“Pure beauty” is everywhere. It’s on the shelves of every major retailer, in the marketing copy of thousands of brands, and in the vocabulary of anyone who’s thought seriously about what’s been going on with their skin for the past five years. It sounds reassuring. It involves security. It indicates that someone has done the work of removing the bad stuff and leaving only the good.
The problem is that “clean beauty” has no legal definition, no regulatory standard, and no independent certification body with any real authority. What counts as “clean” at one retailer is at odds with what counts as “clean” at another. A brand can call itself clean while containing ingredients that are on another brand’s “never list.” And – most importantly for people with sensitive skin, eczema, rosacea or contact allergies – “clean” formulations are often among the most allergenic products on the market.
This guide reveals what “clean beauty” means in practice, where the concept actually helps consumers, where it actively misleads them, and what shoppers with sensitive skin should be looking for.
The Problem of Defining “Pure Beauty”.
The term “clean beauty” emerged as a consumer response to concerns about potentially harmful synthetic chemicals in cosmetics – parabens, phthalates, formaldehyde and similar compounds. The intent was logical: to create a shorthand for products that avoid ingredients with reasonable safety concerns.
The execution was chaotic.
Different retailers define “clean” differently. Sephora’s “Clean at Sephora” program prohibits a list of more than 50 ingredients. The “clean” specification of the target uses a different list. Whole Foods Market uses yet another standard. The Environmental Working Group (EWG) has its own database and rating system. None of these standards agree with each other and none has a regulatory authority.
This means that a product can be “clear” at one retailer and not qualify at another – using the exact same formula. And a product that passes them all may still contain ingredients that are strong contact allergens for sensitive skin.
Where “Pure Beauty” gets it right
To be fair, the clean beauty movement has led to some really positive changes in the industry.
Removal of Formaldehyde Releasers: Pressure from clean beauty advocates has led many well-known brands to reformulate DMDM hydantoin, imidazolidinylurea and other formaldehyde-releasing preservatives. These are legitimate sensitizers and reducing them in mainstream formulations is a real benefit.
Reduction of phthalates: Most clean beauty standards exclude diethyl phthalate (DEP) and related compounds from fragrance blends. Given the evidence of endocrine disruption, this is a reasonable precaution.
Transparency Pressure: The clean beauty movement has pushed the industry toward greater ingredient disclosure and label clarity. More brands are now publishing their full ingredient lists, explaining ingredient choices and providing transparency about sourcing.
Consumer Education: Pure beauty has made ingredient consciousness mainstream. More people read labels now than at any point in history, and that basic literacy—however imperfect—is the foundation for making better choices.
Where “Pure Beauty” actively misleads buyers with sensitive skin
This is where the gap between pure beauty marketing and genuine skin safety becomes harmful:
Physics = safe fallacy
Clean beauty standards almost universally favor “natural” ingredients over synthetics. That sounds reasonable. It is not for sensitive skin.
As covered in depth in our fragrance guide, the EU’s list of 26 declared fragrance allergens—substances proven to cause contact allergy in a significant proportion of the population—consists almost entirely of naturally occurring compounds. Linalool (lavender), limonene (citrus), eugenol (clove), geraniol (rose), cinnamon (cinnamon), and farnesol are all natural. All are common sensitizers. All appear freely in products marketed as “pure”, “natural” and “herbal”.
When a “pure” brand replaces a synthetic fragrance with an essential oil blend, it has not made the product safer for someone with a fragrance sensitivity. They may have made it more dangerous because essential oils contain multiple known allergens in higher concentrations than typical synthetic fragrance blends.
The “freed from” obsession with low-evidence concerns
Many clean beauty lists focus heavily on ingredients like parabens, which have been the subject of significant consumer concern, but whose actual allergy rate (about 2-3% of ACD cases) is much lower than fragrance (30-45% of cases). Brands are reformulating away from well-studied, low-risk preservatives and replacing them with “natural” alternatives like benzyl alcohol or potassium sorbate — some of which are allergens themselves or less effective preservatives that require higher concentrations to be effective.
