Definition
IFRA was established in 1973 and is headquartered in Geneva (Switzerland). It works in coordination with RIFM (Research Institute for Fragrance Materials), which conducts safety assessments on fragrance ingredients. IFRA translates RIFM findings into published Standards, setting maximum usage concentrations for individual ingredients across 12 product categories (IFRA official site, accessed 2026-05-27).
As of the 50th amendment (2023), IFRA Standards restrict or prohibit over 100 fragrance ingredients, including oakmoss, treemoss, Peru balsam, and numerous aroma chemicals identified as skin sensitizers.
Impact on niche perfumery
IFRA restrictions triggered reformulations of many classic perfumes, particularly chypres and fougères relying on oakmoss (Evernia prunastri). The niche perfumery community has debated the standards: critics argue usage limits for home use are set conservatively relative to actual risk; proponents cite reduced contact dermatitis rates since implementation.
Several niche houses openly market IFRA non-compliant formulations for limited distribution, relying on legal frameworks outside the EU and US. This carries commercial and legal risk. The Osmothèque de Versailles preserves pre-IFRA formulas for historical study (Basenotes wiki, accessed 2026-05-27).