Plaine Products

rating tier top choice

Plaine Products

brand rating & evaluation
overall rating: Top Choice
rating tier top choice

Our ratings are based on a scale from 1 (Avoid) to 5 (Top Choice).

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The Shifting Gaia rating evaluates brands based on sustainable practices, ingredients and materials, and social responsibility, among others. Below are a few factors influencing this brand's score:

certifications:

B Corporation Certified
Leaping Bunny
PETA Cruelty-free
PETA Cruelty-free & Vegan

learn more about these certifications*

overview

sustainability
9.4 out of 10
non-toxic
10.0 out of 10
social responsibility

about

Plaine Products is a refillable beauty and personal care brand offering zero-waste, non-toxic, and vegan products, focused on eliminating single-use plastic through aluminum bottle reuse systems.

Highlights

  • Refillable aluminum bottle system
  • Plastic-free shipping materials
  • Carbon-neutral shipping
  • Plant-based, aloe-based formulations

sustainability

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Sustainability
score:
9.4 out of 10

details:

Packaging

The company uses refillable aluminum bottles for all personal and home care products, eliminating the need for single-use plastic containers. Customers are encouraged to return empty bottles to be sterilized and reused, creating a closed-loop system that drastically reduces packaging waste. Even shipping materials reflect this ethos; orders are sent in plastic-free packaging (using recycled cardboard and paper tape) to avoid adding new plastic into circulation. The aluminum bottles are durable enough for multiple reuse cycles, and at end-of-life they remain 100% recyclable, ensuring minimal waste leakage to landfills.


Ingredient Sustainability

 

Plaine Products formulates its personal care items with an emphasis on renewable, plant-based ingredients and sustainable sourcing. The primary base of most formulas is organic aloe vera. The brand pointedly avoids ingredients linked to deforestation or high ecological harm. For example, all products are palm oil-free. Key surfactants and moisturizers (e.g. Sodium cocoate from coconut oil and Sodium safflowerate from safflower oil in the soap-based shampoo, or sugar-derived glucosides in the body wash) are biodegradable and plant-derived, meaning they break down naturally without persisting in the environment.

For preservation and functionality, Plaine Products makes strategic use of safer synthetics: it relies mainly on food-grade preservatives (potassium sorbate, sodium benzoate) and only includes a synthetic preservative or additive when necessary for product stability. This approach was seen in their recent formulation decisions (e.g. introducing a small amount of phenoxyethanol in a facial product when natural preservatives proved insufficient.

Energy Use and Footprint


Plaine Products has made a noteworthy commitment to carbon-neutral shipping: through a partnership with the non-profit We Are Neutral, they fully offset the carbon emissions from transporting orders by investing in reforestation (native tree planting) and methane-capture projects. On the operations side, Plaine Products’ facilities and offices have not publicly detailed renewable energy usage or energy efficiency measures; information on manufacturing energy sources is limited. However, as a Certified B Corp, the company is subject to oversight that includes environmental management, which suggests it measures and works to improve its overall footprint. The carbon offsets and circular packaging system contribute greatly to footprint reduction.

Waste Management

Waste mitigation is arguably the cornerstone of Plaine Products’ mission. The company has established a circular refill system in which consumers return empty bottles to be cleaned, refilled, and reused, effectively designing waste out of the product lifecycle. This approach has resulted in over 800,000 plastic bottles kept out of landfills and oceans (as of late 2025, according to the company’s running tally).

Business Model

Plaine Products has built its business model around sustainability and circular economy principles rather than the typical linear consumer goods model. The brand’s core offering is evergreen personal care essentials (shampoo, conditioner, body wash, etc.) that are meant to be bought once in durable packaging and refilled indefinitely, rather than a constant stream of single-use packaged goods. This model is reinforced by a subscription option (customers can receive regular refills at a discount) which both improves convenience and ensures empties are routinely returned and replaced.

non-toxic

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Non-toxic
score:
10.0 out of 10

details:

Plaine Products emphasizes clean, non-toxic formulations, formulating all products to be safe for humans and aquatic ecosystems alike. Across the board, the products are free from known harmful chemicals. Notably no sulfates, parabens, phthalates, silicones, or synthetic fragrances are used in any of their in-house formulas. Plaine Products does include synthetic ingredients, but these are chosen with care and used in tiny amounts. For example, the preservativephenoxyethanol appears in the facial moisturizer and a styling product because more natural alternatives weren’t sufficiently preserving those water-based formulas. Another example is Polysorbate 20, a gentle emulsifier used in the hand wash (also <1%) to keep essential oils solubilized.

social responsibility

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Social responsibility
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In terms of fair labor practices, Plaine Products shows positive indicators but also some room for deeper transparency. The company’s products are Made in the USA, partnering with a small U.S.-based manufacturer for production. As a Certified B Corporation, Plaine Products has been assessed on criteria including worker treatment and supply chain ethics, suggesting that it meets higher standards of accountability and fair practices internally. They have not released specifics on how they ensure fair labor throughout their supply chain (for example, whether raw ingredient suppliers, such as those harvesting coconut or shea butter, adhere to fair trade or fair wage principles).

The brand is certified by Leaping Bunny and also recognized by PETA’s Beauty Without Bunnies program as both Cruelty-Free and Vegan.

As a member of 1% for the Planet, the company pledges at least 1% of its annual revenue (not just profit) to environmental non-profit organizations. They are noted to support Beyond Plastics, an advocacy group, and even backed a legislative effort, the New York Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act, which aims to reduce single-use plastics and improve recycling systems.