Project – FacePowders MultiFramework

Multi-Framework Compliance for Face Powders (MoCRA + Prop 65 + AB 2762/496/2771)

Four Converging Laws. One Inhalable Product Category.

Face powders now operate under overlapping federal, state, and retailer-driven compliance frameworks, each introducing independent obligations and enforcement risks.

  • MoCRA: facility registration, product listing, GMPs, adverse event reporting
  • Proposition 65: asbestos, lead, TiO₂ (inhalation), carbon black, formaldehyde
  • AB 2762 & AB 496: phased bans on 50+ cosmetic ingredients
  • AB 2771: PFAS prohibition (effective 2025)
  • Retailer Standards: Sephora, Credo, Target, Ulta, Whole Foods

Powders aerosolize during use—making them the highest-exposure cosmetic format.

Why Face Powders Are Structurally Different

  • Inhalable Particle Format: airborne exposure during application
  • Talc–Asbestos Risk: geological co-occurrence
  • Heavy-Metal Pigments: trace contamination from mineral sources
  • Litigation Pressure: talc cases reshaped enforcement economics

What “Face Powders” Includes

  • Loose setting powders
  • Pressed powder foundation
  • Blush & bronzer
  • Eyeshadow and brow powders
  • Mineral makeup
  • Highlighters and finishing powders
  • Contour products
  • Color correctors

Primary Chemical Risk Drivers

  • Asbestos (talc)
  • Lead, cadmium, chromium VI
  • Titanium dioxide (inhalation)
  • Carbon black
  • PFAS
  • Formaldehyde-releasing preservatives

The Talc–Asbestos Liability Shadow

  • Major litigation has reshaped risk expectations
  • FDA asbestos testing programs ongoing
  • Children’s and eye-area powders heavily scrutinized
  • ASCA testing increasingly expected

Multi-Framework Regulatory Stack

MoCRA (Federal)

  • Facility registration
  • Product listing
  • Adverse event reporting
  • Recall authority
  • Safety substantiation

California Overlay

  • Prop 65 exposure modeling
  • AB 2762 & 496 ingredient bans
  • AB 2771 PFAS prohibition

Retailer Standards

  • Expanded restricted substance lists
  • Independent testing programs
  • Immediate delisting risk

Primary Compliance Levers

Supplier Qualification

  • Mine-of-origin disclosure
  • Heavy metal COAs
  • Asbestos testing
  • Regulatory attestations

Analytical Testing

  • ICP-MS heavy metals
  • TEM/PLM asbestos analysis
  • PFAS screening
  • Particle-size analysis

Reformulation

  • Talc-free alternatives
  • PFAS elimination
  • Preservative updates
  • Particle engineering

Defensible Documentation File

  • Bill of Materials
  • Finished-product testing data
  • Exposure analysis
  • MoCRA records
  • Supplier traceability

Compliance is determined by documentation—not assumptions.

Cost of Inaction

  • $2,500 per day per violation
  • $25K–$500K settlements
  • 60-day response deadlines
  • Insurance limitations

How the System Works

Phase 1 — Diagnostic

  • SKU risk screening
  • Supplier audit
  • Exposure assessment

Phase 2 — Build

  • Testing deployment
  • Exposure modeling
  • MoCRA setup

Phase 3 — Reformulate

  • Talc removal
  • PFAS elimination
  • Supplier requalification

Phase 4 — Operationalize

  • Lot-level controls
  • Ongoing monitoring
  • Audit readiness

Final Takeaway

Face powders sit at the intersection of inhalation exposure, mineral impurity risk, evolving federal regulation, and aggressive state enforcement. A coordinated, multi-framework compliance system is required to manage this risk.

Build a Defensible Multi-Framework Compliance System for Your Face Powder Portfolio

Integrate MoCRA requirements, Prop 65 exposure modeling, asbestos and heavy-metal testing, PFAS elimination, and retailer compliance into one structured system—before enforcement occurs.

Schedule a Compliance Consultation
MoCRA · Prop 65 · AB 2762 · AB 496 · AB 2771 — Integrated Compliance Systems

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