Ctrl-F "Animal Testing"
Animal Testing
Clinique does not test our products on animals, nor do we ask others to test on our behalf. We use very few animal ingredients; the few that we use are by-products of the U.S. animal food industry. We use them only when their efficacy cannot be duplicated by any other source of ingredients. It is a corporate policy that logos, animal testing for instance, not be displayed on the packaging of our products.
http://www.clinique.com/customerservice/ask_answers.tmpl
Answer
No, Clinique has never been nor never will be an animal testing makeup line. If at all, they use very little animal ingredients and what little that they do use are by-products of the U.S. animal food industry, so it's totally safe. All this infortmation I found from the Customer Service section of Clinique.com. :)
Added 31 March 2010. The above link is down and does not link to the Clinique customer service page. I have contacted them today for an answer. I will post it when/if I receive a response
no its not tested on animals
Tresemme is not tested on animals animals it says on the back of the bottle u by not tested on animals
In contrast to the majority of skin care products by other companies, Clinique products are 100% fragrance free. Also, all of their products are allergy tested.
On the high end I would go with Clinique, it is 100% allergy tested. Fragrance free. Their products and ingredients are not tested on animals. For the drug store market I would go with Physicians Formula which is also hypoallergenic.
It will say on the bottle or website if it is NOT tested on animals. If it doesnt say anything it probably is tested on animals
yes is it really tested on animals
Carmex lip balm is not tested on animals.
No, Animals should not be tested, because animals are killed during the experiments and suffering during studies and they die in vain when they are tested.
Around 73 animals get tested on a day
theres no exact number of animals that are tested on.
90% of animals tested upon anually are euthanized.
It will depend on the individual product. The two statements you are referencing are "Not tested on animals" and "For animal use". The phrase "not tested on animals" means the product was not tested for human safety on animals - it is a humane statement, not a statement of toxicity. The phrase "for animal use" means the product is intended for use on animals, but it may or may not have been tested on animals prior to marketing.