# Korean skincare ingredients the EU banned - and what to use instead

> The EU restricted retinol, arbutin, kojic acid, silicones, and PFAS in cosmetics. Which K-beauty products are affected and what safe alternatives look like.

By Beauty Desk | 2026-03-22 | trends new releases

The EU now prohibits **1,703 substances** in cosmetics - and several of K-beauty's most popular brightening and anti-aging ingredients just landed on the restricted list. Retinol is capped at 0.3% for face products, alpha-arbutin at 2%, kojic acid at 1%, and cyclic silicones face market bans starting June 2026. If you buy Korean skincare in Europe or ship internationally, your favorite products may already be non-compliant.


Korean cosmetics exports hit **$11.4 billion** in 2025, reaching 202 countries with a 12.3% year-over-year growth rate. Europe is the fastest-growing region - K-beauty exports to Poland alone surged 111.7%. But that expansion is colliding head-on with the EU's most aggressive regulatory cycle in decades.

This isn't a vague "clean beauty" trend. These are enforceable concentration caps, outright bans, and labeling mandates with specific deadlines. Here's what changed, what it means for the products you actually use, and where [Korea's own regulatory overhaul](/blog/korean-beauty-regulatory-changes-2026) fits in.

## What the EU actually banned and restricted

The EU Cosmetics Regulation operates two lists. **Annex II** is the full prohibition list - substances that cannot appear in cosmetics at any concentration. **Annex III** covers restricted substances - allowed, but only within specific limits. Omnibus Act VII alone added 22 new CMR (carcinogenic, mutagenic, reprotoxic) substances to Annex II in 2025.

The restrictions hitting K-beauty hardest fall into five categories: brightening agents, retinoids, cyclic silicones, UV filters, and fragrance compounds. Each has different deadlines and concentration thresholds.



The practical impact is enormous. Non-compliant products found on EU shelves get flagged through the Safety Gate rapid alert system. In 2025, cosmetics became the most frequently reported dangerous product category - over one-third of all 4,671 alerts.

## Retinol, arbutin, and kojic acid hit new limits

These three ingredients define K-beauty's brightening and anti-aging categories. The EU didn't ban them outright - it set concentration ceilings that many existing formulations exceed.

**Retinol** is capped at 0.3% retinol equivalents (RE) for face and hand leave-on products, and just 0.05% RE for body lotions. The reasoning: up to 5% of the EU population already exceeds the tolerable upper intake level for vitamin A through diet alone, according to the SCCS assessment. Products must now carry a mandatory label: "Contains Vitamin A. Consider your daily intake before use."

The EU retinol cap isn't about skincare potency - it's about total vitamin A exposure from food, supplements, and cosmetics combined.

The critical detail most coverage misses: **retinaldehyde is not covered** by this restriction. It converts one step closer to retinoic acid than retinol does, but the EU specifically excluded it from Regulation 2024/996. If you're looking for a [retinol alternative that still delivers results](/blog/retinol-percentage-for-beginners-vs-experienced-2026), retinaldehyde formulations remain fully EU-compliant.



The NEOGEN Dermalogy Real Retinol Serum ($38, 5/5) uses just **0.01% retinol combined with 2% retinyl palmitate** - a formulation that sits well within the new EU cap. The Goodal Black Carrot Vita-A Retinol Firming Ampoule ($29.99, 5/5) takes a different approach, pairing retinol with plant-derived vitamin A from black carrot.

**Alpha-arbutin** is now restricted to 2% in face creams and 0.5% in body lotions, with hydroquinone levels required to stay at unavoidable trace levels. Non-compliant products were banned from the EU market in February 2025 and must be fully withdrawn from shelves by November 2025. The Soko Glam Brightening Bouncy Boost Serum ($22.21, 5/5) lists alpha-arbutin as a key ingredient alongside niacinamide - the concentration will determine its EU market status.

**Kojic acid** is restricted to 1% maximum, and only in face and hand products. Body products containing kojic acid are now prohibited entirely. The SUNGBOON EDITOR Kojic Acid Niacinamide Brightening Face Gel Cleanser ($17, 5/5) uses encapsulated kojic acid in a rinse-off format - a formulation approach that may face different classification rules.

## Silicones and PFAS lose their place in formulations

Cyclic silicones D4, D5, and D6 are the ingredients behind that signature "silky" primer feel in K-beauty. D4 was banned in the EU back in 2022. Now D5 and D6 face new REACH restrictions: market placement of substances and mixtures banned from **June 6, 2026**, with leave-on cosmetics following by June 2027.

The expected result is a **90% reduction** in cyclic silicone emissions. K-beauty primers, cushion foundations, and silicone-based serums will need reformulation for the EU market, likely pivoting to squalane, dimethicone (a linear silicone, not restricted), or plant-derived alternatives.


France became the first EU country to ban PFAS in cosmetics as of January 1, 2026, following Denmark. Five EU countries - Germany, Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark - jointly proposed an EU-wide PFAS restriction through ECHA. If you buy waterproof mascaras, long-wear foundations, or liquid lipsticks, check whether the brand has reformulated for the French and Danish markets.


