Tag: Leaping Bunny

  • Leaping Bunny vs PETA Approved: Which Cruelty-Free Label Can You Trust?

    Leaping Bunny vs PETA Approved: Which Cruelty-Free Label Can You Trust?

    You’ve spotted a little rabbit logo on your foundation and felt good about it. But here’s the uncomfortable truth: not all bunny logos mean the same thing, and some mean almost nothing at all. Anyone can print a rabbit on a box; only a handful of certifications actually verify it.

    The two you’ll see most are Leaping Bunny and PETA. Both certify cruelty-free beauty, but they work very differently, and knowing the difference is what lets you shop with real confidence. Here’s what each one actually guarantees.

    In This Guide:

    1. Cruelty-free vs vegan (a quick recap)
    2. Leaping Bunny: the gold standard
    3. PETA Approved: the bigger database
    4. So which should you trust?
    5. Our Sustainable Picks

    1. Cruelty-Free vs Vegan (A Quick Recap)

    These get muddled constantly. Cruelty-free means the product and its ingredients weren’t tested on animals. Vegan means it contains no animal-derived ingredients (like beeswax or carmine).

    They don’t guarantee each other: a cruelty-free product can still contain beeswax, and a vegan product could, in theory, be tested on animals. If both matter to you, you need to confirm both, which is where certifications come in.

    2. Leaping Bunny: The Gold Standard

    Leaping Bunny, run internationally by Cruelty Free International, is widely regarded as the most rigorous cruelty-free certification there is.

    To earn it, a brand must prove there’s no animal testing at any stage of production, from raw ingredients right through to the finished product, including by its suppliers. It has to put a supplier-monitoring system in place, agree to independent audits, and recommit every single year. That’s the key word: audited. The standard is verified, not just promised, which is why the Leaping Bunny list is more selective (and smaller) than others. The one gap: Leaping Bunny certifies cruelty-free only, not vegan.

    3. PETA Approved: The Bigger Database

    PETA’s programme (its “Global Animal Test-Free” and Beauty Without Bunnies logos) is the other big name, and it works on a different basis. Brands sign a written pledge that they and their suppliers don’t test on animals.

    That makes the process lighter-touch, with less documentation and, crucially, no independent audits to verify compliance, so it relies more on trust. The upside is a much larger database and a genuinely useful free app for checking brands on the go. PETA also offers a combined cruelty-free-and-vegan tier, which Leaping Bunny doesn’t. One nuance worth knowing: PETA has kept some brands certified while they sell in mainland China under its specific conditions, which not everyone is comfortable with.

    4. So Which Should You Trust?

    Both are legitimate, and a brand carrying either logo is a far better bet than one with a random, uncertified rabbit on the box. If you want the strongest possible guarantee, Leaping Bunny’s independent audits make it the more watertight choice. If you want breadth, or a quick cruelty-free and vegan check, PETA’s database is hugely handy.

    Two practical rules. First, ignore unbranded bunny logos, only a recognised certification means anything. Second, if ethics run deep for you, check the parent company too: a small certified brand can sit under a corporate group that still tests elsewhere.

    5. Our Sustainable Picks

    Brands that put their certifications where their marketing is, all shoppable on Amazon UK. Drop your tagged links into the markers below.

    INIKA Organic is the overachiever, Leaping Bunny approved, PETA cruelty-free and Certified Vegan by The Vegan Society, plus COSMOS organic. If you want every box ticked, start here. 

    Try: the INIKA Organic Baked Mineral Foundation.

    e.l.f. Cosmetics is Leaping Bunny certified and 100% vegan, at high-street prices, the easiest way to shop certified without spending a fortune. 

    Try: the cult e.l.f. Power Grip Primer.

    Barry M, a British staple, is cruelty-free and now fully vegan across its range, affordable and easy to find. 

    Try: the Barry M Flawless Original Primer.

    Zao Makeup is registered with The Vegan Society and certified cruelty-free, with the bonus of refillable bamboo packaging, ethics inside and out. 

    Try: the Zao Refillable Bamboo Mascara.

    Read the Logo, Not the Marketing

    A bunny on the box is only as good as the certification behind it. Now you know the difference: Leaping Bunny audits and verifies, PETA pledges and lists, and both beat an uncertified logo every time. Pair a cruelty-free certification with a vegan one and you’ve covered both bases.

    Use the labels as your shortcut, lean on the certified brands above, and explore the rest of our sustainable beauty edit to shop with a clear conscience.


    References