Inspection & Acceptance Protocol
Personal Care Products Inspection & Acceptance Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)
Audience: Global Buyers, QA Managers & On-Site Inspectors · Companion Report: Personal Care Products Inspection & Acceptance Report
This Standard Operating Procedure (SOP) governs field execution for personal care products quality inspection and acceptance at Canton Buying Desk—independent of the General QC Protocol. Personal care formulations contact human skin directly and are highly susceptible to microbial proliferation; inspection must enforce the corporate mandate: Objective Records, Data-Driven Decisions, On-Site Alignment, and Zero Cross-Contamination. The objective is not merely lot pass/hold disposition, but auditable, dispute-free data substantiating final shipment release for global clients. Use this SOP together with the Personal Care Products Inspection & Acceptance Report.
1. Introduction & Core Operational Framework
When completing the inspection report, anchor every entry to four non-negotiable principles: Objective Records, Data-Driven Decisions, On-Site Alignment, and Zero Cross-Contamination. Expressions such as “smells acceptable,” “feels a bit thin,” “I think,” “approximately,” or “good enough” are prohibited on the official report.
Personal care inspection must prioritize hygienic safety and formula/content stability above ancillary criteria. Before inspection, verify possession of the client-approved Specification, BOM, and Golden Sample (if issued). AQL sampling and disposition follow Section 3 of the Canton Buying Desk General QC Protocol. All findings must be captured through calibrated instruments, standardized comparison tools, and the Zone A/B/C surface protocol defined herein.
2. Visual Zone Partitioning & Hygiene Classification
For finished personal care units (container + formula + print), inspectors must apply the industry-standard Zone A / B / C surface protocol to determine defect severity. Aggregating all surfaces into a single judgment tier is prohibited.
Definition: Core surfaces visible at first glance during consumer use or display—including front logo panels, product name zones, sheet-mask front faces, and retail carton fronts.
Weighting: Scratches, print pull-off, foil lift, or typographic errors on Zone A plainly visible under D65 at 30–40 cm shall be classified as Major Defect (MA).
Definition: Bottle back and side panels—typically bearing ingredient lists, manufacturing licenses, barcodes, and applicable standards.
Weighting: Micro-imperfections ≤0.5 mm are permissible provided regulatory text remains legible. Illegible regulatory information escalates immediately to MA.
Definition: Bottle bases, inner cap surfaces, master cartons, mask trays, and similar low-visibility interfaces.
Weighting: Where function, seal integrity, and assembly are unaffected, superficial flaws are classified as Minor Defect (MI) or accepted within documented process allowances.
Conduct appearance and formula sensory evaluation under standardized D65 illumination (~6500K). Inspection under dim warehouses or color-shifted lighting is prohibited.
3. Defect Classification Dictionary (Personal Care Products Specific)
All field anomalies must be mapped precisely to the following three classification levels without subjective dilution:
| Defect Classification | Code | Personal Care Definition | Common Examples | AQL / Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Critical Defect | CR | Hygiene, regulatory, or safety violations — zero tolerance. | Visible insects, hair, mold, or mildew inside formula; severe off-odor; missing country of origin; prohibited claim wording; major ingredient-list errors; penetrating glass cracks or sharp flash; pre-inspection bulk leakage contaminating outer cartons and causing carton collapse. | AQL 0 · One occurrence = entire lot Fail |
| Major Defect | MA | Functional failure or severe Zone A cosmetic damage. | Seized pump head, poor actuation, cracked cap; Zone A print typos, missing text, ghosting; large-scale label delamination; net content mean below negative tolerance limit; pH outside Specification; dip tube too long (bent at bottom) or too short (excessive residual product). | AQL 2.5 · Exceeding Re = lot rejection |
| Minor Defect | MI | Cosmetic-only flaws that do not affect function. | Minor Zone B/C scratches (≤2 mm); tiny bubbles, dust spots, or adhesive residue; slight color variance within approved limit board; minor gift-box indentations or outer-carton creasing without loss of protection. | AQL 4.0 · Exceeding Re = lot rejection |
CR · Critical
- Hygiene risk: foreign matter, mold, off-odor
- Regulatory risk: prohibited claims, missing ingredients
- Safety risk: glass cracks, sharp flash
- Severe failure: bulk leakage contamination
MA · Major
- Function loss: pump, cap, dip tube
- Zone A cosmetic: misprint, large delamination
- Key metrics: net content, pH out of spec
MI · Minor
- Zone B/C minor blemishes
- Within-limit color variance, dust spots
- Minor outer-packaging indentations
4. Inspection Report Module Execution SOP
4.1 General Profile & Sampling Parameters (Report Section 1)
4.2 Key Physical, Chemical & Sensory Parameters (Report Section 2)
This module strongly recommends testing at least 5–10 pcs, recording minimum, maximum, and mean values (sensory and texture items per checkbox protocol):
① Weigh empty container + pump/cap dry weight W₁ on an electronic balance (or tare empty container from line); ② Weigh filled finished unit total weight W₂; ③ Net content = W₂ − W₁. Test 5–10 pcs consecutively; record min/max/mean and compare against Specification for P/F.
