Packaging
All cartons are made from 100% FSC-certified paper with a minimum of 30% recycled fibers and printed with plant-based inks. All primary plastic packaging contains a minimum of 30% post-consumer recycled (PCR) content, with most products exceeding that threshold. Skinfix packaging is designed with recycle-readiness in mind. The brand explicitly avoids mixed materials and small components that disrupt the recycling stream.
Primary packaging still includes plastic components (tubes, pumps, caps, jars) that are not entirely eliminated. The 30% PCR minimum is a floor rather than a leading benchmark; some competitors use 50% or 100% PCR. The refill program covers five products out of the brand's approximately 37-product catalog, which is meaningful but not comprehensive. Specific PCR percentages per SKU are not consistently disclosed beyond the 30% minimum commitment.
Ingredient Sustainability
Skinfix's sustainability philosophy explicitly prioritizes what the brand calls "Planet-Safe Formulas," explicitly avoiding ingredients known or suspected to harm the environment including, microplastics, mineral oil, and silicones that can persist in waterways. The brand has independently tested and confirmed that all of its rinse-off products are 100% biodegradable.
The formulations draw heavily on plant-derived emollients, lipids, and functional botanicals. The formulations make heavy use of biotech-derived ferment ingredients, including Bacillus/Soybean Ferment Extract, Saccharomyces Lysate, and Lactobacillus Ferment Lysate. These are produced through fermentation processes with relatively low land and water requirements, and represent a sustainability-positive choice compared to traditional botanical extracts at equivalent functional levels.
Synthetic polymers appear in some formulations. The brand claims all rinse-off products are 100% biodegradable, which suggests these polymers are used primarily in leave-on products.
Overall, Skinfix's ingredient sustainability profile shows genuine thought and commitment in some areas (the 100% biodegradable rinse-off testing, microplastic and silicone avoidance, heavy use of upcycled and low-input plant ingredients like sunflower and rice bran, plant-derived sterols replacing animal cholesterol, the biotech ferment approach) alongside notable gaps (no Fair Trade or ethical sourcing disclosure for shea butter despite extensive use, no coconut sustainability certification, petrolatum use in the Hand Repair Cream that contradicts broader brand positioning, unclear squalane sourcing). The "Planet-Safe Formulas" philosophy is a meaningful differentiator, but supply chain transparency for at-risk ingredients would strengthen this category for a brand of Skinfix's sustainability positioning and Sephora Clean + Planet Positive status.
Energy & Footprint
The brand qualifies for Sephora's Clean + Planet Positive designation, which requires brands to meet at least one of three climate goals: carbon-neutral operations, greenhouse gas emissions reduction, or corporate operations powered by 100% renewable energy. Sephora does not publicly disclose which specific pathway each brand has taken, and Skinfix does not publicly disclose its own Scope 1, 2, or 3 emissions data, emission reduction targets, or climate commitments in detail.
No Climate Neutral Certification, no Science-Based Targets initiative (SBTi) verification, no signing of The Climate Pledge, no publicly disclosed net-zero target, no published annual Impact Report with quantified emissions data. The brand's sustainability page does not address energy use, carbon emissions, or climate commitments directly beyond the commitment to biodegradable rinse-off formulas. No disclosed investment in renewable energy for operations. No disclosed offsets program.
For a mid-size indie brand qualifying for Sephora Clean + Planet Positive, Skinfix meets the baseline retailer-required climate threshold but does not go meaningfully beyond it.
Waste Management
Skinfix's waste management strategy focuses primarily on end-of-life consumer packaging and formulation biodegradability rather than production-side waste metrics. The brand's partnership with Pact Collective (through Sephora's Beauty (Re)Purposed program) provides consumer-facing access to hard-to-recycle beauty packaging recycling.
For a mid-size indie brand, the combination of refillable flagship products, Pact Collective partnership via Sephora, recycle-ready packaging design, and 100% biodegradable rinse-off formulas represents a meaningful waste management approach. However, the absence of production-side waste disclosure and a direct-to-brand empties program limits the completeness of the waste strategy compared to industry leaders.
Business Model
Skinfix received a minority investment from Stride Consumer Partners in 2021, a private equity firm with a history of growing consumer brands (Tatcha, First Aid Beauty, Urban Decay). This investment model typically prioritizes growth and eventual exit, which can create tension with long-term sustainability commitments depending on exit strategy.
For a mid-size indie brand, Skinfix's business model integrates sustainability at the product and formulation level (refillables, biodegradable rinse-offs, planet-safe formulas) and provides a structural 1% sales donation to a social cause. However, the absence of B Corp certification, environmental-specific charitable giving, and a published impact report limits this category.