No, I would not count Pantene as cruelty-free under a strict vegan shopping standard.
Pantene says it does not test its products on animals and points to non-animal testing methods, but PETA lists Pantene as not cruelty-free. That is enough reason for strict shoppers to choose another shampoo brand.
For vegan shoppers, the cleanest answer comes from two separate checks: animal testing policy and ingredients. A brand can be cruelty-free without every formula being vegan. A formula can be vegan while the parent brand still fails a strict cruelty-free standard.
Quick Answer
No, I would not count Pantene as cruelty-free under a strict vegan shopping standard.

If you only buy from brands with a clear no-animal-testing policy, supplier coverage, and third-party confirmation, do not rely on vague wording like "finished product not tested on animals."
A cleaner cruelty-free policy covers the finished product, the ingredients, the suppliers, and any third-party testing. It also rules out testing that happens because a brand wants to sell in a market with animal-testing requirements.
Does Pantene Test On Animals?
Pantene says it does not test its products on animals and points to non-animal testing methods, but PETA lists Pantene as not cruelty-free. That is enough reason for strict shoppers to choose another shampoo brand.
The phrase "not tested on animals" can mean different things. It may refer only to the finished product. It may not cover ingredients, suppliers, parent companies, or markets where regulators can require animal testing.
That is why two shoppers can read the same brand statement and reach different answers. A casual shopper may accept "we do not test our products on animals." A strict cruelty-free shopper wants proof that the brand will not allow animal testing anywhere in the chain.
Is Pantene Vegan?
Pantene also is not a fully vegan brand. Some formulas may be free of obvious animal ingredients, but that needs a product-by-product check.
For hair care and skincare, watch for keratin, silk amino acids, collagen, lanolin, beeswax, honey, milk proteins, and carmine. Some brands label individual vegan products clearly. Others make you read the ingredient list.
What About The Parent Company?
Parent companies matter to some shoppers and not to others. Some people will buy from a cruelty-free brand owned by a parent company that is not cruelty-free. Others avoid the whole parent company. Pick the line you can stick with.

The bigger issue is clarity. If a brand has no third-party certification, no supplier policy, and no clear answer about required-by-law testing, it is safer to buy from a brand that publishes those details plainly.
Better Shopping Move
If the answer here is not clean enough for you, pick brands with Leaping Bunny, PETA Global Animal Test-Free, or a clear published policy that covers products, ingredients, suppliers, and third-party testing.
For more swaps, start with our cruelty-free hair products, cruelty-free shampoo brands, cruelty-free conditioner brands, and Old Spice guides.
When you are standing in the aisle, look for a real certification logo first. If there is no logo, check the brand's current animal-testing page, then scan the product label for animal-derived ingredients.
Bottom Line
No, I would not count Pantene as cruelty-free under a strict vegan shopping standard. Check the latest policy before buying, because beauty brands change owners, markets, formulas, and certifications.
Useful source for checking the current policy: Pantene animal-testing information.
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