Insert portable pH meter directly into sampled formula and read stable value. If Specification requires 5.5±0.5 and measured value is 6.2, mark F; values outside client Specification count as MA and participate in AQL disposition.
Under standard illumination, visually compare formula color and olfactorily verify fragrance profile against the approved Golden Sample. Match → tick “Match” and P; anomaly → tick “Abn.” and F, with objective description of variance.
Visually inspect and spread-test for uniform texture, separation, or foreign matter; normal → tick “Norm.” and P. Compare unit gross weight against Specification tolerance — abnormally light weight may indicate underfill; do not estimate by hand feel alone.
4.3 On-Site Functional & Special Process Tests (Report Section 3)
This module is optional by test type: when factory equipment is available, QC must execute per SOP below and log data. If unavailable, mark “No Equipment” or “N/A” in the execution status column — fabrication of data is prohibited.
Vacuum Leakage Compliance Test
- Torque cap/pump on filled commercial units; fully submerge in a sealed water chamber of the vacuum apparatus.
- Regulate vacuum to -0.05 MPa to -0.08 MPa for 5 minutes.
- Observe neck threads, pump stem, and tail seals for continuous bubbling or formula seepage; document Pass only when none is observed.
Pump Priming & Dosage Delivery Test
- On unused pump products, actuate until first successful dispense; record stroke count (Prime count ≤5 strokes typical acceptance).
- Weigh 10 full consecutive actuations; divide total mass by 10 to calculate mean weight per actuation (g/act) against Specification.
Centrifugal Emulsion Stability Test
When a laboratory centrifuge is available, place 5–10 ml formula in a centrifuge tube; spin at 3000 rpm for 30 minutes to simulate long-term emulsion integrity. Visible separation, oiling, or thinning constitutes Fail.
Cross-Hatch Tape Adhesion Test (3M 610)
- Apply 3M 610 tape firmly on label edge, silk screen, or hot-stamp zone; burnish; after 1 minute, pull rapidly at 90°, performed 3 consecutive times.
- Log ink lift, label curl, or delamination in the Findings column.
Other Test Items
- Transport Drop Test: Drop packed outer cartons per agreed height using the 1 corner, 3 edges, 6 faces sequence; record inner packaging and product breakage or leakage.
4.4 Defect Tally & Final Disposition (Report Sections 4 & 5)
Photo Traceability Protocol: On-site defect documentation must use a camera with timestamp and location watermark enabled to ensure traceability for subsequent review.
Correct Example: “Among 80 units sampled, 3 bottles at [1 cm below Zone A brand logo (Location)] exhibit [severe silk-screen ghosting with broken strokes (Phenomenon)], classified as [Major Defect (MA)—brand name illegible (Severity)] (Photo Ref 04).”
Incorrect Example: “Some bottles leak; printing looks bad.” — Non-auditable narrative; constitutes protocol non-compliance.
When completing Section 4:
- Tally CR, MA, and MI counts separately into “Actual Defects Found”; enter MA and MI Ac/Re per sample size n from standard tables.
- CR ≥1 → must tick “FAIL/HOLD” regardless of MA/MI results.
- Any defect class ≥ Re → lot Fail; all within Ac → Pass.
Arbitration and Sign-Off Protocol
Once measured data triggers Rejection threshold (Re), the batch is instantly locked as FAIL / HOLD. Private compromises or informal waivers with factory personnel are strictly prohibited. The factory QA head must execute written sign-off on the report.
If factory management refuses to sign, document the refusal contemporaneously, preserve photographic evidence, and immediately escalate to the client’s Canton Buying Desk account manager. Maintaining absolute neutrality and independence from factory interference is mandatory—no release recommendation may be issued based on hospitality, persuasion, or shipment deadline pressure.
5. Integration with General QC Protocol
For foundational AQL code-letter tables, inspection-stage definitions (FAI / DUPRO / PSI / OQC), stratified random-sampling theory, report structure, on-site five-step workflow, and common inspector pitfalls, consult the Canton Buying Desk General QC Protocol.
When executing PSI/OQC on shampoo, shower gel, body lotion, face cream, sheet masks, cleansing balms, and related personal care formulations, this document’s Zone A/B/C protocol and defect dictionary take precedence. Complete the Personal Care Products Inspection & Acceptance Report as the on-site issuance document for supplier alignment and signature.