Packaging
Rizos Curls states that its packaging is 100% recyclable, primarily relying on PET and HDPE plastics, with select products housed in glass or what the brand describes as “bio-sourced materials.” Outer shipping cartons are made from corrugated, recycled, and post-consumer cardboard. The brand has stepped away from single-use thinking by introducing refillable bottles and reusable pumps for some products, and it partners with Pact Collective to take back empty, cleaned containers either through in-store drop-off bins or a mail-back program. This is meaningful given how much beauty packaging falls through the cracks of municipal recycling, which often will not accept small plastic items like pump heads or caps.
That said, the bulk of the line still arrives in petroleum-based PET and HDPE plastic. While these are technically among the more readily recyclable plastics, only a small fraction of household plastic ever actually gets recycled in practice.
There is no use of post-consumer recycled (PCR) plastic content disclosed for the bottles themselves, no compostable or fully plastic-free options, and no aluminum bottle program (which is increasingly common among brands prioritizing circularity).
Ingredient Sustainability
Across the products sampled, Rizos Curls draws on a mix of plant-based ingredients alongside a meaningful proportion of synthetic emollients, conditioning agents, polymers, and preservatives. The brand markets formulas as containing 95 to 97 percent naturally-derived ingredients in newer launches, and several of the plant-based hero ingredients are sustainability-friendly when responsibly sourced. Aloe vera, sunflower seed oil, olive oil, sugarcane extract, and oat-adjacent botanicals fall into more sustainable tiers, particularly when grown without heavy chemical inputs.
The picture becomes more mixed once you look closely at the specific botanicals. Coconut oil appears across nearly every product in the line, and coconut is one of the most overproduced tropical commodities globally. Its sustainability hinges entirely on whether it comes from monoculture plantations (which drive biodiversity loss and soil depletion) or smaller, diversified farms. The brand does not disclose its coconut oil sourcing, certifications, or whether it works with Fair Trade or organic suppliers, so the ingredient cannot be credited at its highest sustainability potential. Shea butter, similarly, can be a strong sustainability story when sourced from West African women's cooperatives, but here it is listed without any sourcing disclosure or certification. Argan oil, which appears in the Deep Conditioner, is another ingredient with significant sourcing concerns: argan trees are native to Morocco and have come under pressure from booming global demand, leading to overharvesting where production is not carefully managed. Again, no sourcing details are provided. Moringa oil and neem oil also show up in the line; these can be reasonably sustainable when cultivated rather than wild-harvested, but transparency is missing.
Energy Use and Carbon Footprint
Rizos Curls is one of the stronger performers in the haircare category when it comes to climate accountability. The brand has been Climate Neutral Certified for two years in a row (now operating as The Climate Label), which means it has measured its full Scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions, purchased verified offsets equivalent to those emissions, and committed to a documented reduction action plan. The brand directs offset spending to projects including reforestation, water restoration, and renewable energy. Customers can also opt to double the offset on their own orders at checkout through a Carbonfund.org partnership, effectively making individual orders climate-positive. On top of this, Rizos Curls partners with SeaTrees, an ocean restoration nonprofit focused on rebuilding blue carbon coastal ecosystems like mangroves and kelp forests. The brand does not publish year-over-year emissions data, intensity metrics, or specific reduction milestones (e.g., percent reductions achieved against a baseline year). There is also no public commitment to renewable energy at its manufacturing facilities, no science-based target, and the formulas and packaging are not yet optimized for low-carbon manufacturing (heavy plastic packaging and globally sourced ingredients both contribute to the footprint). Offsetting alone is increasingly seen as a starting point rather than a destination; the more meaningful work happens upstream in actually decarbonizing operations. For a self-funded independent brand, the level of climate accountability shown is genuinely above-average, it just stops short of the kind of operational transformation seen in best-in-class brands.
Waste Management
Rizos Curls makes real, if modest, efforts on waste. Its partnership with Pact Collective is the most concrete program. Customers can return empty, cleaned packaging by mail or drop-off so that hard-to-recycle beauty containers (caps, pumps, small bottles) actually make it into a specialized recycling stream rather than landfill. The brand also offers refillable bottles and reusable pumps for select products, and ships in corrugated cardboard with recycled and post-consumer content.
There is no in-store refill station network, no bulk refill pouch system that meaningfully reduces packaging per use, no upcycled ingredient program, and no multi-purpose product strategy aimed at reducing the total number of items consumers buy. The product line is not designed around circularity in the way that brands at the top of this category are; refills exist but are not the default or primary offering.
Business Model
The brand maintains a fairly evergreen core of styling and care products that do not change drastically season to season, and many of its bestsellers (Curl Defining Cream, Hydrating Shampoo, Deep Conditioner, Refresh & Detangle Spray) have been in the line for years. This is a meaningful counterpoint to the fast-paced trend cycles common in beauty. The product positioning emphasizes performance and curl health rather than trend-driven aesthetics, and the brand actively educates customers on how to use products properly to extend wash days and reduce the frequency of replacements.
The brand also runs a fairly traditional rewards program, refer-a-friend offers, and standard promotional sales. There is no explicit messaging around buying less or mindful consumption, and the marketing leans into newness and product variety rather than longevity. The result is a business model that sits in the middle: more measured than fast-beauty competitors, but more expansive than truly slow-consumption brands.