The Split: Brexit Created a Separate UK Regulatory Regime

On 1 January 2021, the United Kingdom formally left the European Union's single market and customs union. For cosmetics brands, this was not a minor procedural change โ€” it was a fundamental regulatory separation. Before Brexit, a lash brand with EU compliance could sell from Dublin to Edinburgh under one set of rules. After Brexit, those two cities sit in different regulatory universes. The UK no longer recognizes EU CPNP notifications. The EU no longer recognizes UK Responsible Persons. A product that is fully compliant for the EU market is, by default, not compliant for the UK market โ€” and vice versa.

The United Kingdom has one of the world's largest cosmetics markets, valued at approximately GBP 10 billion annually as of 2025, with the lash and eye cosmetics segment growing faster than the broader beauty market. For a lash brand that already sells in the EU โ€” or plans to โ€” ignoring the UK means leaving 67 million consumers and one of Europe's most sophisticated beauty retail ecosystems on the table. But entering the UK market now requires a separate, parallel compliance process that closely mirrors the EU framework while differing in crucial details.

This guide maps the full post-Brexit UK compliance landscape for false eyelash products. It covers the regulatory framework, the SCPN notification system, UKCA conformity assessment, the unique status of Northern Ireland, and practical strategies for managing dual EU/UK compliance efficiently. If your brand is currently EU-compliant and you want to add the UK, this is your roadmap. If you are starting fresh and are deciding between EU-first or UK-first entry, this provides the comparison you need to make that call.

The UK Cosmetics Regulation: Schedule 34 and What It Means

The UK's cosmetics legislation is formally titled Regulation (EC) No 1223/2009 as retained in UK law and amended by the Product Safety and Metrology etc. (Amendment etc.) (EU Exit) Regulations 2019 (SI 2019/696) and the Cosmetic Products Enforcement Regulations 2013 (SI 2013/1478). In practice, the industry refers to this as the "UK Cosmetics Regulation" or simply "Schedule 34" โ€” a reference to Schedule 34 of the Product Safety and Metrology Regulations, which contains the operative provisions.

The UK Cosmetics Regulation mirrors the EU Cosmetics Regulation (EC 1223/2009) in its core structure. The definitions of what constitutes a cosmetic product, the safety requirements, the CPSR (called the "safety assessment" in UK terminology but identical in substance), the PIF requirements, the labeling rules, the GMP standard (ISO 22716), and the notification obligation are all preserved. The UK deliberately chose to maintain regulatory alignment with the EU to avoid creating unnecessary trade barriers โ€” but the enforcement, the notification portal, the Responsible Person geography, and the conformity marking are UK-specific.

The key structural differences are summarized in the following table.

Regulatory ComponentEU (EC 1223/2009)UK (Schedule 34 + Amendments)Practical Impact for Lash Brands
Governing legislationRegulation (EC) No 1223/2009 โ€” directly applicable in all 27 member statesRetained EU law as amended by UK statutory instruments โ€” enforced separately in Great Britain (England, Scotland, Wales)Two separate legal frameworks. Compliance with one does not automatically satisfy the other. Separate legal review needed for each market.
Notification systemCPNP (Cosmetic Products Notification Portal) โ€” managed by the European CommissionSCPN (Submit Cosmetic Product Notification) โ€” managed by the UK Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS)You must notify the same product twice โ€” once in the CPNP, once in the SCPN. The information required is similar, but the portals, login credentials, and submitting entities are entirely separate.
Responsible PersonMust be established in the EU (any of the 27 member states)Must be established in the UK (England, Scotland, or Wales for GB market; Northern Ireland for NI)You cannot use the same RP for both markets unless the RP has a legal entity in both the EU and the UK. Most brands need two RPs.
Safety assessmentCPSR (Cosmetic Product Safety Report) โ€” Parts A and B, signed by a qualified safety assessorSafety assessment โ€” substantively identical to EU CPSR, signed by a qualified safety assessor recognized under UK lawAn EU CPSR is generally accepted as the basis for the UK safety assessment, but it must be countersigned or adopted by a UK-recognized assessor. Some UK assessors accept EU CPSRs directly; others require conversion.
Conformity markingNo specific conformity mark required for cosmetics; CE marking not applicableUKCA (UK Conformity Assessed) marking may apply if the product is also subject to other regulations (e.g., product safety, EMC for electronic applicators)For standard false eyelashes with no electronic component, UKCA is not required. For heated lash curlers, LED lash lamps, or electronic adhesive applicators โ€” UKCA applies.
Enforcement authorityNational competent authorities in each member stateOPSS (Office for Product Safety and Standards) for GB; local authorities for retail enforcementIf a UK authority challenges your product, you deal with OPSS, not an EU member state authority. Enforcement philosophy is similar โ€” risk-based, proportionate โ€” but the contact point and procedure differ.
The Most Common UK Market Entry Mistake: EU-based brands frequently assume that because the UK Cosmetics Regulation was originally copied from EU law, their existing EU compliance documentation is sufficient. It is not. Even if every data point in your EU PIF and CPSR is identical to what the UK requires, you still need a UK-based Responsible Person and a separate SCPN notification. Without these two UK-specific elements, your product is not legally on the UK market โ€” regardless of its EU compliance status. The UK has full customs authority to detain shipments that cannot demonstrate UK compliance documentation.

SCPN: The UK's Replacement for CPNP โ€” Step-by-Step

The Submit Cosmetic Product Notification (SCPN) portal is the UK's equivalent of the EU's CPNP. It is a mandatory online notification system managed by the Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS), which sits within the UK Department for Business and Trade. Every cosmetic product placed on the GB market (England, Scotland, and Wales) must be notified through the SCPN before it reaches consumers.

Prerequisites for SCPN Notification

Before you can submit an SCPN notification, you need: (1) a UK-based Responsible Person โ€” a legal entity with a physical address in England, Scotland, or Wales (see next section for full details); (2) a completed Product Information File, including a valid safety assessment signed by a qualified assessor; (3) the full product formulation with INCI names and concentration ranges; (4) a clear image or PDF of the product label showing UK-compliant Article 19 labeling; and (5) a Government Gateway account โ€” the RP registers at the UK Government's identity verification portal to access SCPN.

The SCPN Notification Process

  1. Register on the SCPN Portal: The UK Responsible Person creates a Government Gateway account at gov.uk. Once verified, the RP logs into the SCPN portal. First-time users complete a one-time organization profile, providing the RP's company name, registered address, and contact details.
  2. Create a New Product Notification: Click "Create a new notification." The SCPN presents a structured web form similar in layout to the EU CPNP, organized into sections: Product Details, Responsible Person, Composition, and Supporting Documents.
  3. Enter Product Identification: Provide the product name (exactly as it appears on the label), the cosmetic product category (select from the SCPN dropdown โ€” "false eyelashes" or the nearest applicable category), the product's physical form, and whether the product contains nanomaterials or is intended for professional use only.
  4. Enter the Frame Formula: Input every ingredient using INCI nomenclature, with CAS number, concentration band, and function. The SCPN uses the same predefined concentration bands as the EU CPNP: less than 0.1%, 0.1-1%, 1-5%, 5-10%, 10-20%, 20-50%, or greater than 50%. This is the most technically detailed section. The data must match exactly with the PIF and the label.
  5. Upload Supporting Documents: Attach the product label image (showing all mandatory Article 19 labeling elements). The SCPN does not require you to upload the full PIF or CPSR โ€” these must be held by the RP and available on request, but they are not uploaded to the portal.
  6. Review and Submit: Verify all entries. Submit. The SCPN generates a unique notification reference number. Save this number โ€” it is your record of notification and may be requested by UK enforcement authorities, customs officials, or wholesale buyers.

Post-Notification Maintenance

Like the CPNP, the SCPN notification is not a one-and-done filing. You must update the notification whenever: the product formulation changes, the label or packaging changes, the Responsible Person changes, or the product is withdrawn from the UK market. The safety assessment must be reviewed regularly โ€” the UK regulation follows the same principle as the EU: an annual review cycle is standard industry practice, triggered whenever new toxicological data becomes available or the formulation changes.

SCPN Practical Note โ€” Data Portability from CPNP: If you have already completed a CPNP notification for the EU, you can reuse approximately 80-90% of the entered data for your SCPN filing. The frame formula, INCI names, CAS numbers, concentration bands, and product description are identical. What changes: the Responsible Person details, the portal credentials, and the label image (if your UK label differs from your EU label). The most efficient workflow is: complete the EU CPNP first, export or screenshot the entered data, and use that as your SCPN source document โ€” entering the same data into the UK portal while updating only the UK-specific fields.

