Packaging
AEOS bottles its skincare line in glass primary containers, a meaningful upgrade over the virgin plastic that still dominates much of the beauty industry. Glass is endlessly recyclable without loss of quality, and from a long-term pollution and microplastic standpoint it is a strong material choice for liquid skincare. The brand's serums, moisturisers, cleansers, mists, and body lotions all arrive in glass, and product sizing skews small (30 ml serums, 50 ml moisturisers, 5 ml treatment oils), which the brand frames as a function of how concentrated the formulas are.
Pumps and dropper components are not disclosed in detail, and pumps in this category are typically plastic with mixed-material springs that complicate recycling at end of life. There is no published refill or take-back programme, no plastic-neutral or plastic-negative certification, no stated use of post-consumer recycled (PCR) content in secondary packaging, and no detail on the inks, paper, or shipping materials used to fulfil orders.
Ingredient Sustainability
Ingredient sustainability is where AEOS does its best work, and the foundation is uncommon: a 500-acre Demeter-certified biodynamic farm in Lincolnshire where the brand grows a significant share of its own raw materials. Demeter is one of the most rigorous agricultural standards in existence, going beyond organic to require closed-loop soil fertility, biodiversity, and the elimination of synthetic pesticides, herbicides, and fertilisers.
The brand's hero ingredient, biodynamic spelt seed oil, is grown and cold-extracted on-farm using supercritical CO2, which avoids the chemical solvents used in many oil extractions.
Across the sampled product line the plant-based ingredient list draws heavily from the most sustainable end of the spectrum: jojoba
aloe vera, sweet almond oil, sunflower seed oil, calendula, chamomile, lavender, witch hazel, rosehip, grape seed oil None of these carry significant ecological red flags when sourced organically, and AEOS states that all off-farm ingredients are sourced from certified organic and biodynamic farms.
Several ingredients deserve closer attention because of how easily they tip into unsustainable territory in the wider industry. Argan kernel oil appears in multiple formulas and sits in the moderately-low sustainability tier because of overharvesting pressure on Moroccan argan forests, though it is generally sustainable when sourced from women-led cooperatives and certified organic supply.
Notably absent from the formulas: palm oil and palm derivatives, petrochemical emollients (paraffin, petrolatum, mineral oil), silicones, and PEGs. The synthetic functional ingredients that do appear (cetearyl olivate and sorbitan olivate emulsifiers derived from olive, coco glucoside surfactant, xanthan gum, plant-derived glycerin, leuconostoc radish root ferment as a preservative) are biodegradable and low-impact.
Hyaluronic acid is bio-fermented rather than animal-derived. The overall ingredient profile is one of the more sustainable in the prestige skincare category.
Energy Use and Carbon Footprint
AEOS does not publish a carbon footprint, has no carbon-neutral or climate-positive certification, and does not disclose whether the Lincolnshire farm or manufacturing facility runs on renewable energy.
What does work in AEOS's favour is structural. Growing the majority of botanical inputs on a single UK farm and manufacturing in the UK eliminates the long-haul ingredient supply chains that drive emissions for most prestige skincare brands. There is no evidence of air-freighted ingredients or split global manufacturing. For the UK and European customer base, this is a meaningfully shorter supply chain than industry standard.
Waste Management
There is no refill program, no buyback or take-back scheme, no upcycled-byproduct ingredient line, and no public commitment to circular packaging on AEOS's site. The brand's main waste-reduction lever is product concentration: formulas are highly concentrated and intended to be used sparingly, which extends the lifespan of each bottle and reduces consumption frequency. Biodynamic farming is itself a closed-loop, low-waste agricultural model (compost, animal manure, and on-farm preparations replace external chemical inputs), and grape seed oil in the body lotion is a wine-industry byproduct, which is a small but real upcycling touch.
Business Model
AEOS runs a tight, evergreen catalogue of roughly two dozen products organised around a three-step ritual, with no seasonal collections, no trend-driven launches, and no constant new product drops. The brand explicitly markets itself as a 'complete skincare solution' that should be used together for at least two months to see results, which discourages cross-shopping and impulse purchasing. There are no aggressive discount cycles, no flash sales, and the price point itself ensures a slow-purchase rhythm. Marketing focuses on the long-term care of skin, the philosophy behind the farm, and the ritual of application rather than novelty.