Sustainable Personal Care Packaging: Materials and Suppliers

Last updated on:

March 23, 2026

Personal care products place some of the most demanding requirements on packaging: formulation compatibility, dispensing precision, shelf appeal, and barrier performance all have to work together before sustainability even enters the conversation. This page explains the main packaging formats used across shampoo, skincare, body care, and cosmetics, the sustainable material options available for each, and how brands are navigating the transition away from conventional single-use plastic without compromising product performance.

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PCR Beauty Jar by APackaging Group
PCR Beauty Jar by APackaging Group
Description:
PCR jar for topicals creams and lotions.
Why it's sustainable:
The Glow Genesis PCR/PP Beauty Jar. Merging sustainability and style, this 250ml jar is crafted from post-consumer recycled (PCR) polypropylene (PP), making it an eco-conscious choice for your skincare.
Fine Mist Sprayer Bottle by APackaging Group
Fine Mist Sprayer Bottle by APackaging Group
Description:
Spray bottle for skincare, beauty and hygiene products.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recyclable PET.
InnowebMONO Tubes by Gualapack
InnowebMONO Tubes by Gualapack
Description:
Recyclable monomaterial tubes.
Why it's sustainable:
InnowebMONO™ is the new line of monomaterial laminates for tubes, available in white, transparent or metallised and in different thicknesses. Thanks to its high level of purity and increased stiffness to weight ratio, it is the ideal sustainable tube laminate. INNOwebMONO protects your products from oxygen and moisture, and is perfectly compatible with AISA machines.
Platina Tubes by EPL Global
Platina Tubes by EPL Global
Description:
Recyclable squeeze tube for personal care products and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Platina tubes are produced with less than 5% barrier resin and have received recognition from the Association of Plastic Recyclers (APR), USA, as consistently meeting or exceeding the most stringent APR HDPE Critical Guidance criteria.
r-Platina™ Tubes by EPL Global
r-Platina™ Tubes by EPL Global
Description:
Recyclable squeeze tube with PCR content.
Why it's sustainable:
Part of the Platina™ family, r-Platina™ combines the performance and recyclability standards of Platina with high post-consumer recycled (PCR) content, helping brands reduce their environmental footprint without compromising on quality or shelf appeal. Certified by RecyClass with the highest “A” rating, r-Platina™ is designed to be fully compatible with existing HDPE rigid recycling streams. The laminate is available in thicknesses of 250μ and 300μ, with PCR content of up to 50% at 250μ and up to 60% at 300μ, enabling brands to move confidently towards upcoming global packaging regulations and sustainability goals. Importantly, r-Platina™ already complies with the EU Plastics Regulation (PPWR) requirements for 2038, making it a future-ready solution for brands planning long-term sustainable packaging strategies.
PCR Blister Packs by Dordan Manufacturing
PCR Blister Packs by Dordan Manufacturing
Description:
100% PCR Blister Packs for a variety of applications.
Why it's sustainable:
Manufactured thermoformed packaging using up to 100% post-consumer recycled plastic (PCR), primarily RPET.
Aluminum Aerosol Can by Alltub Group
Aluminum Aerosol Can by Alltub Group
Description:
Recyclable aluminum aerosol cans.
Why it's sustainable:
Aluminum aerosol cans offer a safe and ecological packaging for your products; aluminum is in fact endlessly recyclable and thanks to its lightness minimizes the environmental impact of transport.
PCR PP Jar by Albea
PCR PP Jar by Albea
Description:
Monomaterial jar for cosmetics and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Recycle-ready monomaterial jar with 10% PCR content.
Ella Bottle by Albea
Ella Bottle by Albea
Description:
Bottle for personal care applications and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recyclable monomaterial PP bottle for skincare and personal care formulas. Trendy square shape. Available with a pump or a flip top cap. Great capacity of 200ml.
PCR Squeeze Tube by Albea
PCR Squeeze Tube by Albea
Description:
PCR tube for cosmetics and personal care.
Why it's sustainable:
Made with post-consumer-recycled content.
PCR Squeeze Tube from Alpla
PCR Squeeze Tube from Alpla
Description:
250ml squeeze tube for personal care products and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Recyclable and available made with PCR content.
Bamboo Screw Top Jar by Clement Packaging
Bamboo Screw Top Jar by Clement Packaging
Description:
Plant-based, compostable bamboo packaging for your beauty, personal care, or consumer goods brand.
Why it's sustainable:
USDA certified plant-based products and upcycled bamboo.
Plastic-Free Deodorant Tube by Unique Distinctions
Plastic-Free Deodorant Tube by Unique Distinctions
Description:
Plastic-free paper tube for deodorants, balms and topicals.
Why it's sustainable:
This paper deodorant stick is designed to be 100% plastic-free, making it an environmentally friendly alternative to conventional deodorant packaging.
Paper Tube by Custom Paper Tubes
Paper Tube by Custom Paper Tubes
Description:
Paper tube with paper cap.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recyclable paper.
Push Up Paperboard Tubes by GreenWay Containers
Push Up Paperboard Tubes by GreenWay Containers
by
GreenWay Containers
This brand is a member of Packaged Sustainable and helped create the content of its page.
Push Up Paperboard Tubes by GreenWay Containers
Verified Account
This supplier is a member of Packaged Sustainable and helped create the content of this page.
Description:
Plastic free push-up tubes for chapstick, deodorant, etc.
Why it's sustainable:
Food grade, vegan packaging made from recycled and sustainably sourced papers, carnauba wax paper or PET lining and rice glue. With FSC certified and recycled papers.
Space Stick by FusionPKG
Space Stick by FusionPKG
Description:
Stick for chapstick, balm and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recycle-ready PP and available with recycled resin.
PCR Tubes & Bottles by Evergreen Resources
PCR Tubes & Bottles by Evergreen Resources
Description:
PCR packaging products for home and personal care, beauty and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Evergreen offers PCR in all our plastic packaging products, as well as ocean-bound plastic in select categories. Up to 100% PCR can be safely used, depending on the component type. All Evergreen facilities running PCR products are ISO9001 certified. Applications include bottles, jars, sticks, closures, tubes, pumps, sprayers and more.
Bio-Resin Tubes by Evergreen Resources
Bio-Resin Tubes by Evergreen Resources
Description:
Tubes and more made from bioresin.
Why it's sustainable:
Evergreen offers recyclable bio-resin packaging across a range of formats, with maximum bio-resin content varying by product. All Evergreen bio-resin facilities are ISO 9001 certified. Biodegradable options are available in select categories and are designed to fully biodegrade within two years when discarded in open land environments. Applications include tubes, caps, jars, bottles, pumps, compacts, palettes, lipsticks, and more.
Kraft Paper Cap Tube by Custom Paper Tubes
Kraft Paper Cap Tube by Custom Paper Tubes
Description:
Kraft paper container with paper cap.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recyclable kraft paper.
Compostable Twist-Up Stick by Clement Packaging
Compostable Twist-Up Stick by Clement Packaging
Description:
Twist-up stick for deodorants and more.
Why it's sustainable:
Certified biobased and recognized as a US Government BioPreferred supplier, our material starts off right with its renewable bamboo origins and no fossil fuels.
Backyard Compostable Squeeze-Up Lip Balm Tubes by GreenWay Containers
Backyard Compostable Squeeze-Up Lip Balm Tubes by GreenWay Containers
by
GreenWay Containers
This brand is a member of Packaged Sustainable and helped create the content of its page.
Backyard Compostable Squeeze-Up Lip Balm Tubes by GreenWay Containers
Verified Account
This supplier is a member of Packaged Sustainable and helped create the content of this page.
Description:
Fully compostable squeeze-up tube for lip balm and cosmetics.
Why it's sustainable:
Fully backyard compostable in as little as 14 days. Eco Tubes have been tested to withstand hot oil filling up to 150 degrees F, or 66 degrees C. With FSC certified paper.
100ml Vienna Jar by Berry Global
100ml Vienna Jar by Berry Global
Description:
Jar with screw top for a variety of applications.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recyclable PET.
Infinity Quartz Jar by Berry Global
Infinity Quartz Jar by Berry Global
Description:
Jar for cosmetics and skincare products.
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recyclable PET.
Couture Needle Nose Tube by FusionPKG
Couture Needle Nose Tube by FusionPKG
Description:
PCR tube for cosmetics and more
Why it's sustainable:
Made from recycled resin.