EU CPNP vs UK SCPN: Side-by-Side Comparison

FeatureEU CPNPUK SCPN
Managing authorityEuropean Commission (DG GROW)UK Office for Product Safety and Standards (OPSS)
Legal basisArticle 13 of EC 1223/2009Schedule 34, Regulation 13 (retained EU law + UK amendments)
Who submitsEU-established Responsible Person or their authorized representativeUK-established Responsible Person or their authorized representative
Access credentialsEU Login account (European Commission authentication service)Government Gateway account (UK Government identity verification)
Portal URLhttps://webgate.ec.europa.eu/cpnp/Via gov.uk โ€” https://www.gov.uk/guidance/cosmetic-products-notification-portal
Data requiredProduct name, category, RP details, frame formula (INCI + CAS + concentration band), nanomaterial declaration, label imageSame fields as CPNP. For practical purposes, the data requirements are identical.
Concentration bandsPredefined: <0.1%, 0.1-1%, 1-5%, 5-10%, 10-20%, 20-50%, >50%Identical predefined concentration bands to CPNP
PIF/CPSR uploadNot required โ€” held by RP, available on request within 72 hoursNot required โ€” held by RP, available on request. UK does not specify a fixed deadline but expects prompt provision.
Language of submissionEnglish is the working language, but the portal supports all 24 EU official languagesEnglish only
Public accessibilityPartially public โ€” certain product data is visible to national poison control centersNot publicly accessible โ€” data is shared with UK National Poisons Information Service (NPIS) for medical emergency purposes
Update obligationMust update when formulation, label, or RP changesSame update obligation as CPNP
FeeNo notification feeNo notification fee

UK Responsible Person: Must Be UK-Established

The Responsible Person (RP) requirement is where the post-Brexit split bites hardest for lash brands. Under the UK Cosmetics Regulation, the Responsible Person must be a legal entity established in the United Kingdom. An EU-established company โ€” even one with a subsidiary office in the EU โ€” cannot serve as the UK RP unless it also has a registered legal entity in England, Scotland, or Wales. This is not a paperwork formality; it is a hard legal requirement backed by UK customs enforcement.

Options for the UK Responsible Person

RP Liability in the UK Context: The UK RP carries the same legal responsibilities as the EU RP: ensuring product safety, maintaining the PIF, holding the safety assessment, cooperating with enforcement authorities, and maintaining records of undesirable effects. UK product liability law applies โ€” the RP can be held liable for harm caused by a defective cosmetic product. Professional indemnity insurance covering product liability (typically GBP 1-5 million coverage) is standard for UK RP service providers.

UKCA Marking: Does It Apply to False Eyelashes?

The UKCA (UK Conformity Assessed) marking is the UK's replacement for the EU's CE marking. For false eyelashes โ€” strip lashes, cluster lashes, individual flare lashes, and standard lash adhesives โ€” UKCA does not apply. Cosmetic products are regulated exclusively under the UK Cosmetics Regulation, which does not require or recognize UKCA marking. The product's conformity with UK cosmetic legislation is demonstrated through SCPN notification and the existence of a complete PIF, not through a marking on the product.

However, UKCA may apply if your lash product incorporates non-cosmetic components that fall under other UK regulations that do require UKCA marking. Examples include:

For standard false eyelashes โ€” no electronic components, no UKCA: If your product is a box of strip lashes with a tube of adhesive, your compliance requirements are: UK Cosmetics Regulation compliance (SCPN + UK RP + PIF + Safety Assessment), and REACH compliance for the adhesive formulation (via UK REACH, which is a separate post-Brexit system โ€” see our REACH guide for details). No UKCA marking is needed on the packaging.

GB vs Northern Ireland: The Windsor Framework

One of the most operationally confusing aspects of post-Brexit UK compliance is the status of Northern Ireland. Under the Windsor Framework (agreed between the UK and EU in February 2023, effective from October 2023), Northern Ireland maintains a unique regulatory position: it applies EU rules for goods โ€” including cosmetics โ€” while being part of the UK customs territory. This creates a dual-access situation that lash brands must navigate carefully.

What the Windsor Framework Means for Lash Brands

Practical Dual-Access Strategy Using Northern Ireland: For a lash brand wanting to efficiently access both EU and UK markets, establishing a base in Northern Ireland offers a unique advantage: you can place products on the NI market under EU rules (CPNP notified, EU RP), and those products qualify for unfettered access to the GB market. You would still need a UK-based RP for direct GB market placement, but the NI route provides a fallback and can simplify the logistics for brands that already have EU compliance in place. This strategy is most relevant for brands with physical warehousing flexibility โ€” it requires a physical NI presence (warehouse, office, or fulfillment center) to be credible.

