7 Reasons There Aren’t More Preservative Free Cosmetics

by Left Brain on April 25, 2008 · 61 comments

Here at the Beauty Brains, we get asked about preservatives in cosmetics all the time. People wonder why compounds with potential safety issues like formaldehyde or parabens are used. Should they use self-preserving cosmetics? They also ask why cosmetic companies don’t get rid of preservatives.

Wouldn’t it be great if we could? Cosmetic chemists, cosmetic manufacturers and certainly cosmeticMicrobes in the world marketers would love to get rid of preservatives. Unfortunately, the disease-causing microbes would love it too. There are some companies that offer preservative free products but not many. Here are the top reasons why more companies aren’t making preservative-free cosmetics.

7 Reasons Preservative Free Cosmetics are Rare

1. Preservative free cosmetics don’t last as long.
A standard cosmetic can have a shelf life of 1 or even 2 years or more. This is great for those products you have stuffed in your medicine cabinet or bathroom drawers. You can feel confident that if you open them up tomorrow you won’t get Tetanus or Gangrene. A preservative-free cosmetic won’t last more than a couple of weeks. It’ll spoil just about as fast as milk and become dangerous.

2. Because they need to be refrigerated
Unless it is put in some special packaging, preservative free cosmetics need to be refrigerated to keep them safe. You wouldn’t eat fish you left out on the counter overnight so you shouldn’t use unpreserved cosmetics that haven’t been refrigerated either. This refrigeration step is a huge inconvenience for people so manufacturers just don’t think people will want to do it. Consumer research has proven them right.

3. Because they can easily get contaminated
You know how there is the common, good advice that you shouldn’t share your cosmetics with anyone? Do you know why? Because each time you use cosmetics, you expose yourself to microbial contamination. Even when there are preservatives the microbes can live in small numbers. Your body is used to your bacteria but other people may not be. Preservative free cosmetics are even more prone to contamination and can pick up any sinister microbe that happens to be floating in the air. When people get sick using cosmetics, it’s bad for product’s manufacturer.

4. Because they are more expensive to make
It is possible to make preservative free cosmetics. You can use special packaging or make them anhydrous (water-free). Unfortunately, both of these options can double, triple, or quadruple the cost for manufacturing. And while most people don’t mind spending $5 on a lip balm, spending $20 for the same thing that is merely preservative free is harder to get them to accept. The other problem is that these cosmetics typically don’t work as well. They are more greasy, sticky and just less appealing.

5. Because natural preservatives don’t work as well
One strategy for creating preservative free cosmetics is to use natural preservatives. Technically the products aren’t preservative free but from an advertising and legal standpoint, they are. In the EU there is a list of ingredients you can use for product preservation. If you don’t use any of those ingredients, you can call yourself “preservative free”. Unfortunately, as this article points out, natural preservatives do not work as well as the standard ones.

6. Because natural preservatives aren’t approved
The article also points out the second major problem with natural preservatives. They are too expensive to get approved. A natural preservative manufacturer would have to spend millions of dollars on their new ingredient and there is no guarantee it would get on the approved list of preservatives. No company wants to take that chance. Therefore, don’t look for natural preservatives anytime soon.

7. Because preserved cosmetics are safe
Probably the most important reason you don’t see more preservative free cosmetics is because the preserved products work great and are perfectly safe. True, some of the compounds used to preserve products can be nasty stuff but when used at low enough levels they are harmless. Cosmetic marketers just don’t find people willing enough to spend extra money for a benefit that is imperceptible. And if people aren’t going to buy the product, cosmetic companies aren’t going to make it.

Are you concerned about preservatives in your cosmetics? Leave a comment and let the Beauty Brains community know.

{ 10 trackbacks }

Medicine » Blog Archive » 7 Reseasons There Aren’t More Preservative Free Cosmetics
April 25, 2008 at 4:52 am
Best of the Beauty Brains 2008 | The Beauty Brains
December 31, 2008 at 1:53 am
Is Alcohol Bad For Hair And Skin? | The Beauty Brains
September 22, 2009 at 12:03 am
Is Alcohol Bad For Hair And Skin? | Beauty Aware
September 22, 2009 at 10:30 pm
Beauty 365 Weekly Rundown – 4/2/10 « Beauty 365
April 1, 2010 at 10:15 pm
How Can You Preserve DIY Cosmetics?
April 29, 2010 at 7:02 am
How Can You Preserve DIY Cosmetics? | Fitness Lifestyle Health Club
April 29, 2010 at 3:39 pm
How Can You Preserve DIY Cosmetics? | Beauty Aware
April 29, 2010 at 5:41 pm
7 Reasons There Aren’t More Preservative Free Cosmetics « ClarkCreations's Blog
July 26, 2010 at 2:14 am
Preservative cosmetic | Ajaygoud
May 30, 2011 at 12:38 pm

{ 51 comments… read them below or add one }

Esthetician January 6, 2012 at 3:29 am

I am proud to say I make natural cosmetics and hope to soon produce natural skin care as well as a licensed Esthetician, and while I enjoyed the article, I feel it is necessary to point out a couple things. Not all preservatives or parabens are bad. Although most of what is produced in today’s market is used because it is easier to synthesize rather than find alternatives, there are preservatives and parabens that are natural and can be used quite effectively. Do your research and you can easily figure out which is which. Secondly, just because a product has preservatives, anti-microbials, or any other safety measure does not guarantee a bacteria or germ free product. Especially where cosmetics and skin care products are concerned. If you apply your high end powder with the best brush out there, you can still end up with a case of something or other. If that brush is not properly cared for, you might as well bathe in sewer water. If this were not the case, no one would suffer from bouts of acne( not hormonally caused mind you), or get a type of Herpe virus in the eye. And for the record yes, it can happen. I am very particular about what goes into my products but I also use standard products on myself and others when the need arises. I don’t want to be lumped in with one group or another lol.

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: