What is Cosmetic Customisation? OEM vs ODM vs Private Label Explained



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What is Cosmetic Customisation? OEM vs ODM vs Private Label Explained

Business & Brand Building
Updated: June 2026
~1,300 words Β· 6 min read

Cosmetic customisation is a term manufacturers use to describe the process of developing a product to a brand’s specific requirements β€” rather than selling a standard product off the shelf. But the level of customisation varies dramatically between manufacturing models. OEM, ODM, and private label each describe meaningfully different approaches, and understanding what each involves is essential for choosing the right manufacturing partner and model for your brand.

What is Private Label Cosmetics?

In private label cosmetics, the manufacturer develops or adapts a formula specifically for your brand. The formula may be developed from scratch to your brief, or it may be a customised version of a base formula from the manufacturer’s library. What defines private label is that the finished formula is exclusive to your brand β€” it is not shared with other brands or available in the manufacturer’s standard catalogue.

Private label gives you control over ingredients, concentrations, texture, fragrance, and performance. You own the formulation and can build your brand’s story around it. The trade-off is development time β€” typically three to six months β€” and higher upfront cost.

What is OEM?

OEM stands for Original Equipment Manufacturer. In the cosmetics context, OEM typically means the brand brings their own formula specification to the manufacturer, who then produces it. This model is used by brands that have their own formulation expertise β€” perhaps they have developed a formula in their own lab or worked with an independent formulator β€” and want a third-party manufacturer to scale it up and produce it commercially.

OEM gives the brand the highest level of formula control because they are not relying on the manufacturer’s formulation capabilities. The manufacturer’s role is production, quality control, and regulatory compliance β€” not formula development.

What is ODM?

ODM stands for Original Design Manufacturer. In cosmetics, ODM typically means the manufacturer designs, develops, and produces the product β€” and the brand applies its own branding and packaging to a product the manufacturer has created. This is similar to what many people call “white label” β€” the core product exists independently of the brand, and multiple brands can use similar products.

ODM is fast and low-cost. Development time is minimal because the formula already exists. The trade-off is differentiation β€” if the manufacturer is selling the same or similar product to multiple brands, your product does not have formula exclusivity.

ModelFormula OriginExclusivityBrand’s IP ControlTypical Use Case
Private LabelDeveloped by manufacturer for brandExclusive to brandHigh β€” formula owned by brandBrands building product differentiation
OEMDeveloped by brand, produced by manufacturerFully exclusiveMaximum β€” brand owns formulaBrands with own R&D or existing formulas
ODMManufacturer’s standard catalogueNon-exclusiveLow β€” formula owned by manufacturerSpeed-to-market, range extension

Customisation Beyond the Formula

Cosmetic customisation extends beyond the formula. Packaging customisation β€” custom glass moulding, custom closures, bespoke secondary packaging β€” creates another layer of brand differentiation. Fragrance customisation, where a brand works with a perfumer to create a signature scent for an otherwise standard formula, is a relatively affordable way to add exclusivity.

The most successful independent brands in the UAE cosmetics market typically combine: a core formula that is genuinely differentiated (private label or OEM), packaging that is distinctive, and fragrance or sensory elements that create a consistent brand experience across the range.

Which Model Is Right for Your Brand?

The decision depends on three factors: your level of formula expertise, your differentiation strategy, and your timeline and budget.

  • No formulation expertise + need to get to market in 3–4 months β†’ ODM or white label
  • Formula differentiation is central to your brand story β†’ private label
  • You already have a formula from your own lab or acquired β†’ OEM

Key questions to ask your manufacturer: Is this formula exclusive to my brand? Who owns the formula β€” me or you? What happens to the formula if I move to a different manufacturer? Clear answers to these questions clarify which model is actually being offered, regardless of the terminology used.

Summary

  • Private label = formula developed exclusively for your brand by the manufacturer β€” exclusive, but takes 3–6 months
  • OEM = you bring your own formula, the manufacturer produces it β€” maximum IP control
  • ODM = manufacturer’s existing formula with your branding β€” fast and low-cost but no formula exclusivity
  • Customisation can extend beyond the formula to packaging, fragrance, and sensory elements
  • Ask your manufacturer directly: who owns this formula, and is it exclusive to my brand?
  • Most successful UAE brands combine private label formulas with distinctive packaging and custom fragrance
  • No single model is universally right β€” it depends on differentiation strategy, expertise, and timeline

Want to discuss your customisation options?

We work with brands across all three models β€” private label, OEM, and stock-based ODM. Book a call to discuss your brief and we will recommend the approach that suits your brand stage and budget.

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