If you have ever bought something because it said clean, natural, or non-toxic on the front, you are in good company. These words feel reassuring. The uncomfortable truth is that almost none of them mean anything official, and that gap is exactly why so many brands keep landing in court.
Is there a legal definition of clean beauty?
No. There is no regulatory or legal definition of clean in beauty anywhere in North America. The same is true for natural and non-toxic. Any brand can print these words on a label and define them however they like, or not define them at all. That is not a small loophole. It is the entire reason the category feels so confusing.
Why does this end up in lawsuits?
Because when a word has no fixed meaning, shoppers fill in their own, and sometimes the product does not match. Several major beauty retailers and brands have faced class-action lawsuits over their clean, natural, or hypoallergenic claims, with plaintiffs arguing that products marketed this way still contained ingredients a reasonable person would not expect. Some of these cases were dismissed and others are ongoing, but the pattern is clear: when marketing promises more than the label delivers, trust breaks down.
So what should clean actually mean?
We think it should mean something simple and verifiable: you can see exactly what is in the bottle, and there is nothing in there that does not need to be. Not a curated list of scary ingredients a brand happens to leave out while keeping a dozen others you cannot pronounce. Real transparency is not a badge. It is a short, honest ingredient list you can read in five seconds.
How to judge a product for yourself
A few habits cut through almost all the noise. Read the back of the bottle, not the front. Count the ingredients, because a shorter list is usually a more honest one. Look for words you recognize as actual things, not chemical names buried mid-list. And ask whether the brand tells you where its ingredients come from. Marketing language is cheap. A traceable, transparent ingredient list is not.
Where Canadian Grace stands
We do not use the word clean as a marketing badge, because we do not need to. Our bottles contain one ingredient: the oil. There is no made-without list to memorize, because there is nothing else in there to leave out. When you pick up our argan or rosehip, the front of the bottle and the back of the bottle say the same thing. That is the only definition of clean we trust.
If you want to see how simple an ingredient list can actually be, have a look at our oils. The earth already gave us everything these products need, so there was never anything to hide. For more on this, we also wrote about why big brands dilute their oils.