Fragrance Allergens in Cosmetics: The 26 EU‑Listed Names and What They Mean

Fragrance Allergens

Fragrance allergens are specific aroma compounds that must be declared on cosmetic labels in the EU when they exceed trace levels. Originally 26 compounds identified for their high sensitization potential, this list helps consumers with contact allergies avoid triggers. While the EU expanded labeling requirements in 2023, the original 26 remain the most recognized – here they are with their sources and risks.

What are the 26 EU fragrance allergens?

Under Regulation (EC) No 1223/2009, these must be listed individually if >0.001% in leave-on products or >0.01% in rinse-offs. They occur naturally in essential oils or synthetically in perfumes.

Allergen (INCI) Source/Type
Amyl Cinnamal Jasmine-like synthetic
Amylcinnamyl Alcohol Lily of the valley scent
Anisyl Alcohol Anise/licorice note
Benzyl Alcohol Preservative + almond scent
Benzyl Benzoate Fixative, balsamic odor
Benzyl Cinnamate Balsam/styrax aroma
Benzyl Salicylate Fixative, floral note
Cinnamal Cinnamon aldehyde
Cinnamyl Alcohol Cinnamon/hyacinth scent
Citral Lemon/lemongrass (geranial+neral)
Citronellol Rose/geranium oil component
Coumarin Hay/sweet vanilla scent
Eugenol Clove/carnation aroma
Evernia Furfuracea Extract Oakmoss (lichen)
Evernia Prunastri Extract Oakmoss lichen
Farnesol Lily of the valley
Geraniol Rose/palmarosa oil
Hexyl Cinnamal Jasmine-like synthetic
Hydroxycitronellal Muguet (lily) synthetic
Hydroxyisohexyl 3-Cyclohexene Carboxaldehyde Lyral (banned 2019)
Isoeugenol Spicy carnation note
Linalool Lavender/citrus terpene
Alpha-Isomethyl Ionone Violet/woody synthetic
Limonene Citrus peel terpene
Alpha-Pinene, Beta-Pinene Pine/essential oils

Fragrance Allergens

Why these 26 specifically?

Selected based on patch test data showing highest dermatitis rates. Linalool, limonene and geraniol lead due to ubiquity in “natural” fragrances. Oakmoss extracts cause 20% of fragrance allergies despite low usage.

Common reactions and who should avoid

  • Contact dermatitis: Redness, itching (face/neck most affected).
  • Photosensitivity: Citral, furocoumarins worsen with sun.
  • High-risk groups: Eczema patients, children, fragrance-sensitive.

Fragrance Allergens in skincare

How to spot and avoid fragrance allergens

  1. Check INCI for the 26 names above threshold levels.
  2. Choose “fragrance-free” or “unscented” (not “no added fragrance”).
  3. Patch test leave-ons; rinse-offs safer.
  4. Note 2023 EU expansion adds 45+ allergens (implementation 2026-2028).

Bottom line

The EU’s 26 fragrance allergens represent highest-risk compounds – now expanding to 70+. Sensitive skin? Scan labels or stick to verified fragrance-free. Most tolerate low levels fine, but declaration empowers avoidance without banning beloved scents entirely.

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