USA Contract Manufacturer for Teeth Whitening, Dietary Supplements & Topicals

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(626) 380-5887 | (714) 858-3097 info@atriumsci.com
10871 Capital Ave Garden Grove, CA 92843
oral care contract manufacturing laboratory

Oral Care Contract Manufacturing: A Complete Guide for Private Label Brands

Oral care contract manufacturing is the backbone of the private label oral care industry. Whether you’re building a whitening brand, launching a specialty mouthwash, or formulating an innovative oral supplement, partnering with an experienced contract manufacturer determines whether your product reaches market on time, in compliance, and with the quality your customers expect. This guide walks through everything a brand owner needs to know before signing a manufacturing agreement.

What Is Oral Care Contract Manufacturing?

Oral care contract manufacturing is the process by which a brand owner outsources the formulation, production, quality testing, and often packaging of oral care products to a specialized third-party facility. Rather than building and staffing their own manufacturing plant — an investment that can run into the tens of millions of dollars — brands work with contract manufacturers to reach market faster, at lower capital cost, and with access to established regulatory infrastructure.

Contract manufacturers in this space typically offer services across the full product development lifecycle: from initial concept and formulation development through stability testing, manufacturing scale-up, and finished goods delivery. The brand retains ownership of the formula (or co-develops it), while the manufacturer handles the operational complexity.

Oral Care Product Categories Available for Private Label

A full-service oral care contract manufacturer can produce a wide range of product formats. Understanding which category your product falls into is the first step in evaluating potential manufacturing partners.

Toothpaste and Whitening Toothpaste

Toothpaste is one of the most regulated oral care categories because many formulas contain active drug ingredients — fluoride for cavity prevention, or hydrogen peroxide for whitening — that classify the product as an OTC drug. Private label toothpaste requires compliance with FDA’s OTC monograph system and must meet specific active ingredient thresholds. Manufacturers must understand both cosmetic and drug GMP requirements to produce these products legally.

Mouthwash and Oral Rinse

Mouthwash formulations range from pure cosmetics (freshening breath without antibacterial claims) to OTC drugs (products containing active antiseptic ingredients like cetylpyridinium chloride). The regulatory classification depends entirely on the product’s intended use claims. An experienced oral care contract manufacturer will guide brands through this distinction before formulation work begins — because changing the classification mid-project is costly.

Teeth Whitening Strips

Teeth whitening strips represent one of the fastest-growing segments in consumer oral care. The manufacturing process is technically demanding: whitening gel must be formulated with precise hydrogen peroxide concentrations, applied uniformly to a flexible strip substrate, and packaged in conditions that maintain stability over the product’s shelf life. Shelf life and heat resistance are among the most critical quality factors — a topic covered in depth in our post on the most important criteria of teeth whitening products.

Oral Dissolving Films

Oral dissolving films (ODFs) are a newer but rapidly adopted format in both oral care and supplement delivery. In oral care applications, ODFs can deliver active whitening agents, fluoride, or breath-freshening compounds directly via the oral mucosa. The technology allows for innovative products that don’t fit neatly into the toothpaste or strip categories, offering strong consumer differentiation for brands willing to invest in the format.

Specialty Oral Care Supplements

The convergence of oral health and nutritional supplementation has created a growing category of oral care supplements: products containing probiotics for gum health, collagen peptides for oral tissue, CoQ10 for periodontal support, or vitamin D for enamel strength. These products are regulated as dietary supplements under FDA’s DSHEA framework rather than OTC drugs, which changes the manufacturing requirements and the GMP standard that applies.

oral care private label products toothpaste mouthwash

FDA Regulatory Framework for Oral Care Products

Regulatory compliance is the most complex dimension of oral care product development. Understanding how FDA categorizes oral care products is essential before any formulation work begins — and choosing the wrong contract manufacturer here can be catastrophic for a brand.

Cosmetics vs. OTC Drugs: What Category Is Your Product?

FDA draws a sharp line between cosmetics and OTC drugs. A cosmetic only affects appearance — a mouthwash that freshens breath without antibacterial claims is a cosmetic. An OTC drug is intended to treat or prevent disease or to affect the structure or function of the body. A toothpaste with sodium fluoride making anticavity claims is an OTC drug. Many oral care products are both: a whitening toothpaste with fluoride is simultaneously a cosmetic (whitening) and a drug (anticavity), requiring compliance with both regulatory frameworks.

cGMP Requirements for Oral Care Manufacturing

OTC drug manufacturers must operate under 21 CFR Part 211 (cGMP for finished pharmaceutical products), which imposes significantly stricter requirements than the dietary supplement cGMP standard (21 CFR Part 111). Pure cosmetic manufacturers operate under 21 CFR Part 700. Brands should confirm which regulatory standard their manufacturer operates under — and whether it matches the intended regulatory classification of their product — before signing any contract.

The Oral Care Contract Manufacturing Process

Understanding what happens inside a contract manufacturer from contract signature to finished goods helps brand owners set realistic timelines and ask the right questions during vendor evaluation.

