Packaging
David’s has built its packaging around recyclability and material reduction rather than plastic. Its toothpastes are filled into aluminum tubes, a metal that can be recycled repeatedly without loss of quality, replacing the multilayer plastic-and-aluminum laminate tubes that make conventional toothpaste tubes effectively unrecyclable.
The tubes are lined with a food-grade, BPA-free barrier that keeps the paste from contacting the metal. Outer cartons are FSC-certified paperboard, and David’s uses vegetable-based rather than petroleum-based inks, avoiding the artificial colorants found on much conventional packaging.
The brand has also taken steps toward reuse. Its mouthwash is sold as a refill kit: customers keep a reusable glass bottle and buy small concentrate refills that are diluted at home
The toothpaste tubes still use a conventional plastic cap, and the floss dispenser is plastic, so the system is recyclable and low-waste but not 100% plastic-free.
Ingredient Sustainability
Across a representative sample of David’s products, the formulas draw on a short, consistent list of plant and mineral-derived ingredients.
The mineral components, calcium carbonate and hydrated silica, are mined and milled domestically; calcium carbonate and silica are abundant, and the brand’s emphasis on USA sourcing shortens supply chains and reduces freight emissions. Sweeteners and humectants such as birch-derived xylitol, vegetable glycerin, and stevia leaf extract are renewable and plant-based, and xylitol sourced from birch is generally a lower-impact choice than corn-derived alternatives tied to intensive monoculture.
The plant-derived ingredients are mostly low-footprint species. Peppermint, spearmint, wintergreen, and anise are hardy, fast-growing crops with modest water and input requirements, and the activated charcoal in the charcoal toothpaste is made from coconut shells, a byproduct that would otherwise be discarded.
The clearest weak point is coconut. Coconut oil and the coconut-derived surfactant sodium cocoyl glutamate appear across the toothpaste sample, and coconut is one of the more sustainability-sensitive crops when grown as a monoculture, where it depletes soil and reduces biodiversity.
Material Sustainability
The materials assessment covers David’s non-formula products, principally the bamboo toothbrush and the floss. The toothbrush handle is bamboo, one of the most sustainable raw materials available: it grows rapidly, regenerates without replanting, sequesters carbon, and needs little irrigation or chemical input. Its bristles are made from castor oil rather than petroleum-based nylon; castor is a renewable, hardy crop that grows on marginal land, and while the bristles are not fully biodegradable, they are a markedly lower-impact choice than conventional nylon and can be removed so the handle composts.
The floss strand is multifilament polyester made from recycled water bottles, which diverts plastic from waste streams and avoids virgin petroleum feedstock; the brand notes that plant-based alternatives did not perform adequately for this use.
Energy Use and Carbon Footprint
The brand reports that roughly 90 to 98 percent of its ingredients are sourced from within the United States, which shortens supply chains and reduces the freight emissions associated with importing raw materials. Production is small-batch and human-powered rather than heavily automated, which limits energy-intensive overproduction, and lightweight, low-volume formats such as the mouthwash concentrate further reduce shipping impact.
However, the brand provides no public measurement or reporting of its greenhouse gas emissions, and there is no evidence of renewable energy use at its facilities, of formal carbon offsetting, or of third-party verification or carbon certification.
Waste Management
As a small operation, David’s inherently generates less production waste than large-scale manufacturers, and several design choices actively reduce waste for the consumer. The mouthwash refill kit is the strongest example: customers keep a reusable glass bottle and repurchase only a small concentrate, with each refill replacing a full-size bottle of finished product. The floss is similarly built around a refillable dispenser, and the reusable tube key helps customers use every last bit of toothpaste, reducing residual product waste. Packaging is designed for recyclability across the range.
These efforts are solid but not yet comprehensive. David’s does not operate a buyback or take-back program, does not report upcycling ingredients or byproducts beyond the coconut-shell charcoal, and its core toothpaste line is not yet offered in a refillable format.
Business Model
David’s operates a slow-consumption business model centered on a compact, evergreen range of oral care essentials. The brand does not chase fast trends or release frequent limited-edition products; its lineup grows slowly and deliberately, with occasional new flavors or formats added rather than seasonal churn.
Products are designed for everyday, long-term use, and a subscribe-and-save option supports steady replenishment rather than impulse buying.
The founder’s stated focus on quality, performance, and conscious consumption, together with messaging that encourages using products fully, reinforces a mindful rather than high-volume approach.