Charlie’s Soap is the perennial favorite on tons of natural living blogs, and having used their powder formula, I can attest to its effectiveness.
Like other producers, Charlie’s is unwilling to provide their exact ingredients, and would only say this when I probed them further: “Our formulas are what make us special. They have been fully tested for toxicity (Duke University), biodegradability (Japan Food Research Labs), and effectiveness (SGS US Testing Labs). They are unique and (following the practices of Coca-Cola) secret. Their formula is secret too, but that doesn’t keep folks from drinking it.”
Hmmm, comparing themselves to Coke probably isn’t Charlie’s savviest PR move—The Coca-Cola Company is not exactly exemplary when it comes to concern for the health of its consumers. While Charlie’s denies using SLS or SLES, one of the ingredients they disclosed is sodium metasilicate–which Skin Deeps considers moderately hazardous and which the Journal of Reproduction and Fertility found to show reproductive effects in animals at low doses. EWG Score: D
Looks like Charlie's now lists ingredients but C12-16 pareth-9 and theC10-14 alcohol ethoxylate both come with possible contamination with ethylene oxide and 1,4-dioxane.
Citra-Suds has also been moved from Good Stuff to Sneaky Stuff. One of my readers suspected that their laundry detergent contains sodium laureth sulfate and I followed up to discover that it does. When doing the initial review, I had an email exchange with a company representative and I asked twice if their laundry detergent contained SLES. I was told that it did not.
I suspect that the woman I talked to was just uninformed, but this is no excuse. In addition, some Citra products (laundry and otherwise) contain limonene, a potential carcinogen, and definite respiratory irritant. I was told they used orange oil for fragrance, which is a misleading answer as orange oil is technically a different (and harmless) ingredient. It also contains neurotoxic methylisothiazolinon. EWG Score: C.
Clean Cult - Calls itself a plastic-free brand while uses plastic for sheets
Dapple’s various laundry detergents contain tetrasodium iminodisuccinate (which gets a C from EWG) and benzisothiazolinone, which is a concerning preservative.
DedCool is fragrance heavy and not transparent about their ingredients.
Earth Breeze uses PVA strips
Earth Friendly ECOS laundry detergents contain bad surfactants (like cocamidopropyl betaine) and preservatives (neurotoxic methylisothiazolinone).
 
                                  
                                
376 comments
Christina
Hi! Love your site, have used it a lot for our first little one – Savannah now 10 months :) Someone may have asked already but what would you recommend as a safe product to remove stains? We are into solid foods now so avocado, blueberry, strawberry, pasta sauce – you name it and it is on her! Even the reoccurring blow out stains. Some I am able to catch fresh after they happen but most are not until the end of the day. Thank you for your hard work, this site is really fantastic!
Lori
How about the Dapple baby products?
Layla
Hi!
Is method free and clear detergent good to use on my baby’s clothes?
Blaine Burgan
available from our website or Amazon….
Blaine Burgan
Karli,
I am the founder of PURE Natural Laundry Detergent. Completely natural and we list our ingredients on the bottle. Made Safe certified! PURE is awesome at REMOVING odor naturally and not covering or masking it!
Karli
How does Tandi’s handle adult stinky workout clothes?
Crystal
Have you looked into Norwex laundry detergent? Thanks!
Jess
I was wondering this too. They have an EWG score if A?
Lauren
Hi, did you ever hear anything about the detergent brand attitude for little ones.
Maia James
Not yet, but it’s on our list:).