Packaging
Lola has taken meaningful steps to make its packaging more sustainable but still relies on some single-use plastics. On the plus side, the company’s cardboard-applicator tampons eliminate plastic in favor of smooth cardboard (with a paper wrapper that is recyclable and compostable). Lola’s tampon boxes and other paper packaging are likewise recyclable, and the brand even notes its shipping boxes are made from recycled material and are compostable.
However, many Lola items still use plastic components: for instance, the popular compact tampons have BPA-free plastic applicators and likely plastic wrappers, and the pads are individually wrapped in a thin polyethylene film. The pads themselves include a polyethylene backsheet and use conventional polymers (polypropylene dispersal layer and an acrylic-based absorbent gel) which are not biodegradable. Even cleansing wipes, while made of biodegradable bamboo viscose, come individually packaged
Ingredient Sustainability
The brand avoids the worst offenders. You won’t find any non-renewable petroleum fillers, no toxic dyes or heavy metals, no palm oil, no PVC plastics, etc. The use of certified organic cotton and biobased materials (bamboo, corn-derived propanediol, etc.) shows Lola sources with an eye to renewability and lower environmental footprint. A few components (like plastic layers in pads, or the processing of bamboo into viscose) prevent a higher score, as there is still reliance on non-biodegradable or resource-intensive materials in certain products. However, these are relatively limited within Lola’s assortment, and the brand often provides alternative options (for instance, customers concerned about pad plastics can choose Lola’s cup products instead).
Energy Use and Footprint
When it comes to carbon footprint and energy use, Lola has room to improve. The brand does not yet demonstrate robust measures to minimize or offset its emissions. Transparency on emissions is essentially absent: Lola does not publish data on its carbon footprint or energy consumption, and we found no mentions of climate commitments (e.g. carbon neutrality, science-based targets) on their site.
Waste Management
On the product side, many Lola items are single-use by nature (tampons, pads, wipes, condoms), which inherently generate waste. Recognizing this, Lola has expanded into reusable products (offering a menstrual cup and washable underwear) to give consumers waste-free alternatives to disposables.
Business Model
Lola’s business model is built on providing quality essentials on a subscription basis, rather than pushing trendy, short-lived products, a structure that generally encourages sustainable consumption patterns rather than overconsumption. The company offers a relatively focused product range: menstrual products, sexual wellness, and related care items. These are “evergreen” needs that don’t go in and out of fashion. Indeed, Lola rarely introduces new products for the sake of novelty; most expansions (like adding a prenatal vitamin or postpartum pads) are logical extensions addressing genuine customer needs, not whimsical fads. There are no seasonal collections or constantly changing styles.