EuroSOR · Beauty & Personal Care Series
EU Responsible Person for Cosmetics:
What Beauty Brands Must Set Up
Before Their First EU Sale
Most non-EU skincare, haircare, and colour cosmetics brands know they need an EU Responsible Person. Fewer realise that RP appointment is just the start. A Cosmetic Product Safety Report, a Product Information File, and a CPNP notification per product all have to be in place before a single unit goes on sale — and each has its own timeline and qualified assessor requirement.
EU Regulation governing all cosmetics sold across 27 member states
Separate compliance requirements most non-EU brands discover after stock ships
Prohibited and restricted ingredients under EU Cosmetics Regulation Annexes
EU entity capital required with a Seller of Record structure
Appointing an eu responsible person cosmetics is the first step under Regulation (EC) 1223/2009. It is not the last. The Responsible Person must hold a Cosmetic Product Safety Report prepared by a qualified assessor, maintain a complete Product Information File, and submit a CPNP notification per product before that product can be sold anywhere in the EU. Most single-role RP services cover the appointment only. This post covers the full compliance picture and where the requirements connect.
What the EU Responsible Person Role Actually Covers
Under Regulation (EC) 1223/2009, every cosmetic product placed on the EU market must have a designated Responsible Person established in the EU. For any non-EU brand, that means appointing an EU-based entity to take on the legal obligations the regulation assigns to the RP. The RP's name and address must appear on the product label.
The RP carries ongoing obligations that follow the product for its entire time on the EU market — not a one-time paperwork step. What many brands miss is the scope of that accountability.
Legal Accountability
What the RP is responsible for
Ensuring each product has a compliant CPSR before sale. Maintaining the PIF and making it available to authorities. Registering each product on CPNP before market placement. Notifying authorities of serious undesirable effects.
Ongoing Obligations
What the RP must maintain
Product compliance across all changes to formulation, packaging, or claims. Updated PIF documentation when formulas or labels change. Response to market surveillance authority requests. Coordination of any product withdrawal across EU member states.
The Cosmetic Product Safety Report: What It Is and Who Can Write It
The CPSR is the central safety document required by Regulation (EC) 1223/2009 for every cosmetic product sold in the EU. It must be completed before the product is placed on the market. The CPSR has two parts: Part A covers safety information (formula, ingredient specifications, microbiological quality, stability testing, and toxicological data); Part B is the formal safety assessment. Only a qualified assessor — a person with a degree in pharmacy, toxicology, medicine, or a related discipline — can author Part B.
The Product Information File and CPNP Notification
Product Information File
The PIF is the complete technical and safety dossier for each cosmetic product. It must be compiled by or on behalf of the Responsible Person and held at the RP's EU address, accessible to national market surveillance authorities on request. The PIF must include the product description, the CPSR, GMP evidence, proof of claimed effects, and data on animal testing. It must exist and be current from the day the product goes on sale — there is no submission process, but it must be accessible on request for 10 years from the last sale date.
CPNP notification
Before a cosmetic product is placed on the EU market, the Responsible Person must submit a notification through the Cosmetic Products Notification Portal. The notification must be submitted per product by the EU-established RP. Non-EU brands cannot access the CPNP directly.
EU Cosmetics Labelling: INCI Names, Allergens, and Claims
| Label Element | EU Requirement | Typical Non-EU Gap |
|---|---|---|
| Responsible Person | EU-established RP name and full address on all product packaging | No EU address on existing label |
| INCI ingredient list | All ingredients listed using INCI nomenclature in descending order of weight at time of manufacture | Common names or US trade names used instead of INCI |
| Fragrance allergens | 26 fragrance allergens declared individually when above threshold concentrations (0.001% leave-on, 0.01% rinse-off) | Listed as "parfum" only, with no individual allergen declaration |
| Language | Mandatory fields in the official language of each country of sale | English-only labelling for DE, FR, IT, ES markets |
| Period after opening | PAO symbol with number of months, or minimum durability date for products with shelf life under 30 months | Expiry date format used without PAO symbol |
| Net quantity | Metric units only: g, ml, kg, l | Imperial units (oz, fl oz) on packaging |
Full Compliance Checklist Before Stock Enters the EU
| Requirement | What It Involves | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Ingredient review | Check each ingredient against EU Annexes II–VI. Any prohibited or restricted substance requires reformulation before any other step can proceed. | First — before CPSR |
| CPSR (per product) | Cosmetic Product Safety Report authored by an EU-qualified assessor. Required before CPNP notification and before first sale. Timeline: 4–12 weeks per product. | Before CPNP |
| PIF compilation | Product Information File assembled and held at the RP's EU address. Must be accessible to authorities on request from first day of sale. | Before first sale |
| CPNP notification (per product) | Notification submitted via the EU CPNP portal by the EU-established RP, per product, before market placement. | Before first sale |
| EU Responsible Person | EU-established entity designated as RP. Name and address on all product labels. Holds CPSR and PIF. Submits CPNP notifications. Responds to market surveillance authorities. | Before first sale |
| Importer of Record | EU-based entity with EORI number and VAT registration to file customs declarations and pay import duties. | Before first inbound |
| EU VAT registration | Storing inventory in the EU creates a VAT obligation. Non-EU companies must appoint a fiscal representative jointly liable for VAT filings. | Before stock ships |
| EPR — packaging | Registration with national packaging EPR scheme per country of sale. Cosmetics packaging (glass, plastic, cartons) often spans multiple material categories. | Before first sale |
How EuroSOR Handles This as One Structure
The current market for EU cosmetics compliance is fragmented by design. CPSR assessors work on safety reports. RP services put their address on your label. EPR consultants handle packaging registration. IoR providers handle customs. None of these parties coordinate with each other, and none take accountability for the full compliance outcome.
EuroSOR acts as the EU Responsible Person on your product labels, coordinates the CPSR assessor process and holds the PIF at the registered address, submits CPNP notifications per product, acts as Importer of Record at the border, and handles VAT, EPR, and GPSR obligations across your target markets. One contract replaces the four or five separate provider relationships a non-EU beauty brand would otherwise need to manage.
Frequently Asked Questions
This page is updated periodically. Verify all compliance requirements with a qualified EU regulatory, legal, and tax adviser before entering the EU market. Nothing here constitutes legal, regulatory, or tax advice. CPSR requirements, ingredient restrictions under EU Cosmetics Regulation Annexes, CPNP notification obligations, and EPR contribution rates should be confirmed against current official guidance for each target member state before acting.