France is moving ahead with one of the world’s toughest crackdowns on “forever chemicals,” with a new law banning most PFAS in cosmetics and clothing set to take effect in January 2026 .
The shift will hit beauty, fashion, and outdoor brands that rely on PFAS-based waterproofing and stain-resistant treatments, and it will likely accelerate reformulation across Europe and beyond. What PFAS Are And Why They Matter Per and polyfluoroalkyl substances , or PFAS , are synthetic chemicals used since the late 1940s to
make non-stick, waterproof, and stain-repellent coatings for everything from frying pans to umbrellas, carpets, and even dental floss. Because they hardly break down in nature, they accumulate in soil and groundwater and have now been detected everywhere from Mount Everest to human blood and brain tissue.
Long-term exposure, even at low levels, has been linked to liver damage, higher cholesterol, weakened immune response, low birth weights, and several cancers. These risks, combined with their persistence, are why PFAS are often called “forever chemicals” and why regulators are now targeting them in consumer products.
Inside France’s 2026 PFAS Ban In February 2025 , French lawmakers approved a law that bans the production, import, and sale of products containing PFAS where safer alternatives exist, effective January 2026 .
The law covers cosmetics, ski wax, and clothing treated with PFAS , while carving out exceptions for some “essential” industrial textiles. A proposed ban on non-stick saucepans was removed from the final text after lobbying by Tefal , the French cookware manufacturer, so PFAS-coated pans are not immediately included…