Formulation Development

Formulation begins with a technical brief from the brand: target claims, delivery format, active ingredients, flavor and texture preferences, target retail price point, and any ingredient restrictions (vegan, gluten-free, no artificial dyes). Experienced formulators translate these requirements into a working prototype, balancing efficacy, stability, consumer experience, and manufacturing feasibility. Expect two to five formulation iterations before a formula is locked for scale-up.

Stability and Shelf-Life Testing

Stability testing confirms that a formula retains its claimed potency, appearance, and safety profile throughout its stated shelf life under expected storage conditions. ICH guidelines define accelerated and real-time stability protocols. For oral care products, stability testing is not optional — it is required to substantiate shelf-life claims and is among the first things an FDA inspector will request. Most OTC drug products require at least 24-month real-time stability data supported by accelerated studies.

Quality Control and Certificate of Analysis

Every batch of finished oral care product must be accompanied by a Certificate of Analysis (COA) confirming that the batch was tested against specification and passed. For OTC drug products, the COA must document identity, purity, potency, and safety testing per 21 CFR Part 211. A COA from a reputable contract manufacturer will identify the testing method, specification range, actual result, and pass/fail determination for each tested parameter.

oral care contract manufacturing production facility

What to Look for in an Oral Care Contract Manufacturer

Not all contract manufacturers are equipped to produce every type of oral care product. Before requesting a quote, verify the following:

  • FDA facility registration and inspection history — OTC drug manufacturers must be registered with FDA. Ask for the facility’s FEI number and the date and outcome of their most recent FDA inspection.
  • Product format capabilities — Confirm the manufacturer has commercial-scale equipment for your specific format. Strip manufacturing requires specialized coating and lamination equipment that not every contract manufacturer possesses.
  • In-house laboratory — An in-house analytical lab with HPLC and microbiological testing capability allows faster turnaround on COA testing and reduces dependence on third-party labs for routine batch release.
  • Minimum order quantities — MOQs in oral care manufacturing vary widely by format. Understand the minimum before committing to a partner whose floor is too high for your launch volume.
  • Regulatory support — If your product requires OTC monograph compliance or FDA facility registration, does your manufacturer have regulatory affairs staff who can support this, or will you need to hire a separate consultant?
dental quality assurance oral care certification

The Role of the ADA Seal in Oral Care Product Positioning

For consumer-facing oral care products, the American Dental Association’s Seal of Acceptance is one of the most recognized third-party quality endorsements available. The ADA’s guidance on tooth whitening safety and effectiveness provides the scientific framework manufacturers and brands use to substantiate efficacy claims. While the ADA Seal is not required, products that earn it gain a significant credibility advantage in retail and professional channels alike.

Oral Care Contract Manufacturing with Atrium Scientific

Atrium Scientific specializes in oral care contract manufacturing for brands that require both scientific rigor and commercial-scale production capability. Our services include whitening strips, oral dissolving films, and specialty oral care formulations developed in partnership with our in-house team of formulators and quality scientists.

Every product we manufacture is backed by full batch COA documentation and stability testing. We work with brands at all stages — from initial concept through commercial launch. Learn more about our full range of manufacturing services or contact our team to discuss your oral care project.

Frequently Asked Questions About Oral Care Contract Manufacturing

How long does oral care contract manufacturing take from concept to finished goods?

Timeline varies by product complexity and regulatory category. A cosmetic mouthwash with existing base formulas can move from brief to finished goods in 12–16 weeks. An OTC drug product requiring full monograph compliance and stability work typically takes 6–12 months. Whitening strips with custom gel concentrations usually fall in the 16–24 week range for an initial production run.

What is the difference between a cosmetic and an OTC drug oral care product?

The distinction comes down to intended use claims. A mouthwash claiming only to freshen breath or improve appearance is a cosmetic. One claiming to kill bacteria, prevent gingivitis, or remineralize enamel is an OTC drug. Active drug ingredients — fluoride, hydrogen peroxide above certain concentrations, antibacterial agents — automatically make a product an OTC drug regardless of marketing language.

Can I own my formula with a contract manufacturer?

Formula ownership terms vary by manufacturer. Some offer white-label products from their existing formula library — you don’t own the formula but pay lower development costs. Others will co-develop a proprietary formula you own exclusively under a signed IP agreement. If formula ownership is important to your brand strategy, confirm the terms in writing before development begins.

Do oral care contract manufacturers handle private label packaging?

Most full-service oral care contract manufacturers offer packaging services ranging from filling into customer-supplied packaging to full turnkey solutions including container sourcing, label printing, and outer carton assembly. Confirm which packaging formats a manufacturer supports and whether their pricing is all-in or component-based.

What certifications should an oral care contract manufacturer hold?

At minimum, look for FDA facility registration and cGMP certification — 21 CFR Part 211 for OTC drug products, 21 CFR Part 111 for supplement formats. ISO 22716 (Good Manufacturing Practices for cosmetics) and NSF certification may also matter depending on your product type and target retail channel.

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