This is actually for a product I've been selling for years and am trying to improve it as sales are really picking up and I now sell several thousand dollars worth every month. The product is sold in heat sealed packets much like ketchup packets at fast food places so it's not in a spray bottle to be "spritzable". Once the buyer is ready to use it, the instructions say to empty the packet into a 500ml bottle of rubbing alcohol, the alcohol then allows both the water and oil based parts of my product to "homogenize" into a "single" liquid with no oil floating on top and the essential oil is then highly diluted when the product is mixed and ready to use. The final solution is then meant to refill the cleaning solution cartridge for the shaver's automatic self-cleaning base, it is not for "manual" use where it would at any time touch someone's skin unless accidentally spilled.
I agree there is still a risk of spilling it on your hands when transferring it to the alcohol bottle, but one of the improvements I have planned is to mix the essential oil with mineral oil to better lubricate the shaver, I was planning in diluting it at about a rate of 1:1 (for example 1 ml eo to 1 ml mo), is that enough to make it safe? In any case the essential oil makes up about 30% of the product by volume so there isn't much room for dilution (the water part can be reduced to make room for other ingredients like the mineral oil I will soon be adding to my new formula).
However I just realized my product is no more dangerous than EO bottles you can buy at the grocery store, so why would it be a risk for my product but not for EO bottles which are 100% EO?
Since this product is by extremely far my #1 seller (I sell 5400% more of this than I do soap) I want to make it the best and safest I can for my customers. Would adding warnings to avoid skin contact and wash thoroughly in case of contact be enough?
I know I hadn't explained what the product is until now, now that I explained it in more detail I'd like to know what I can do to prevent lawsuits and to ensure the longest shelf life possible (ideally at least 1-2 years).
Thanks