PFAS compounds are what make waterproof makeup actually waterproof. They're also classified as "forever chemicals" because they don't break down in the environment. France's Law No. 2025-188 gives brands a 12-month sell-through period for pre-ban stock, but any new production must be PFAS-free. The EU-wide ban is still under ECHA review, but the direction is clear.

## Sunscreens and fragrance face tighter scrutiny

Two UV filters common in Korean sunscreens hit regulatory walls. **4-MBC (4-Methylbenzylidene Camphor)** is now prohibited under EU Regulation 2024/996 due to endocrine disruption concerns. **Benzophenone-3 (oxybenzone)** is already restricted to 6% in face products and 2.2% in body products, and Denmark intends to propose a full EU endocrine disruptor classification in 2026.

Korean sunscreen brands have pivoted to newer filters - ethylhexyl triazone, DHHB, iscotrizinol, and bisoctrizole - which are larger molecules less likely to absorb through skin. If you're shopping for [Korean sunscreens](/blog/best-korean-sunscreen-for-oily-skin-2026), the newer filter generation is both more photostable and more EU-friendly.

Korean sunscreen brands already reformulated away from 4-MBC and oxybenzone - the replacement filters are larger molecules that stay on the skin surface instead of absorbing through it.

The fragrance overhaul is equally significant. EU allergen labeling expands from **26 to over 80 declarable allergens** by July 2026, with detection thresholds of 0.001% for leave-on products and 0.01% for rinse-off. That's not a ban - it's a transparency mandate. But it means K-beauty products sold in the EU will need dramatically expanded ingredient labels.



The lilial and lyral situation reveals a lag between regulation and enforcement. Both fragrances have been prohibited for years, yet they still trigger the vast majority of cosmetic safety alerts. K-beauty recalls tripled from 5 to 16 cases in 2025, largely driven by fragrance non-compliance.

## Which K-beauty products are affected

The question isn't whether a product contains a restricted ingredient - it's whether the **concentration** exceeds the new limits. A serum with 0.2% retinol is fine. One with 1% retinol isn't. The ingredient list alone doesn't tell you this.

Here's how some popular K-beauty products stack up against the new EU rules. Retinol-containing products need to stay under 0.3% RE, arbutin products under 2% for face use, and kojic acid products under 1%.



The NEOGEN Real Retinol Serum's 0.01% retinol plus 2% retinyl palmitate converts to well under the 0.3% RE threshold. Products like the Juice Beauty Blemish Clearing Salicylic Acid Serum use actives - like salicylic acid - that remain entirely unaffected by the EU changes. The new regulations target specific ingredient families, not all actives.

Products that don't disclose exact concentrations create a problem. You can't verify compliance from the label alone if the brand doesn't list percentages. For body products, the arbutin and kojic acid limits are even stricter - 0.5% and zero, respectively.

## K-beauty is reformulating, not retreating

South Korea's own regulatory body, MFDS, is preparing a **mandatory cosmetics safety assessment system** launching in 2028, with domestic testing already scaled from a few hundred to roughly 2,000 cases annually. The regulatory direction mirrors the EU's approach - more data, more testing, stricter enforcement.

The brands already ahead of this curve are the ones leaning into ferment technology, vitamin complexes, and peptides - ingredients with no EU restrictions and strong efficacy data.



The SUR.MEDIC+ Pink Vita Brightening Capsule Essence ($38, 5/5) delivers brightening through a vitamin B and glutathione complex - no restricted ingredients. The NEOGEN Dermalogy Real Ferment Micro Essence ($76, 5/5) uses bifida ferment lysate and saccharomyces ferment filtrate, ingredients the EU has no plans to restrict. The ma:nyo Rejuvenating 4-Step Set ($84, 5/5) builds its entire line around bifida biome technology.

The NEOGEN Real Ferment Micro Value Set ($88.20, 5/5) bundles toner, essence, and serum in a ferment-forward system. The NEOGEN Double Vita Tone Up Ampoule Mask ($29, 5/5) uses vitamin C and multivitamins for brightening without touching arbutin or kojic acid. These aren't compromises - fermented ingredients have their own clinical backing for barrier repair and radiance.

The ingredients replacing restricted ones in K-beauty - ferment lysates, vitamin complexes, bakuchiol - aren't second choices. They're the formulation direction the entire industry is moving toward.

K-beauty's 2026 product launches reflect this shift. As we covered in our [summer trends roundup](/blog/k-beauty-trends-2026-summer), the focus has moved from single high-concentration actives to multi-pathway formulations that achieve similar results through ingredient synergy rather than brute-force percentages.

## How to check your products before buying

The EU's INCI glossary just expanded by **348 new ingredient entries** to 30,418 total, with mandatory label compliance by July 30, 2026. Between new ingredient names, new concentration limits, and new allergen declarations, reading a K-beauty label in 2026 requires more attention than it used to.

If you're buying K-beauty products for use in or shipment to the EU, here's what to verify on the packaging or product page.



