Preskoči na vsebino
FREE SHIPPING OVER €5460-DAY MONEY-BACK PROMISEMADE IN THE EU · GMP-CERTIFIED

Phthalates 101: Fragrance, PVC, Hormone-Sensitive Living

If "fragrance" on a label is vague, learn what to ask. The honest, evidence-aligned guide to phthalates — where they hide and what to swap.

Phthalates are a group of chemicals you have probably encountered without knowing it — under the catch-all word "fragrance" on a product label, in PVC plastic flooring, in some shampoos, lotions, and cleaners. Some phthalates have been associated with concerns about endocrine (hormone) disruption, especially for fertility, pregnancy, and child development.

Here is the calm, evidence-aligned version: what phthalates are, what the EU has done about them, and where it makes sense to lower exposure.

What phthalates actually are

A family of compounds historically used for two main purposes:

  1. Plasticisers — making rigid PVC plastic more flexible (e.g., flooring, shower curtains, food packaging, tubing, vinyl gloves)
  2. Fragrance carriers and fixers — helping scent compounds dissolve and persist in cosmetics, cleaning products, air fresheners, candles

Different phthalates have different uses and different safety profiles.

Why hormones come into the conversation

Several phthalates have been classified as endocrine disruptors — chemicals that can interfere with the body's hormonal signalling. Particular concerns include:

  • Effects on testosterone and androgen pathways
  • Effects on fetal development, especially male fetuses
  • Possible links with fertility outcomes
  • Possible links with thyroid effects
  • Effects in children's developing systems

The strongest evidence is for higher-exposure populations and for specific phthalates — DEHP, DBP, BBP, DnHP, DiBP — which have been progressively restricted in the EU.

“A family of compounds historically used for two main purposes:”

— Feel AWSM Editorial

What the EU has done

EU regulation on phthalates is among the strictest globally:

  • REACH restrictions on DEHP, DBP, BBP, DiBP — restricted in articles in concentrations above 0.1% (especially in toys, childcare items, and many consumer products)
  • Cosmetics Regulation prohibits DEHP, DBP, BBP, and others in cosmetic products sold in the EU
  • Food contact regulation restricts phthalate use in food packaging
  • Toy safety regulation has been tight on phthalates for over a decade

If a product is EU-compliant and recently manufactured, it generally does not contain the most-restricted phthalates in cosmetics or children's items. The remaining concerns are about:

  • Older imported or non-EU products
  • Categories with looser restrictions (some industrial uses)
  • "Fragrance" on labels that may include other phthalates not yet restricted
  • Imported toys or products

Where to look (and look carefully)

Personal care products

The EU has banned the most-concerning phthalates in cosmetics, but "fragrance" on a label can still be a black box. EU labels list certain fragrance allergens, but the full fragrance composition is often confidential.

Practical approach:

  • Look for "phthalate-free" or "DEP-free" labels (DEP is sometimes still used)
  • Fragrance-free or low-fragrance products skip the question entirely
  • Smaller and more transparent EU brands often disclose more

Cleaning products and air fresheners

These are often the highest fragrance loads in a home:

  • Skip plug-in air fresheners and aerosol "freshening" sprays
  • Choose unscented or EU Ecolabel cleaning products
  • Open windows instead of masking smells

PVC plastics in the home

PVC vinyl can be flexible thanks to plasticisers (some are phthalates).

Common locations:

  • Vinyl shower curtains (especially the strong "new" smell)
  • Vinyl flooring (less concern when settled, more during installation)
  • Soft PVC packaging
  • Some imitation leather (older or non-EU)

Lower-exposure swaps:

  • Cotton, hemp, or polyester shower curtains instead of vinyl
  • Cork, wood, linoleum, or tile flooring when replacing
  • Glass storage instead of PVC food packaging
  • Real leather or synthetic non-PVC alternatives for clothing/upholstery

Food contact

  • Glass containers for hot or fatty foods
  • Avoid heating plastic wraps or containers
  • Skip plastic food containers showing wear (cracks, scratches, cloudy plastic)

Children's items

EU regulation has been tightest here — most current EU-compliant toys and childcare items are well-regulated. The concern shifts to:

  • Older items
  • Imported items from outside EU/UK
  • Items not sold as toys but used as such (e.g., decorative items)

What is reassuring

EU consumers generally benefit from:

  • The cosmetics phthalate ban
  • The toy and childcare item restrictions
  • Labelling rules that disclose certain fragrance allergens
  • Active regulatory updates as new evidence emerges

This does not mean exposure is zero — but the regulatory floor is meaningfully high.

What pregnant women specifically may want to think about

The strongest concerns about phthalates are around fetal development and early childhood. For women planning pregnancy, pregnant, or breastfeeding:

  • Fragrance-free or low-fragrance personal care
  • Skip air fresheners and plug-ins
  • Glass food storage
  • Avoid heating plastic
  • Vinyl gloves during cleaning if cleaning products are heavy
  • EU Ecolabel cleaning products
  • Discuss any specific concerns with your doctor or midwife

What is overstated

  • Every plastic item in your home is not equally concerning
  • Phthalate exposure cannot be reduced to zero, but reasonable steps significantly lower it
  • "Detox phthalates" supplements are not evidence-supported

What to be careful with

  • "Detox the body of phthalates" claims
  • Imported products without EU regulatory compliance
  • Heavy fragrance on top of fragrance (perfume + scented lotion + scented soap + air freshener)
  • Replacing one plastic concern with another (e.g., disposable plastic alternatives)

What to look for vs what to be careful with

Look for Be careful with Why it matters
EU-compliant, recently made cosmetics Older or non-EU imports EU restrictions are strict
"Phthalate-free" or fragrance-free labels "Fragrance" without further detail Black box ingredient
Cotton/hemp shower curtains Cheap PVC vinyl curtains Common phthalate source
Glass food storage Heated plastic wraps Migration is the realistic concern
EU Ecolabel cleaning products Heavy chemical cleaning sprays Verified standards

When to talk to a healthcare professional

Speak with a doctor or midwife if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or planning conception and want personalised guidance. For specific medical concerns, a healthcare professional is the right resource.

The final takeaway

Phthalates are a real but mostly addressable concern in EU markets thanks to strict regulation. The honest priorities: choose fragrance-free or low-fragrance personal care, skip air fresheners and plug-ins, replace vinyl shower curtains and PVC where simple, store food in glass especially for hot or fatty foods. EU regulation has done meaningful work; your reasonable, prioritised swaps make a real difference at your level.

---

Was this article helpful?
Share this article
Was this article helpful?
Share this article
Editorial standards

Aligned with EU health authority guidance · EFSA-authorised claims · Reg. (EC) No 1924/2006

The Inner Circle

One useful email a month.

Founder notes, real science, member-only offers. No spam, ever.