Saudi Arabia's Ready-to-Drink (RTD) market is booming, driven by young, busy consumers seeking convenience, with significant growth in RTD coffee & tea, functional drinks, and plant-based options, focusing on innovative flavours, healthier low-sugar/keto choices, and eco-friendly packaging like cans, catering to a rising Western coffee culture and demand for on-the-go refreshment. Key trends include functional ingredients, premiumization, e-commerce growth, and a shift towards sustainable options, with major players investing heavily in this expanding market.

How Saudi Arabia Cosmeceutical Brands in the RTD Drinks Segment Use Reverse Engineering to Achieve
Sensory Match Accuracy

What Science Can Do, Feb 23, 2026.

Saudi Arabia’s Ready-to-Drink (RTD) market is booming, driven by young, busy consumers seeking convenience, with significant growth in RTD coffee & tea, functional drinks, and plant-based options, focusing on innovative flavours, healthier low-sugar/keto choices, and eco-friendly packaging like cans, catering to a rising Western coffee culture and demand for on-the-go refreshment. Key trends include functional ingredients, premiumization, e-commerce growth, and a shift towards sustainable options, with major players investing heavily in this expanding market.

The ready-to-drink (RTD) cosmeceutical market in Saudi Arabia is expanding rapidly, focusing on beverages infused with bioactive compounds, vitamins, collagen, antioxidants, and plant extracts aimed at enhancing skin, hair, and overall wellness. In this competitive field, sensory attributes such as taste, aroma, texture, and appearance are vital, as inadequate sensory appeal may hinder consumer acceptance. Brands often utilize reverse engineering to meticulously analyze competitors’ products to improve or replicate desirable sensory qualities. [1]

Understanding Reverse Engineering in Cosmeceutical RTDs:

Reverse engineering in the context of beverage formulation that involves systematically analyzing a finished product to understand its composition, flavour, texture, and visual characteristics. The process includes:

  1. Ingredient Identification: Determining the primary and secondary components, including bioactives, sweeteners, flavors, stabilizers, and functional additives.
  2. Concentration Analysis: Quantifying the exact proportion of ingredients to achieve balance without compromising functional efficacy.
  3. Sensory Profiling: Assessing aroma, taste, mouthfeel, and color to ensure the recreated product is indistinguishable from the original.

This approach is particularly important for cosmeceutical RTDs where ingredients can interact, degrade over time, or contribute bitterness or off flavors. Reverse engineering ensures that both efficacy and sensory appeal are preserved. [2] [3]   

Reverse Engineering Processes for Sensory Match Accuracy in RTD Beverages:

This table shows that how reverse engineering is applied to achieve precise sensory matching in cosmeceutical RTD beverages. It highlights key actions and tools used to replicate taste, aroma, texture, and appearance without compromising functional efficacy.

Sensory Parameter

Reverse Engineering Process

Analytical & Sensory Tools Used

Typical Challenges in Cosmeceutical RTDs

Outcome (Sensory Match Accuracy)

Taste

• Deconstruction of sweetness, acidity, bitterness, and umami balance

• Identification of taste-active compounds (sweeteners, acids, minerals, bioactives)

• Rebalancing using modulators and masking agents

• HPLC for sweetener and acid profiling

• Electronic tongue (E-tongue)

• Trained sensory panel testing

• Bitterness from collagen, polyphenols, vitamins

• Metallic off notes from minerals

• Aftertaste persistence

• Clean sweetness profile

• Bitterness effectively masked

• High similarity to reference product

Aroma

• Identification of volatile aroma compounds

• Mapping top, middle, and base aroma notes

• Reconstitution of aroma release during consumption

• GC–MS for volatile profiling

• GC-Olfactometry (GC-O)

• Aroma sensory mapping

• Aroma loss during thermal processing

• Interaction of bioactives with flavors

• Rapid aroma fade during shelf life

• Authentic aroma impact on opening

• Stable aroma throughout shelf life

• High consumer acceptance

Texture & Mouthfeel

• Measurement of viscosity, smoothness, and carbonation behavior

• Identification of hydrocolloids, fibers, or proteins affecting mouthfeel

• Optimization of stabilizer systems

• Rheology and viscometry

• Texture profile analysis (TPA)