Omission of real information about allergens
Almost no “clean beauty” brands disclose whether their products are free of the EU’s 26 declared fragrance allergens. None of the major retail “clean” certification programs require allergen disclosure at this level. A “pure” product can legitimately and legitimately contain high concentrations of linalool, limonene, and geraniol — with no disclosure beyond “fragrance” or a long list of botanical extract names.
For someone with a fragrance contact allergy, a “clean” product that leads to essential oils is no cleaner. It’s a minefield.
The cost premium problem
Pure beauty products usually cost much more than conventional alternatives. When the premium is justified by a truly better formulation — well-chosen active ingredients, transparent sourcing, rigorous allergen testing — it’s worth it. When justified primarily by marketing language and the removal of ingredients that posed no significant risks in the first place, consumers pay more for a feeling of safety rather than actual safety.
What buyers with sensitive skin really need instead of “clear”
The framework that actually caters to sensitive, allergic or reactive skin isn’t pure beauty – it’s allergen-aware beauty. The distinction is important.
Allergen-aware beauty asks different questions:
Instead of “is this ingredient natural or synthetic?” asks “is this ingredient a known contact allergen?”
Instead of “is this brand ‘clean certified’?” it asks “who formulated this and what is their evidence base for their ingredient choices?”
Instead of “does this product avoid parabens?” asks “does this product avoid the 14 most common contact allergens – including fragrances, nickel, formaldehyde releasers and wheat derivatives?”
Instead of “does this feel like a wellness product?” asks “can I read the full ingredient list and understand what’s in it?”
Questions to ask any brand that claims to be safe for sensitive skin:
- Who designed the product and what are its features?
- Are you free of the EU’s 26 declared fragrance allergens — not just synthetic fragrances, but the allergens themselves?
- Are you Methylisothiazolinone (MI) and Methylchloroisothiazolinone (MCI) free?
- Are you free of nickel and other heavy metal contaminants?
- Are you gluten and wheat free — for celiac and DH skin?
- Have the “natural” botanical extracts in your formula been evaluated for sensitizing potential?
The EpiLynx difference: It’s not clean, it knows the allergens
EpiLynx is not advertised as a “pure beauty” brand. The term is too vague, too inconsistent and too easily misused to be useful to the people who need our products most.
Instead, EpiLynx is an allergen-aware beauty — formulated by a pharmacist and PhD scientist who has psoriasis and gluten sensitivity, who knows the science of contact allergy, and who built a brand around eliminating the 14 most common contact allergens by design. Not under a marketing contract. Not with retailer certification. With the science of wording.
The EpiLynx product is free of: fragrance (including the 26 declared EU allergens), nickel, parabens, formaldehyde releasers, gluten and wheat derivatives, propylene glycol, lanolin, chemical sunscreens and all other most common contact allergens. Not because “pure beauty” says so. Because science says so.
Creating a routine that is truly allergen aware (not just “clean”)
Step 1: Ignore the “clean” label and read the full ingredient list. Referral against known allergen lists, not just pure “never lists” beauty.
Step 2: Identify any ingredients from the EU’s 26 declared fragrance allergens: linalool, limonene, geraniol, eugenol, cinnamal, citronellol, farnesol, benzyl alcohol, benzyl salicylate and more. If present in a product left on hold, treat the product as flavored regardless of any “clean” claims.
Step 3: Choose brands where “free from” claims are backed by the founder’s scientific credentials and verified compounding process — not marketing convention.
Step 4: Take the EpiLynx skin quiz to create a routine that’s genuinely tailored to your allergen profile — not just aesthetically aligned with clean beauty trends.
EpiLynx is an allergen-aware beauty—prescribed by a pharmacist, free of the 14 most common contact allergens. Take the Skin Quiz at epilynx.com to find products that are truly safe for your skin.
