Overview:

Sustainability 7.5/10
Non-toxicity 7.0/10

Davines is a family-owned Italian haircare and skincare company producing professional salon hair products, body care, and skincare with a stated commitment to sustainability across formulation, packaging, and operations.

Highlights:

  • Certified B Corporation since 2016
  • Carbon neutral production since 2018
  • Plastic neutral via Plastic Bank partnership

Sustainability

score : 7.5/10

Packaging

Davines has put considerable design effort into reducing the environmental footprint of its packaging, although the company has not eliminated plastic from its lineup. As of recent reporting, roughly 64 to 67 percent of total packaging is made from recycled, bio-based, or mass-balance materials, with paper and cardboard packaging exceeding 90 percent recycled content. Bottles for shampoos, conditioners, and other liquid formulas typically use post-consumer recycled PET (rPET) or bio-based polyethylene derived from sugarcane, which is recyclable and has a lower carbon footprint than conventional fossil-based plastic.

The brand operates an in-house Packaging Research and Development department guided by eco-design principles, focusing on lightweighting (which reduced plastic use by 160 tonnes between 2014 and 2022), mono-material design for easier recycling, and elimination of unnecessary secondary packaging.

Davines also offers 500ml refill pouches for shampoos and conditioners, which the brand reports cut plastic consumption by 74 percent compared to two standard 250ml bottles.

A Take Back Box program with Green Circle Salons provides an in-salon collection channel for hard-to-recycle items like aerosols, dark plastics, and combined materials, although this is currently limited to a pilot network of participating salons rather than a comprehensive consumer-facing buyback system.

Ingredient Sustainability

The brand's Essential Haircare line incorporates signature plant extracts sourced from Italian Slow Food Presidia farms. These are small-scale producers cultivating heirloom species at risk of extinction, such as the Cartucciaru melon from Sicily, and the Minuta olive from Messina.

These partnerships, in place since 2014, support biodiversity, traditional cultivation, and small family farms rather than monoculture supply chains.

In 2024, Davines reached a notable milestone by obtaining Regenerative Organic Certification for the European Regenerative Organic Center (EROC), a 17-hectare research and farming hub in Parma run in partnership with the Rodale Institute.

ROC is one of the strongest standards available, covering soil health, animal welfare, and farmworker fairness simultaneously. However, ROC-certified ingredients currently appear in a limited number of products, typically limited-edition or campaign-linked items, rather than across the entire range.

Where the ingredient picture becomes more mixed is in the breadth of plant materials used across the broader catalog. The Authentic Formulas line, which the brand markets as 98 to 100 percent of plant origin, contains a mix of inherently sustainable ingredients alongside several that carry meaningful sustainability concerns when not carefully sourced. Safflower oil, sunflower oil, sesame oil, and jojoba oil are all relatively low-impact crops.

The Authentic Nourishing Oil also includes geranium (pelargonium) oil, patchouli oil, and citronella oil, all of which are typically associated with monoculture farming and soil depletion when grown at scale. 

Shea butter appears in the line as well, which can be sustainable when sourced from West African cooperatives but can also become a pressure point on shea tree populations under high demand. 

Davines does specify use of organic safflower oil and certified palm derivatives, but full sourcing transparency for individual ingredients like geranium, patchouli, or shea is not consistently provided product-by-product.

Synthetic ingredients across the lineup are mostly mild surfactants from the coconut and glucose families.

Energy Use and Carbon Footprint

Davines is one of the strongest performers in the professional haircare category on energy and emissions. The company achieved carbon neutrality across all its branches worldwide in 2018 and 2019 through a combination of emissions reduction and credible offsetting, including the EthioTrees reforestation and soil regeneration project in the Tembien Highlands of Ethiopia.

The brand has set emission reduction targets validated by the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) and has committed to net zero emissions by 2030 as part of the B Corp Net Zero 2030 pledge.

Davines publishes annual sustainability reports detailing direct and indirect emissions across scopes 1, 2, and 3, with the 2024 report drafted following GRI 2021 standards.

Waste Management

Davines makes meaningful efforts to reduce waste through both product design and end-of-life systems. The refill pouch program for the most popular shampoos and conditioners is the most impactful single waste-reduction initiative, reducing plastic by 74 percent per equivalent volume. The Take Back Box program with Green Circle Salons provides an in-salon collection point for hard-to-recycle items, although it remains in a piloted rollout across a subset of participating salons rather than a universally available buyback system.

