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Clean Beauty: What the Labels Really Mean

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Clean Beauty: What the Labels Really Mean
Clean Beauty: What the Labels Really Mean

‘Clean,’ ‘natural,’ ‘non-toxic’ — beauty labels are full of reassuring words with no agreed definitions. Here’s how to read past the marketing and judge a product on what actually matters.

‘Clean’ is not a regulated term

There’s no legal standard for ‘clean beauty.’ Each brand and retailer sets its own rules, usually a list of excluded ingredients. That can be useful, but it’s a marketing framework, not a safety guarantee.

‘Natural’ doesn’t mean better — or safer

Natural ingredients aren’t automatically gentler, and synthetic ones aren’t automatically harmful. Many of the most effective and best-tolerated ingredients, like hyaluronic acid and many peptides, are made in a lab. Judge ingredients by evidence, not origin.

What to actually look for

  • A full ingredient list — transparency is the real signal of a trustworthy brand.
  • Evidence behind claims — look for studies or clinical testing, not just adjectives.
  • Appropriate formulation — actives at meaningful levels in a well-designed base.
  • Honest packaging — claims that describe the formula, not fear-based marketing.

Our approach

At Aurélle we publish every ingredient and its purpose, formulate with clinically studied actives, and never test on animals. We don’t use the word ‘clean’ as a shield — we just show you what’s inside and why.

The most powerful tool you have is an ingredient list and a healthy skepticism of buzzwords.