• Sensory mouthfeel panels

• Grittiness from actives• Phase separation

• Excessive thickness or thin mouthfeel

• Smooth, premium mouthfeel

• Stable texture over shelf life

• Consistent carbonation experience

Appearance

• Analysis of color, clarity, opacity, and haze

• Identification of natural or synthetic color systems

• Optimization of emulsification and stabilization

•Spectrophotometry (L*, a*, b*)

• Turbidity and haze analysis

• Visual sensory evaluation

• Color instability due to pH or light

• Sedimentation of actives

• Cloudiness in clear RTDs

• Visually identical to benchmark product

• Stable color and clarity

• Premium shelf appeal

Structured Reverse Engineering Workflow for RTD Cosmeceutical Sensory Matching:

Reverse engineering in RTD cosmeceuticals in Saudi Arabia typically follows a structured approach:

  • Product Selection & Analysis: Brands identify target the development of beverage products with desirable sensory profiles, often from competitors or market leaders.
  • Component Profiling: Advanced analytical tools such as Gas Chromatography-Mass Spectrometry (GC-MS), High-Performance Liquid Chromatography (HPLC), and spectrophotometry help identify flavors, colorants, and functional ingredients.
  • Flavor & Aroma Reconstruction: Extracting and reproducing key aroma-active compounds while balancing sweetness, bitterness, or acidity.
  • Textural and Visual Matching: Replicating viscosity, carbonation, and color, which may require stabilizers, emulsifiers, or microencapsulation techniques to maintain bioactive stability.  [4] [5]  

This multi-step approach ensures that the final product of cosmetic development beverage closely mimics the target sensory profile while maintaining compliance with local food regulations.

Challenges and Solutions in Sensory Matching:

Replicating sensory characteristics in cosmeceutical RTDs is complex due to:

  • Bitterness from Bioactives: Ingredients like collagen peptides or plant extracts can be bitter.
  • Ingredient Stability: Vitamins and antioxidants can degrade during processing or storage, affecting taste and appearance.
  • Functional-Sensory Balance: Enhancing health benefits without compromising taste requires formulation expertise.

Solutions include:

  • Masking Agents: Sweetness modulators, natural flavors, or bitterness blockers.
  • Microencapsulation: Protecting sensitive ingredients to maintain sensory and functional integrity.
  • Precision Formulation: Adjusting pH, viscosity, and carbonation to match mouthfeel and flavor perception. [6]

Representative Application Approaches and Success Metrics in Saudi Cosmeceutical RTD Beverage Development:

While specific brand data may be proprietary, typical approaches include:

  • Skin-Focused Drinks: Brands replicating popular collagen-fortified beverages with neutral taste by using microencapsulated collagen and natural fruit flavors.
  • Antioxidant-Rich Drinks: Reverse engineering competitor products to achieve both vibrant color and consistent antioxidant levels without bitterness.
  • Custom Flavor Profiles: Brands tailoring flavors to local consumer preferences (e.g., date or pomegranate-based RTDs) while preserving functional activity.
  • Success metrics include consumer acceptance scores, repeat purchase rates, and sensory consistency across batches. [7]

Integrated Sensory and Regulatory Reverse Engineering in Saudi Cosmeceutical RTD Beverages

The table explains how Saudi cosmeceutical RTD brands combine reverse engineering with SFDA regulatory compliance to achieve accurate sensory matching. It highlights the alignment of taste, aroma, texture, and appearance optimization with approved ingredients, claims, and formulation standards.

RTD Cosmeceutical Category

Target Sensory Objective

Key SFDA Regulatory Focus

Reverse Engineering & Compliance Actions

Outcome Achieved

Collagen / Skin-Beauty Drinks

Neutral taste, smooth mouthfeel, premium clarity

Approved collagen sources, claim limits, allergen labeling

Verify collagen origin and purity; control dosage; apply encapsulation and permitted flavor masking

