Why can IFRA restrict a natural essential oil ingredient, not just synthetics?
Show answer & explanation
Answer: Exposure sets the risk
Exposure sets the risk ✓ — Right: fragrance safety is exposure-based, not a morality contest between natural and synthetic. IFRA Standards can ban, limit, or set criteria for ingredients when safety concerns exist, and the standards also consider constituents present inside natural complex substances such as essential oils. RIFM describes using real-world exposure and maximum acceptable concentrations. The surprise is that a natural origin does not exempt a molecule from dose and contact-allergy math.
Natural always lasts longer — Natural materials can be beautiful and complex, but they do not automatically last longer or become safer. Some fresh natural materials are highly volatile, while some synthetics are designed for stability and persistence. IFRA's concern is whether a material is safe at a given exposure in a given product type. Nature is a source label, not a safety certificate or a stopwatch.
Synthetic means stronger — Synthetic does not simply mean stronger. A lab-made molecule can be weak, strong, volatile, persistent, irritating, or very well tolerated depending on its structure and dose. IFRA and RIFM evaluate endpoints such as sensitization and systemic exposure rather than judging by origin alone. The useful takeaway for shoppers is that 'natural' and 'synthetic' are origin stories; safety limits are about chemistry plus exposure.
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