Packaging
Eucerin packaging is dominated by plastic, with a clear effort to move away from virgin fossil-based plastic toward post-consumer recycled (PCR) content. The brand reports that its Face Cleanser bottles are made of up to 98% recycled plastic and its Body Cleanser bottles up to 99% recycled plastic, with transparent PET bottles using up to 97.5% recycled PET.
The more progressive move is the introduction of Hyaluron-Filler jar refills, which the brand reports use 90% less plastic than the original jars.
Beyond these wins, packaging remains plastic-forward. Most products ship in plastic tubes, jars, pump bottles, and outer cartons, with no widespread use of glass, aluminum, or compostable biomaterials. There is no plastic-neutral, plastic-negative, or zero-waste certification, no industry-recognized verification of recycled content claims, and no clear consumer-facing instructions for end-of-life beyond standard municipal recycling.
Ingredient Sustainability
Petroleum derivatives sit at the core of many flagship formulas. Original Healing Cream lists petrolatum and mineral oil (paraffinum liquidum) as the second and third ingredients, with the entire formula essentially built on fossil-based hydrocarbons (petrolatum, mineral oil, ceresin, lanolin alcohol). Baby Eczema Relief Body Cream also contains mineral oil. These materials are non-renewable, non-biodegradable, and carry a significant carbon and resource footprint upstream, regardless of their inert behavior on skin. Synthetic ingredients across the line lean heavily on petrochemical-derived emulsifiers and solvents.
Plant-based ingredients in the line raise their own sustainability questions, several of which fall into the more concerning tiers of common cosmetic raw materials.
Shea butter appears in multiple products but is not disclosed as Fair Trade or organic certified, leaving open the risk of overharvesting pressure on West African shea tree populations and exclusion of women-led cooperatives that have historically managed the supply. Coconut-derived ingredients are not disclosed as organic or sourced from non-monoculture systems.
Other ingredients of concern include licorice root extracts used as the brand's signature soothing actives, sourced without published sustainability or wild-harvesting disclosures, and oat-derived ingredients (colloidal oatmeal, oat kernel extract) sourced without organic certification.
Energy Use and Carbon Footprint
Parent company Beiersdorf has set a Net Zero target by 2045, validated by the Science Based Targets initiative and aligned with the IPCC's 1.5°C pathway, with a commitment to reduce absolute greenhouse gas emissions by 90% across the entire value chain.
Carbon footprint reductions are also linked to product-level decisions: switching from virgin to recycled PET (a reported 16% reduction in packaging-related CO2e for the 400ml recycled PET bottle), lightweighting caps and tubes, increasing the share of side-stream and plant-based raw materials with lower land-use impact, and the Hyaluron-Filler refill system with its 85% packaging-CO2e reduction. Beiersdorf has been a CDP participant since 2006 and reports emissions data in its annual report.
The brand is not yet carbon neutral, has not committed to a near-term carbon-negative or fully verified offset position, and operates global supply chains that still depend on long-distance shipping and energy-intensive manufacturing for synthetic ingredients.
Waste Management
Eucerin's waste reduction efforts cluster around two main initiatives. First, the brand has eliminated microplastics from its cosmetic formulations since the end of 2023, following the UNEP definition of solid, non-water-soluble, non-biodegradable plastic particles 5mm or less. This removes one significant ongoing waste contribution from the product itself. Second, the Hyaluron-Filler refill system represents a small but real step toward circular packaging design, allowing consumers to refill jars rather than purchase new ones.
Beyond these, comprehensive waste reduction is limited. There is no broad refill program across the body care, face care, or sun care lines, no buyback or take-back program for empty containers, and no upcycled or multi-purpose product positioning.
Business Model
Eucerin operates within the rhythms of a large global skincare company. New product ranges and reformulations are introduced regularly, and the brand markets seasonally relevant categories like sun protection with new SKUs and packaging variations. Pricing sits in the affordable mass-pharmacy tier, which encourages accessibility but also enables high-volume consumption. There are no explicit consumer-facing campaigns encouraging mindful purchasing or buying less, and the brand has a wide product catalog with substantial overlap between similar products in different ranges.