We measured consumer exposure to formaldehyde (FA) from personal care products (PCP) containing FA-releasing preservatives. Six study subjects applied facial moisturiser, foundation, shower gel, shampoo, deodorant, hair conditioner, hair styling gel or body lotion at the 90th percentile amount of EU PCP consumer use. FA air concentrations were measured in the empty room, in the presence of study subjects prior to PCP use, and for one hour (breathing zone, area monitoring) after PCP use. The mean FA air concentration in the empty bathroom was 1.32±0.67μg/m3, in the presence of subjects it was 2.33±0.86μg/m3. Except for body lotion and hair conditioner (6.2±0.1.9 or 4.5±0.1.5μg/m3, respectively), mean 1-h FA air concentrations after PCP use were similar to background. Peak FA air concentrations, ranging from baseline values (2.2μg/m3; shower gel) to 11.5μg/m3 (body lotion), occurred during 0–5 to 5–10min after PCP use. Despite of exaggerated exposure conditions, FA air levels were a fraction of those considered to be safe (120μg/m3), occurring in indoor air (22–124μg/m3) or expired human breath (1.4–87μg/m3). Overall, our data yielded evidence that inhalation of FA from the use of PCP containing FA-releasers poses no risk to human health.