Migliaccio & Rathod LLP is investigating whether the Jo Malone London fragrance is marketed in a way that may mislead consumers about ingredient safety, sensitivity, or “clean” fragrance expectations.
Consumer-safety databases such as EWG’s Skin Deep list Jo Malone fragrance products and ingredient information, including fragrance-ingredient concerns. Separately, lilial, also known as butylphenyl methylpropional, has been banned in cosmetics in the European Union since 2022.
What Consumers Report
Consumers may report:
- Purchasing a Jo Malone London fragrance because of premium, gentle, or refined ingredient positioning.
- Believing the products were suitable for sensitive-skin or ingredient-conscious consumers.
- Paying premium prices based on perceived ingredient quality.
- Later learning that some fragrance ingredients may be restricted or prohibited in other markets.
Why Consumers Should Be Concerned
Consumers increasingly purchase fragrances based on ingredient safety and wellness expectations. If premium fragrance marketing creates a clean, gentle, or sensitive-skin impression while formulas contain controversial fragrance ingredients, consumers may have paid more than they otherwise would have.
Potential claims may include:
- Misleading ingredient-safety representations
- False advertising
- Breach of express warranty
- Consumer protection violations
Signs You May Be Affected
- You purchased a Jo Malone London fragrance because of ingredient-quality or safety expectations.
- You believed the product was gentle, clean, or suitable for sensitive-skin use.
- You paid a premium for those representations.
- You later learned the product may contain controversial fragrance ingredients.
If you have encountered these issues, we would like to hear from you. Please complete the contact form on this page, send us an email at [email protected], or give us a call at (202) 470-3520.
[False Advertising Contact Form]
