Packaging
Weleda has steadily moved its packaging away from virgin plastic and toward recycled, refillable, and infinitely recyclable formats. Approximately 60% of its primary packaging is now glass, 15% is aluminum, and the remaining portion is plastic, with a corporate goal that 65% of all primary packaging by weight comes from recycled or bio-based sources. Glass bottles are made from up to 85% recycled green glass (70% post-consumer, 15% post-industrial), which is fully recyclable in standard curbside systems. However, Weleda is a 100-year-old company that started as a pharmaceutical/anthroposophic remedies brand, and a lot of their portfolio is still small medicinal tinctures, oils, and homeopathic preparations sold primarily in Europe. Those tiny amber glass dropper bottles and aluminum tubes for medicinal balms inflate the "glass and aluminum" percentages globally. The mainstream personal care products that drive consumer-facing sales (body lotions, baby products, body washes, deodorants, hand creams) lean much more heavily on plastic.
The brand has reformulated several iconic products into more circular formats, with Skin Food returning to a 95% recycled aluminum tube and the Skin Food Body Butter moving from plastic to a recycled glass jar. Roll-on deodorant bottles are HDPE with 70% post-consumer recyclate, and the Calendula Baby Oil bottle is made from 97% recycled plastic. Cartons are FSC-certified card printed with mineral oil-free inks.
That said, Weleda's packaging is not plastic-free, and certain items (body wash bottles made of mixed PP/PE plastics, soft-touch tubes, pumps with metal springs) are not accepted by all curbside recycling programs. To address this, the brand operates a free mail-back recycling program with ENVA in the UK and TerraCycle internationally, with returns supporting reforestation through TreeSisters. Compostable or refillable packaging systems remain rare across the line, and the brand has been transparent that fully sustainable packaging is still a work in progress.
Ingredient Sustainability
Ingredient sustainability is one of Weleda's most well-developed areas. The brand sources roughly 1,000 raw materials and reports that more than 80% of its certifiable plant-based ingredients come from certified organic, biodynamic, or controlled wild-collection sources.
Weleda operates eight medicinal plant gardens around the world (covering roughly 25,000 hectares in total), with the flagship garden in Schwäbisch Gmünd, Germany spanning 23 hectares of Demeter-certified biodynamic land. These gardens use crop rotation, intercropping, composting, and open-pollinated seeds, and provide habitat for 50+ bird species and several hundred wild bee species at the German site alone. The brand is also a co-founder of Hortus officinarum and the Sunflower Initiative for Bio-Seeds, both of which work to preserve open-pollinated seed biodiversity, addressing the monoculture issue at its root.
Shea butter (used in the Skin Food Body Butter), which can be unsustainable when over-collected from wild populations, is sourced through fair trade partnerships in West Africa. Cocoa butter, frequently linked to deforestation, comes through similar long-term cooperatives. Sweet almond oil, notoriously water-intensive when sourced from California monocultures, is sourced predominantly from organic Mediterranean producers. Palm oil and palm derivatives (used in some soaps and as fatty acid feedstocks) are RSPO certified and increasingly sourced as organic and fair trade, with Weleda also funding the Borneo Orangutan Survival Foundation to address deforestation impacts.Regarding synthetic ingredients, the formulas avoid petrochemical-derived emollients, silicones, and microplastics entirely. The synthetic ingredients that do appear are limited to lower-impact options like glyceryl stearate, xanthan gum, lactic acid, and pentylene glycol.
The notable caveats: most products contain alcohol (denatured ethanol) at notable concentrations, which is biodegradable but energy-intensive to produce, and lanolin (an animal-derived ingredient) appears across many baby and Skin Food products. The Skin Food line also contains hydrolyzed beeswax. Carrageenan, used as a thickener in some Skin Food variants, is moderately sustainable when farmed but can damage marine ecosystems if wild-harvested.
Energy Use & Carbon Footprint
Weleda's climate work is independently verified and detailed. The brand's production sites in Switzerland, Germany, and France run on 100% renewable electricity, including for energy-intensive manufacturing processes. The Swiss site uses locally produced biogas in its buildings, and the Cradle Campus logistics center in Germany operates emissions-free, powered by geothermal and solar energy and constructed from wood and rammed earth.
In October 2022, the brand extended this to its product-related (cradle-to-gate) footprint by calculating and offsetting all emissions from raw material extraction through delivery to retailers, an estimated 50,000 metric tonnes of CO2-equivalent annually. This was independently verified by TÜV Nord (TN-CC 020 standard), making the entire product portfolio climate-neutral certified. The brand has also been transparent about the limits of climate neutrality, noting publicly that offsetting alone is not sufficient and that Scope 3 emissions (the consumer-use phase, especially water heating during showers and baths) remain its biggest remaining footprint. The brand is actively working to reduce emissions through reformulation, lighter packaging, and consumer education rather than relying solely on offsets, which is the level of rigor that distinguishes leading climate practice from greenwashing.
Waste Management
Weleda's waste reduction efforts focus on circular packaging, byproduct utilization, and direct producer take-back. The brand's biodynamic gardens operate as closed-loop systems, with all garden trimmings composted on-site (using loaned manure from neighboring farms) into the nutrient-rich humus that fertilizes the next growing cycle. In manufacturing, packaging intensity (the ratio of packaging weight to product weight) has been progressively reduced year over year, and the share of recycled materials in primary and secondary packaging has steadily increased.
On the consumer side, Weleda partners with TerraCycle internationally and ENVA in the UK to take back any packaging that local councils cannot recycle, including mixed-material plastic tubes, soft-touch packaging, and pumps with metal components. The mail-back program is freepost and supports reforestation partnerships. The brand has also concentrated some of its formulas to reduce packaging-to-product ratios. However, Weleda does not currently operate a comprehensive refill or buyback program for its core skincare line in the way some smaller competitors do (in-store refill stations are largely absent), and consumer-facing reuse remains limited to what people do at home with the glass jars after use. Multi-purpose products like Skin Food (used as face cream, body cream, hair tamer, cuticle balm, and primer) reduce the number of items a consumer needs to buy.
Business Model
Weleda's product line is genuinely evergreen. Skin Food has been in continuous production since 1926, the Calendula Baby line has been around for over 50 years, and most of the brand's catalog stays consistent year over year rather than churning through trend-driven launches or seasonal limited editions. The company is structured as a foundation-owned business with sustainability written into its corporate bylaws, which means it is not driven by quarterly growth pressure in the same way as venture-backed beauty brands. Weleda explicitly markets multi-purpose use cases (one Skin Food jar replacing several products) and emphasizes durability and quality over high product turnover.
That said, Weleda does run periodic promotions, gift sets, and seasonal launches (particularly around holidays), and its product range is broad enough to encompass mainstream retail beauty rather than a curated minimalist line. Marketing remains educational and values-driven rather than urgency-driven, and the brand consistently advocates for buying less and using products fully. This places Weleda firmly in the slow-consumption category without going to the extreme of single-line, hyper-curated brands.