Bitterness minimized; compliant claims; clean, stable formulation

Antioxidant-Rich RTDs

Vibrant color, fresh taste, no astringency

Approved colorants, antioxidant limits, stability data

Profile polyphenols; balance acidity/sweetness; validate antioxidant stability

Stable color; clean flavor; approved antioxidant positioning

Vitamin & Beauty Boost Drinks

Light sweetness, fresh aroma, visual clarity

Vitamin dosage limits, health/beauty claim substantiation

Precise vitamin quantification; aroma reconstruction; avoid therapeutic claims

Fresh sensory profile; safe vitamin levels; compliant beauty support claims

Plant-Extract Functional Drinks

Localized flavor (date, pomegranate), smooth texture

Botanical safety, traditional use acceptance

Select SFDA-accepted extracts; use approved masking agents; optimize viscosity

Local taste matched; botanically compliant formulation

Premium Carbonated Cosmeceutical RTDs

Fine carbonation, smooth foam, visual appeal

Additive limits, carbonation standards, packaging safety

Match CO₂ within norms; select approved stabilizers/emulsifiers

Consistent mouthfeel; fully compliant carbonation and additives

Insights from FRL:

A Saudi Arabian cosmeceutical RTD beverage brand seeks to launch a Vitamin & Beauty Boost RTD drink by collaborating with a Food Research Lab. The lab reverse engineers’ market-leading vitamin beauty drinks formulation, utilizing HPLC and GC-MS for ingredient analysis to replicate their sensory experience while addressing challenges such as vitamin bitterness and aroma loss during processing. Strategies include microencapsulating vitamins, reconstructing aromas, and optimizing drink characteristics like pH and viscosity. Sensory panels and electronic tongue analyses are employed to refine taste and aftertaste, resulting in a stable, appealing cosmetic product development that meets consumer expectations for beauty benefits and indulgence, while adhering to regulatory standards.

Conclusion:

Reverse engineering enables Saudi Arabia cosmeceutical RTD brands to achieve precise sensory match accuracy while preserving functional efficacy in highly competitive markets. By partnering with advanced Food Research Lab, brands can scientifically decode benchmark products, overcome challenges such as bitterness and stability, and deliver premium, consumer-accepted beauty beverage product development. FRLs play a critical role in translating market trends into compliant, scalable, and sensorially superior RTD drink formulations that drive repeat purchase and brand success.

Reference:

  1. Marque, C., Pensé-Lhéritier, A.-M., & Bacle, I. (2022). Sensory methods for cosmetics evaluation. In Nonfood sensory practices (pp. 169–196). Woodhead Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-821939-3.00012-9
  2. Felicia, A. (2025). Sensory science in cosmetics. In Cosmetic industry: Trends, products and quality control. IntechOpen. https://doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.1009804
  3. Bîrsan, M., Gore, E., Scripcariu, Ș.-I., Vlad, R.-A., Antonoaea, P., Pintea, C., Pintea, A., Cotoi, C.-T., Focșa, A.-V., & Ciurba, A. (2025). Multi-active cosmeceutical formulations: Stability, sensory performance, and skin tolerability. Cosmetics, 12(5), 195. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics12050195
  4. Rico, F., Mazabel, A., Egurrola, G., Pulido, J., Barrios, N., Marquez, R., & García, J. (2024). Meta-analysis and analytical methods in cosmetics formulation: A review. Cosmetics, 11(1), 1. https://doi.org/10.3390/cosmetics11010001
  5. Liu, S.-L., Jaw, Y.-M., Wang, L.-F., Chuang, G. C.-C., Zhuang, Z.-Y., Chen, Y.-S., & Liou, B.-K. (2021). Evaluation of sensory quality for Taiwanese specialty teas with cold infusion using CATA and temporal CATA by Taiwanese consumers. Foods, 10(10), 2344. https://doi.org/10.3390/foods10102344
  6. Park, H.-J., Lee, Y.-J., Lee, H.-E., Jang, Y.-A., & Lee, H.-S. (2026). Selecting segmentation strategies for sensory acceptance: Evidence from multiple full-sample and reference-based methods using absolute liking and relative satisfaction. Food Quality and Preference, 138, 105833. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.foodqual.2025.105833

7. Du, X.-N., He, Y., Chen, Y.-W., Liu, Q., Sun, L., Sun, H.-M., Wu, X.-F., & Lu, Y. (2024). Decoding cosmetic complexities: A comprehensive guide to matrix composition and pretreatment technology. Molecules