Labeling Differences: UK-Specific Requirements

UK labeling requirements under the retained EU Cosmetics Regulation mirror the EU's Article 19 requirements with two key differences: language and address format.

Label ElementEU RequirementUK RequirementCan One Label Serve Both?
Responsible Person name & addressFull name and address of RP established in the EUFull name and address of RP established in the UKNo โ€” different RP addresses. You cannot list an EU address for the UK market or a UK address for the EU market. Dual-market labels must list both or use separate labels.
Language of warnings and instructionsOfficial language(s) of the member state of sale (up to 24 languages)English โ€” all warnings, precautions, and instructions must be in EnglishPartially. An English-language warning is acceptable in Ireland and Malta (EU member states where English is an official language) but not in France, Germany, etc. A French-only label is legal in France but not in the UK. Multi-language labels covering English plus EU languages can serve both markets.
Ingredient list (INCI)INCI nomenclature โ€” internationally standardized, English/Latin terms accepted EU-wideINCI nomenclature โ€” identical standard, English/Latin termsYes โ€” the INCI ingredient list is internationally standardized and does not require translation. One INCI list works for EU and UK labels.
Nominal contentWeight, volume, or number of itemsSame requirements โ€” number of pairs for lashesYes โ€” "10 Pairs" is acceptable in both markets.
Batch codeUnique batch code on immediate and outer packagingSame requirementYes
PAO symbolPeriod-after-opening symbol with months (e.g., "24M")Same requirementYes โ€” identical format.
Country of originRequired by customs and member state laws for imports from outside the EURequired by UK customs for imports from outside the UKYes โ€” "Made in China" works for both markets.
Conformity markNo CE/UKCA mark for cosmeticsNo UKCA mark for cosmetics (standard lashes; see UKCA section for electronic products)Yes โ€” neither requires a conformity marking on standard lash packaging.

The Dual-Market Label Solution

The most practical approach for brands selling in both the EU and UK is a multi-market label that includes: (1) the EU Responsible Person's full name and EU address, (2) the UK Responsible Person's full name and UK address, (3) warnings and instructions in English plus the official languages of the EU member states where the product is sold, (4) a single INCI ingredient list, and (5) a single batch code, PAO symbol, and nominal content declaration. This approach requires a larger label panel to accommodate multiple RP addresses and languages, but it avoids the cost and complexity of maintaining separate label inventories for the EU and UK markets. For a lash box that measures approximately 120mm x 80mm, this is typically feasible with a fold-out label or a multi-layer peel-and-reveal label construction.

Cost-Efficient Dual EU/UK Compliance Strategy

Managing parallel compliance for both the EU and UK introduces additional costs, but strategic decisions early in the process can reduce duplication significantly. Here is a cost breakdown for a typical lash brand with 10-30 SKUs entering both markets.

Compliance ActivityEU OnlyUK OnlyEU + UK Dual (Optimized)Savings from Coordination
Responsible Person (annual fee)EUR 1,000-2,500/yearGBP 800-2,000/yearEUR 2,200-3,800/year (bundled EU+UK RP from a provider with entities in both jurisdictions)EUR 300-700/year by using a single provider for both markets instead of two separate providers
Safety assessment (per SKU)EUR 400-800 per SKUGBP 350-700 per SKUEUR 500-900 per SKU (single assessment adopted for both markets by a dual-qualified assessor)EUR 250-600 per SKU โ€” significant. The toxicological data is the same; the assessment conclusion works for both jurisdictions. Negotiate a dual-market rate.
Notification (portal filing)No fee (CPNP)No fee (SCPN)No fee for either portal โ€” but labor to enter data twiceManage for 80-90% data reuse from CPNP to SCPN. Data entry time is the cost here, not a government fee.
GMP certification (ISO 22716)EUR 2,000-5,000 (factory audit + certification, valid 3 years)Same certificate accepted in UKEUR 2,000-5,000 โ€” single ISO 22716 certificate accepted in both jurisdictionsEUR 0 โ€” one certification covers both markets.
Label design & printingMulti-language EU labelEnglish-only UK labelSingle multi-market label (EU languages + English + both RP addresses)Saves the cost of separate label print runs and inventory management for two label SKUs per product
Laboratory testing (per batch)EUR 300-600 (microbiology, heavy metals, formaldehyde)GBP 250-500 โ€” same test methods, UK-accredited labEUR 300-600 โ€” single ISO 17025-accredited lab report accepted in both markets (use a lab accredited by both UKAS and an EU national accreditation body)EUR 250-500 โ€” test once, use the report for both compliance dossiers
Annual PIF maintenance (per SKU)EUR 50-150/yearGBP 40-120/yearEUR 70-180/year (single PIF maintained for both markets)EUR 30-90/year per SKU by avoiding duplicate PIF management

