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Conformité des emballages en marque blanche : comment indiquer ingrédients, origine, codes de lot et avertissements

Your packaging has two jobs: look cute and keep you out of trouble. The secret is treating compliance text like a tiny user manual—clear, consistent, and impossible to misread under bad bathroom lighting.

Key Takeaways

  • Treat compliance text like a tiny user manual: clear, visible, and readable in poor lighting.
  • List materials for nails (e.g., ABS) and use supplier SDS/ingredient lists for adhesives and removers—don’t guess ingredient names.
  • Use an explicit, unambiguous country-of-origin statement that matches how the product is imported or assembled.
  • Include a durable, legible batch/lot code on the outer packaging (and inner tray when possible) and map it to an internal log for traceability.
  • Write warnings that prevent predictable misuse—specific, short, and easy to scan (choking, eye contact, patch-test, ventilation, flammability).

Who this article is for

Wholesale buyers, salon owners, Shopify & TikTok Shop sellers, private-label founders, beauty retailers, and anyone launching or managing press-on nail packaging who needs tidy, compliant labeling.

Private Label Packaging Compliance: How to Write Ingredients, Origin, Batch Codes & Warnings press-on nails from 365nails

The 4 “Must-Get-Right” Label Elements

1) Ingredients (a.k.a. “What is this made of?”)

For press-on nails, you may have two “ingredients” worlds:

  • The nails themselves (materials): e.g., ABS plastic, soft gel polymer, etc.
  • Adhesives/primers/removers (chemical mixtures): may require more formal chemical labeling in some regions.

How to write it (practical and readable):

  • If you’re listing materials, use:
    Materials: ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene), Pigments.
  • If you’re listing adhesive contents, don’t freestyle. Use your supplier’s SDS (Safety Data Sheet) / official ingredient list and format.

Avoid:

  • “Non-toxic” unless you can substantiate it.
  • Vague claims like “Eco material” without a definition.

2) Country of Origin (Origin / Made in)

This is where brands get accidentally poetic. Don’t be literal.

If you assemble in one country and make components in another, you may need a more specific statement depending on the destination market. When in doubt, align with your importer/3PL’s customs guidance.

3) Batch / Lot Code

Batch codes are your “time machine.” When something goes wrong (allergy complaint, glue leakage, color mismatch), batch codes let you trace exactly which production run did it.

Best practices:

  • Put it on the outer box and, if possible, the inner tray.
  • Make it durable (ink that doesn’t rub off).
  • Keep it short but traceable.

Also: maintain a simple internal log: batch code → date → supplier → materials → QC report.

4) Warnings 

Warnings should prevent predictable mistakes. Not scary, just specific.

Common warning topics for press-ons + glue:

  • Choking hazard (small parts)
  • Keep away from children
  • Avoid contact with eyes/mouth
  • Skin irritation / allergy patch test suggestion (for adhesives)
  • Do not use on damaged nails/skin
  • Flammability (for removers/alcohol-based products)
  • Ventilation (for strong adhesives)

Example warning block (friendly-serious tone):
Warnings:

  • Keep out of reach of children. Small parts may present a choking hazard.
  • Nail glue may bond skin instantly. Avoid contact with eyes and mouth.
  • Discontinue use if irritation occurs. Do not apply to broken or inflamed skin.
  • Use in a well-ventilated area.

Final sanity check (the 30-second test)

  • Can a customer find the warnings in 3 seconds?
  • Is “Made in ___” unambiguous?
  • Is the batch code present and legible?
  • Are claims defendable (no magic words like “non-toxic” unless proven)?

Related 365nails resources

FAQ

Do I need a Safety Data Sheet (SDS) for my nail glue or remover?

Yes—adhesives, removers, and other chemical products should have an SDS from your supplier. Use the SDS to populate ingredient lists and hazard/warning wording rather than inventing terms yourself.

Where should I put the batch or lot code?

Put a durable batch/lot code on the outer box and, if space allows, on the inner tray or product itself. Make the code short, scannable, and backed by an internal log linking code → production date → materials → QC notes.

Can I write ‘Non-toxic’ or ‘Eco’ on my packaging?

Avoid vague or health claims like ‘Non-toxic’ or undefined eco claims unless you have documentation to support them. Use specific, verifiable statements that your supplier or certification can back up.

How should I handle country-of-origin wording?

Be explicit and consistent: use the wording required by your importer/customs guidance. If components and final assembly occur in different countries, confirm the correct phrasing with your import partner or legal advisor.

What warnings are essential for press-ons and nail adhesives?

Include choking hazard language for small parts, eye/mouth contact warnings, a recommendation to patch-test adhesives, guidance not to use on damaged skin, ventilation advice for strong solvents, and flammability warnings for alcohol-based removers.

365nails Fit

365nails supports private-label and wholesale press-on brands by helping with product selection, custom packaging options, and supplier coordination. We rely on supplier-provided SDS and ingredient lists for chemical labeling, offer packaging templates that include space for batch codes and warnings, and can help set up traceability practices. For sellers using dropshipping or small-batch private label, we assist with logistics and labeling guidance so your packaging is shopper-friendly and easier to keep compliant—while recommending you confirm final wording with your legal/import advisor.

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