Many brand clients pay close attention to cosmetic packaging when planning OEM manufacturing, but most may not be very familiar with how to label the information on cosmetic packaging. Today, daao cosmetics oem will discuss how to distinguish products from their outer packaging and what constitutes qualified packaging, thus helping you choose cosmetics when purchasing. This information can also serve as a guide for those in the cosmetics industry to design their product packaging.

I. What information must be labeled on cosmetic packaging?
1. Product Name
The cosmetic name should, in principle, include the trademark name (or brand name), generic name, and attribute name. The trademark name must be marked with the trademark symbol, such as ® or TM. ® indicates a registered trademark with a trademark certificate; TM indicates a trademark in the process of registration. The label should include at least one complete label of the name; that is, except for the trademark, all text or symbols in the name should use the same font and size without gaps.
The generic name should be accurate and scientific, and can be text indicating the raw materials, main active ingredients, or product functions. When using raw materials or functional ingredients as generic names, these must be raw materials and ingredients contained in the product formula, except for words that are only understood as describing the product's color, luster, or smell, such as pearl, fruit-type, rose-type, etc. When using function as a generic name, the function must be a function that the product actually possesses.
Attribute names should indicate the objective form of the product and should not use abstract names. However, for products whose attributes are already known to consumers, the attribute name can be omitted, such as: lipstick, blush, lip gloss, face color, cheek color, hair color, eye color, eyeshadow, conditioner, serum, face mask, hair mask, blush, nail polish, etc.
2. Net Content
Liquid cosmetics indicate net content by volume; solid cosmetics indicate net content by mass; semi-solid or viscous cosmetics indicate net content by mass or volume. The font height must not be less than 2mm. Note that milliliters should be written as mL, not ML.
3. Full Ingredient List
Using "Ingredients" as a leading phrase, list the true full ingredients of the product. The packaging ingredients must match the formula ingredients and product properties.
4. Product Efficacy Description
Truly inform consumers of the product's effects to facilitate understanding and purchase.