Total estimated differential: For a 20-SKU lash brand, the incremental cost of adding UK market access to an existing EU compliance setup is approximately GBP 2,000-4,000 per year in RP fees plus one-time costs of GBP 1,500-3,000 for initial SCPN notification data entry. This is a fraction of the revenue potential of the UK beauty market. Coordinating both compliance streams from the start โ€” rather than adding the UK as an afterthought โ€” reduces total dual-market compliance costs by an estimated 25-40% versus managing them as completely separate processes.

Timeline and Transition Periods: What Is in Effect in 2026

The post-Brexit regulatory transition is largely complete as of 2026, but several ongoing developments require attention.

What is already in effect: The UK Cosmetics Regulation (Schedule 34) has been fully operative since 1 January 2021. SCPN notification is mandatory for all cosmetics placed on the GB market. The UK RP must be UK-established. There are no remaining transition periods or grace periods for pre-Brexit compliance โ€” all products on the GB market must meet current UK requirements.

UK REACH divergence: The UK operates its own REACH system (UK REACH), separate from EU REACH. The transition from EU REACH to UK REACH is ongoing, with full registration deadlines extended to 2026-2028 depending on tonnage band and hazard classification. For lash adhesive manufacturers and importers, this means: substances imported into the UK from the EU or from outside the UK may require separate UK REACH registration. ECHA registrations do not automatically transfer to UK REACH. For the typical lash brand importing small volumes of cyanoacrylate-based adhesive, the 1-tonne-per-year threshold means UK REACH registration is unlikely to be triggered โ€” but the same downstream user obligations (SDS, exposure scenarios, SVHC communication) apply under UK REACH as under EU REACH.

UKCA marking extension: For products covered by regulations requiring UKCA marking (not applicable to standard false eyelashes โ€” see UKCA section above), the UK government has extended the acceptance of CE marking for goods placed on the GB market. As of 2026, the government has indicated indefinite continuation of CE marking recognition for many product categories, including those subject to the Toy Safety, Electromagnetic Compatibility, and Radio Equipment regulations. For lash-related electronic products (heated curlers, LED lamps), CE marking remains accepted on the GB market alongside UKCA.

Windsor Framework implementation: The Windsor Framework has been operational since October 2023. Its provisions for cosmetics โ€” that Northern Ireland follows EU rules โ€” are fully in effect. The "green lane" for GB-to-NI movements and "unfettered access" for NI-to-GB movements are operational, though their practical implementation continues to evolve. Brands with NI-based operations should monitor OPSS and UK Government guidance for updates.

Work with a Dual-Market-Ready Lash Factory

Navigating post-Brexit UK compliance while maintaining EU market access is a solvable challenge โ€” but it requires factories, testing labs, assessors, and Responsible Persons who understand the dual-market requirement from day one. The single most common bottleneck is receiving incomplete technical documentation from the factory that satisfies one jurisdiction but not the other. A factory that has experience preparing documentation for both EU and UK compliance eliminates this bottleneck entirely.

At Aurevia Lashes, our factory in Qingdao supplies lash brands selling across the EU and UK. We prepare technical documentation packages that support both EU CPNP and UK SCPN notifications โ€” including complete frame formulas with INCI names, CAS numbers, and concentration bands accepted by both portals. Our third-party testing reports come from ISO 17025-accredited laboratories (SGS, Intertek) recognized in both the EU and the UK. We can connect you with Responsible Person service providers that cover both jurisdictions through a single point of contact. And we maintain full visibility on the evolving regulatory landscape โ€” when ECHA updates the SVHC Candidate List or UK OPSS issues new guidance, our clients are informed before it affects their products on the shelf.

Request a quotation and mention UK and EU dual compliance โ€” we will include our technical documentation package and our recommended UK+EU Responsible Person network. You can also request product samples to evaluate our lash quality, adhesive performance, and packaging before placing a production order.