Return to Title 21, Code of Federal Regulations Cosmetic
Products Contents
Code of Federal Regulations
Title 21, Volume 7, Parts 600 to 799
Revised as of April 1, 1996
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
CITE: 21CFR700
Page 174-175
TITLE 21--FOOD AND DRUGS
CHAPTER I--FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES--(Continued)
PART 700--GENERAL--Table of Contents
Subpart A--General Provisions
Sec. 700.3 Definitions.
As used in this subchapter:
(a) The term act means the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act.
(b) The term cosmetic product means a finished cosmetic the
manufacture of which has been completed. Any cosmetic product which is
also a drug or device or component thereof is also subject to the
requirements of Chapter V of the act.
(c) The term flavor means any natural or synthetic substance or
substances used solely to impart a taste to a cosmetic product.
(d) The term fragrance means any natural or synthetic substance or
substances used solely to impart an odor to a cosmetic product.
(e) The term ingredient means any single chemical entity or mixture
used as a component in the manufacture of a cosmetic product.
(f) The term proprietary ingredient means any cosmetic product
ingredient whose name, composition, or manufacturing process is
protected from competition by secrecy, patent, or copyright.
(g) The term chemical description means a concise definition of the
chemical composition using standard chemical nomenclature so that the
chemical structure or structures of the components of the ingredient
would be clear to a practicing chemist. When the composition cannot be
described chemically, the substance shall be described in terms of its
source and processing.
(h) The term cosmetic raw material means any ingredient, including
an ingredient that is a mixture, which is used in the manufacture of a
cosmetic product for commercial distribution and is supplied to a
cosmetic product manufacturer, packer, or distributor by a cosmetic raw
material manufacturer or supplier.
(i) The term commercial distribution of a cosmetic product means
annual gross sales in excess of $1,000 for that product.
(j) Establishment means a place of business where cosmetic products
are manufactured or packaged.
(k) The term manufacture of a cosmetic product means the making of
any cosmetic product by chemical, physical, biological, or other
procedures, including manipulation, sampling, testing, or control
procedures applied to the product.
(l) The term packaging of a cosmetic product means filling or
labeling the product container, including changing the immediate
container or label (but excluding changing other labeling) at any point
in the distribution of the cosmetic product from the original place of
manufacture to the person who makes final delivery or sale to the
ultimate consumer.
Page 175
(m) The term all business trading names used by the establishment
means any name which is used on a cosmetic product label and owned by
the cosmetic product manufacturer or packer, but is different from the
principal name under which the cosmetic product manufacturer or packer
is registered.
(n) The definitions and interpretations contained in sections 201,
601, and 602 of the act shall be applicable to such terms when used in
the regulations in this subchapter.
(o) System of commercial distribution of a cosmetic product means
any distribution outside the establishment manufacturing the product,
whether for sale, to promote future sales (including free samples of the
product), or to gage consumer acceptance through market testing, in
excess of $1,000 in cost of goods.
(p) Filed screening procedure means a procedure that is:
(1) On file with the Food and Drug Administration and subject to
public inspection;
(2) Designed to determine that there is a reasonable basis for
concluding that an alleged injury did not occur in conjunction with the
use of the cosmetic product; and
(3) Which is subject, upon request by the Food and Drug
Administration, to an audit conducted by the Food and Drug
Administration at reasonable times and, where an audit is conducted,
such audit shows that the procedure is consistently being applied and
that the procedure is not disregarding reportable information.
(q) Reportable experience means an experience involving any allergic
reaction, or other bodily injury, alleged to be the result of the use of
a cosmetic product under the conditions of use prescribed in the
labeling of the product, under such conditions of use as are customary
or reasonably foreseeable for the product or under conditions of misuse,
that has been reported to the manufacturer, packer, or distributor of
the product by the affected person or any other person having factual
knowledge of the incident, other than an alleged experience which has
been determined to be unfounded or spurious when evaluated by a filed
screening procedure.
39 FR 10054, Mar.15, 1974, as amended at 46 FR 38073, July 24, 1981
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