All waste from the Davines Village production facility is reportedly recycled or recovered through a waste-to-energy process, with only a small residual amount sent for incineration. The brand emphasizes mono-material packaging designs to facilitate consumer recycling and provides clear disposal guidance.

Where Davines could go further is in true buyback or refill-at-home programs available to all consumers, not just salon clients, and in eliminating remaining single-use components like pumps and small caps. Multi-purpose products are present in the Authentic Formulas line (oil, butter, and shampoo formulated for use on hair, face, and body), but most of the broader catalog is single-purpose.

Business Model

Davines operates closer to slow consumption principles than most large beauty companies. Each Essential Haircare family addresses a specific hair need (hydration, smoothness, volume, color protection, repair, shine) rather than being driven by seasonal trend cycles. 

The same core lines have remained in the catalog for many years with formula refinements rather than constant new launches, and the brand emphasizes salon-prescribed routines built around long-term hair health rather than impulse purchasing.

Davines does release limited-edition products tied to its annual sustainability campaigns, such as the We Sustain Beauty and Grow Beautiful collections, but these are framed as climate action initiatives rather than novelty drops. The brand runs occasional promotions and gift-with-purchase programs, particularly through its direct-to-consumer site, which slightly softens what would otherwise be a more restrained model.

Non-toxicity

score : 7.0/10

The Essential Haircare line and the Naturaltech anti-aging line are free of sulfates (no SLS or SLES), parabens, formaldehyde-releasing preservatives, mineral oil, and petrolatum. Surfactants are drawn primarily from milder coconut and glucose-derived families, including sodium lauroyl methyl isethionate, sodium cocoyl isethionate, cocamidopropyl betaine, decyl glucoside, and coco-glucoside. These are widely regarded as low-irritation alternatives to harsher detergents.

Preservation systems rely largely on sodium benzoate, potassium sorbate, benzyl alcohol, and citric acid for pH adjustment, which sit in lower-toxicity categories. The brand does not use formaldehyde donors, methylisothiazolinone, triclosan, or quaternium-15 in its standard formulations. 

Synthetic colorants are present in some lines and synthetic fragrance (parfum) is used across most formulations.

PEG-40 hydrogenated castor oil appears in products and can carry trace contamination with 1,4-dioxane unless rigorously purified. Polysorbate 20 carries the same concern. Silicones such as amodimethicone, dimethicone, and cyclomethicone appear in several styling and conditioning products. While these are not acutely toxic for human use, they are persistent in the environment.

Social Responsibility

score : 7.0/10

Social Responsibility

Fair Labor

Davines operates centralized manufacturing at its Davines Village headquarters in Parma, Italy, employing roughly 900 people globally, with around half based in Parma. Italy has strong labor protections, and Davines provides employee benefits that exceed legal minimums, including optional maternity leave at 60 percent of pay (compared to the legal standard of 30 percent), five extra days of paid paternity leave, training programs, and on-site benefits such as free meals at the Village. The brand's B Corp recertification in 2020 scored 117.4 points.

Davines also actively supports its supplier network in obtaining B Corp certification, with 25 to 34 partners having become B Corps through this advocacy. Italian-based ingredient sourcing through Slow Food Presidia farms supports small-scale family producers with fair compensation. As a founder and lead of the B Corp Beauty Coalition, Davines pushes industry-wide standards for ethical operations.

Where the picture becomes less clear is in upstream supply chain transparency for ingredients sourced outside Italy, such as roucou oil from the Amazon, shea butter from West Africa, and palm derivatives.

Community Engagement

Davines has built genuine community engagement into its business model rather than treating it as a marketing layer. The North American operation is a 1% for the Planet member. The brand contributes 50,000 euros annually to the Rodale Institute to support regenerative organic agriculture research, and the partnership with Plastic Bank funds plastic collection and provides income for waste collectors in coastal communities in Indonesia, the Philippines, Brazil, and Thailand.

The brand also funds the Good Farmer Award, an annual prize for regenerative organic farming in Italy and the United States.

Animal Welfare

Davines states that it does not test products or ingredients on animals and does not delegate such testing to third parties.

In 2017, the brand suspended new product registrations in China to avoid mandatory animal testing during the registration process. In 2021, following the introduction of China's CSAR 2021 regulation that abolished pre-market animal testing for some non-special-use cosmetics packaged domestically in China, Davines resumed import of certain products under the exemption.

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