For products purchased from Korean e-commerce sites and shipped directly, EU regulations technically apply only at the point of market entry - meaning the retailer placing the product on the EU market bears compliance responsibility. But if customs flags a shipment containing prohibited substances, it gets destroyed at the border. The practical advice: buy from EU-based retailers or check the [ingredient guides](/guides/best-retinol-products) for products with disclosed, compliant concentrations.

Flip the bottle. Read past the marketing claims. If the concentration isn't listed, contact the brand directly - any company serious about the EU market will have reformulation data ready.

## Product Comparison

| Product | Brand | Price | Rating |
|---------|-------|-------|--------|
| SUR.MEDIC+ Pink Vita Brightening Capsule Essence | Neogen | $38.00 | — |
| [1+1] Real Ferment Micro Essence 5.07 oz / 150ml + FREE GIFT Bakuchiol Serum | NEOGEN DERMALOGY | $76.00 | 5/5 (7) |
| Real Retinol Serum (30ml) | Neogen | $38.00 | — |
| [Value Set] Real Ferment Micro Toner, Real Ferment Micro Essence, Real Ferment Micro Serum | Neogen | $88.20 | — |
| Kojic Acid Niacinamide Brightening Face Gel Cleanser | SUNGBOON EDITOR | $17.00 | 5/5 |
| Brightening Bouncy Boost Serum | Soko Glam | $22.21 | — |
| [GOODAL] BLACK CARROT VITA-A RETINOL FIRMING AMPOULE | Goodal | $29.99 | 5/5 (1) |
| Salicylic Acid Acne Serum Travel Size | Juice Beauty | $31000.00 | 5/5 (1) |
| Rejuvenating additional 4-Step Set (Ampoule Pad + Serum + Eye Cream + Mist) | ma:nyo | $84.00 | 5/5 (1) |
| NEOGEN DERMALOGY Double Vita Tone Up Ampoule Mask (30g+3g) (5pack) | Neogen | $29.00 | — |

## Frequently Asked Questions

**Q: What Korean skincare ingredients are banned in Europe?**
A: The EU prohibits lilial, lyral, TPO, and 4-MBC outright in cosmetics. Retinol is capped at 0.3% for face products, alpha-arbutin at 2% in face creams, and kojic acid at 1% for face and hands only. Cyclic silicones D5 and D6 face market restrictions from June 2026. France banned PFAS in cosmetics from January 2026.

**Q: What skincare ingredients are illegal in the EU?**
A: The EU now prohibits 1,703 substances under Annex II of the Cosmetics Regulation. Recent additions include TPO, banned since September 2025, and 22 new CMR substances under Omnibus Act VII. Fragrances lilial and lyral are fully banned. The UV filter 4-MBC is prohibited for endocrine disruption concerns.

**Q: Are K-beauty products safe for EU consumers?**
A: K-beauty products sold within the EU must comply with EU Cosmetics Regulation. Products purchased from Korean retailers or international shipping sites may not meet EU standards. South Korea is strengthening its own safety framework, with mandatory safety assessments planned from 2028 and domestic testing scaled to roughly 2,000 cases annually.

**Q: What is the EU retinol limit for cosmetics?**
A: The EU caps retinol at 0.3% retinol equivalents for face and hand leave-on products and 0.05% for body lotions under Regulation 2024/996. Products must carry a warning label about vitamin A intake. Retinaldehyde is not covered by this restriction. The limits took effect November 2025.

**Q: Why are some Korean products recalled in the EU?**
A: Most EU recalls of Korean cosmetics involve banned fragrances. Lilial and lyral detection triggered roughly 90% of cosmetic alerts in 2025. The EU Safety Gate issued a record 4,671 alerts that year, with cosmetics as the most frequently flagged product category. K-beauty recalls specifically tripled from 5 to 16 cases.

**Q: What is the EU cosmetics regulation 2026 update?**
A: Key 2026 changes include fragrance allergen labeling expanding from 26 to over 80 declarable allergens by July 2026, cyclic silicone D5 and D6 market bans from June 2026, France's national PFAS ban effective January 2026, and the INCI glossary adding 348 new ingredient entries requiring label updates by July 2026.

## References

[1] Commission Regulation (EU) 2024/996 - Restrictions on Retinol, Arbutin, and Kojic Acid in Cosmetics - European Commission: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/996/oj
[2] Commission Regulation (EU) 2025/877 - Omnibus Act VII Amending Annex II (CMR Substances) - European Commission: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2025/877/oj
[3] Commission Regulation (EU) 2024/1328 - REACH Restriction on Cyclic Silicones D4, D5, D6 - European Commission / ECHA: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2024/1328/oj
[4] Commission Delegated Regulation (EU) 2023/1545 - Fragrance Allergen Labelling Requirements - European Commission: https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg_del/2023/1545/oj
[5] Safety Gate 2025 Annual Report - Dangerous Non-Food Products - European Commission: https://commission.europa.eu/live-work-travel-eu/consumer-rights-and-complaints/product-safety/safety-gate_en
[6] S. Korean cosmetics exports hit all-time high in 2024 - Korea Herald: https://www.koreaherald.com/article/10433209
