Packaging
Tom's of Maine has made meaningful progress on packaging while still relying heavily on plastic across most of its line. The brand introduced what it claims is the first recyclable toothpaste tube and has now transitioned all full-size toothpastes into this format. Mouthwash bottles use post-consumer recycled (PCR) plastic, deodorant containers have been converted to 100% recycled plastic, and bar soaps come in fully recyclable paper packaging. The Natural Strength deodorant line is sold in 100% plastic-free paper packaging, which represents the brand's most ambitious move away from virgin plastic.
That said, the majority of products across toothpaste, mouthwash, deodorant, and floss still arrive in plastic, even if recyclable or PCR. The recyclable toothpaste tube has also faced legitimate criticism: many materials recovery facilities reject the tubes due to residue contamination, and U.S. plastic recycling rates remain under 10%, so the real-world circularity benefit is more modest than the marketing suggests. There are no refill programs, no compostable packaging, and no plastic-neutral or plastic-negative certifications. The brand partners with TerraCycle to handle hard-to-recycle items from any brand, which is a positive offset.
Ingredient Sustainability
A representative review of products across toothpaste, deodorant, bar soap, and mouthwash reveals a mixed sustainability picture. On the positive side, Tom's of Maine sources several plant-based ingredients that are inherently low-impact: aloe vera, sunflower seed oil, hops extract, and xylitol (often derived from birch or corn) are all hardy, low-input crops with minimal ecological footprint. Castor oil, glycerin from vegetable sources, and sodium gluconate are similarly responsible choices.
The brand's most significant sustainability concern is its heavy reliance on palm-derived ingredients. Bar soaps are built on sodium palmate, sodium palm kernelate, and sodium cocoate as primary surfactants. Even with parent company Colgate-Palmolive's claim of nearly 100% RSPO-certified palm oil sourcing, RSPO certification is widely understood to reduce but not eliminate the deforestation, peatland destruction, and biodiversity loss associated with industrial palm.
Some essential oils used in scented products, including peppermint, lemongrass, eucalyptus, and tea tree, are typically grown in monoculture systems unless specifically sourced otherwise, and Tom's does not publish farm-level traceability or certifications like organic or biodynamic for these inputs. Sandalwood vanilla and rose vanilla deodorants raise specific concerns: sandalwood is widely associated with overharvesting and illegal logging, and rose oil is highly water-intensive. Without sourcing transparency on these inputs, they sit in unsustainable tiers by default.
Synthetic ingredients are present but generally on the lower-impact end of the spectrum. Propylene glycol and butylene glycol appear in deodorants but the brand uses vegetable-derived versions rather than petroleum-derived.
Energy Use & Carbon Footprint
Tom's of Maine and parent company Colgate-Palmolive both publish emissions data with third-party verification, which is unusually transparent for a brand of this scale. Colgate-Palmolive has Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi) approved emissions reduction targets, including a 20% Scope 1, 2, and 3 reduction by 2025, 42% by 2030, and Net Zero across the value chain by 2040. The parent company's most recent reported emissions footprint was approximately 46.7 million tons CO2e, while Tom's brand-level estimated footprint was around 74,646 tons CO2e in its most recent reporting period.
The Sanford, Maine production facility runs on 100% renewable electricity, supported by community solar projects in the state. Colgate-Palmolive has set a 100% renewable energy goal company-wide by 2030 and is currently powering a majority of its sites with renewables. Tom's has also implemented freight consolidation initiatives with customers and third-party logistics partners to reduce transport emissions. The brand acknowledges that consumer use of products accounts for around 55% of its footprint, with purchased goods and services adding another 24%, demonstrating a full Scope 3 understanding.
Waste Management
Tom's of Maine has converted its Sanford, Maine manufacturing facility into a zero-waste site, meaning operational waste is diverted from landfill through recycling, composting, and reuse. The brand's TerraCycle partnership extends recycling access to consumers for hard-to-recycle items including mouthwash bottles, deodorant containers, toothpaste tubes, soap packaging, floss containers, and toothbrushes, accepting these items from any brand rather than only Tom's products.
The brand has helped launch The Recycling Partnership's Pathway to Circularity Recyclability Framework and is a member of the Polypropylene Coalition, contributing to systemic infrastructure improvements rather than just product-level fixes. There are no refill or buyback programs, however, and the product range relies on single-use containers throughout. No upcycled ingredients or multi-purpose products were identified during evaluation.
Business Model
Tom's of Maine has historically maintained an evergreen catalog focused on long-term staples, which aligns with slow consumption principles. However, the brand recently launched a 16-product prebiotic line described as the most extensive expansion in its 50-year history, and has been called out in Colgate-Palmolive earnings reports as a successful growth driver. The deodorant line alone now spans 11+ scents. Frequent promotions and discounts are run through retail partners and direct channels.
There is little evidence of marketing that explicitly encourages mindful purchasing or buying less. The pricing strategy targets accessible, mass-market personal care, which by nature relies on volume. As a Colgate-Palmolive subsidiary, the brand operates inside a corporate structure built around growth and market share rather than degrowth or curated minimalism.