The Problem With “Natural”
Walk into any pharmacy or beauty retailer and you’ll find the word “natural” on roughly 40% of the products. It’s on luxury serums, it’s on supermarket own-brands, it’s on products that contain primarily synthetic ingredients. “Natural” has no regulated definition in skincare. Any brand can use it for any product, without restriction, without verification, without any obligation to explain what they mean by it. It is, in the most technical sense, a marketing word.
This is the starting point for understanding skincare labels, and it’s an uncomfortable one because “natural” sounds like it should mean something. It doesn’t – not on its own, without a certification or a specific context to anchor it. Knowing this is not a reason to dismiss natural-positioned products. It is a reason to look past the front label and at what’s actually in the product.
What “Organic” Actually Requires
Organic is more regulated, but not as regulated as most people assume. In food, “organic” has strict legal definitions. In skincare, it depends entirely on whether the brand has sought certification. An uncertified product calling itself “organic” is in a similar position to one calling itself “natural” – the label is self-designated and unverified.
Certified organic is different. COSMOS Organic certification (the current European standard, which replaced BDIH, Ecocert, and others) requires that a minimum percentage of the product’s ingredients be certified organic, that the processing methods meet specific standards, and that synthetic UV filters, silicones, parabens, and a list of other restricted substances are absent. The certification is audited by an independent third party.

The Label Decoder
| Term | Regulated? | What to Trust | Red Flag If… |
|---|---|---|---|
| Natural | No | Nothing on its own | Used as the main claim with no specifics |
| Organic | Only if certified | The certification logo, not the word | No certification body named |
| Clean | No | The brand’s own “clean” definition | No list of excluded ingredients given |
| Green | No | Nothing on its own | No environmental certifications present |
| COSMOS Organic | Yes – independently audited | Fully | Logo present but no certifier named |
| COSMOS Natural | Yes – independently audited | Fully (less strict than Organic tier) | Same as above |
| Soil Association Organic | Yes | Fully – UK’s strictest organic standard | Logo present without date |
| Ecocert | Yes | Fully – now operates under COSMOS | Old-style logo may predate current standards |
What “Clean Beauty” Actually Means
Clean beauty is a marketing category, not a regulated one. Different brands define it differently, which means a “clean” product from one brand might contain ingredients that another brand’s “clean” list explicitly excludes. The most useful version of clean beauty is when a brand publishes its specific exclusion list and explains the reasoning behind each ingredient choice.
The brands doing clean beauty credibly are the ones that show their work – specific ingredients excluded, specific reasons given, and usually a certifier involved. The ones doing it less credibly use “clean” as a general mood with no substance behind it. These are very different products even when they’re on the same shelf.

How to Read an Ingredient List (Practically)
INCI – International Nomenclature of Cosmetic Ingredients – is the standardised naming system for cosmetic ingredients. Ingredients are listed in descending order by concentration. The first five ingredients typically make up 80-90% of the product. The last few are often preservatives, fragrances, and active ingredients present in very small amounts.
Aqua (water) first is normal in most products. A recognisable plant oil in the top five (Argania Spinosa Kernel Oil, Rosa Canina Fruit Oil) in an organic product suggests the organic claims have substance. A long list of synthetic polymers and petrochemicals in the top five of a product calling itself “natural” is worth noting.
You don’t need to become a cosmetic chemist to use this. Learning the INCI names for five or six common ingredients you’re interested in avoiding – or seeking – takes about twenty minutes and gives you a workable filter for most label-reading situations.
“The front of a skincare label tells you what the brand wants to say. The ingredient list tells you what the product actually is. Learn to read the second one.”
Which Certifications to Actually Look For
For organic: COSMOS Organic or Soil Association Organic are the gold standards in the UK. Both require independent auditing and have specific, published standards you can read. For broader sustainability: Leaping Bunny for cruelty-free, certified B Corp for overall business ethics. A product with multiple independent certifications is far more trustworthy than one with none, regardless of how good the front-of-pack copy sounds.
The certification logos take five seconds to spot. If they’re there, look them up once and understand what they actually verify. If they’re absent and the label is heavy with “natural” and “pure” and “green” – that absence is information worth having.