Sustainable Personal Care Packaging Formats and the Materials Behind Them

Personal care packaging covers more formats than most other consumer product categories, and the sustainability options available differ meaningfully depending on which format your product requires. Understanding the format landscape before approaching suppliers is the starting point for any productive sourcing conversation in this category.

Bottles are the dominant format across shampoo, conditioner, body wash, and lotion. Conventional versions use HDPE or PET, both of which are technically recyclable in most curbside programs but frequently contaminated by pump mechanisms, mixed closures, and residual product. The sustainable transition here moves in two directions. The first is increasing post-consumer recycled content (PCR) in the bottle itself, with 50 to 100 percent PCR HDPE and rPET bottles now commercially available from multiple suppliers at competitive pricing. The second is refillable bottle systems where a durable primary container (aluminum, glass, or high-quality PCR plastic) is designed for long-term consumer ownership and paired with lightweight refill pouches or cartridges that reduce plastic use per fill by up to 80 percent compared to buying a new bottle each time. Pump and dispensing mechanisms are a secondary recyclability consideration worth addressing explicitly: many pumps contain mixed materials including metal springs and mixed plastics that complicate recyclability of the full assembly, and pump-free dispensing formats (disc caps, solid formats, squeeze tubes) are worth evaluating where the product formulation allows.

Tubes for toothpaste, lotions, creams, and facial cleansers have historically been one of the harder personal care formats to make recyclable because conventional tubes use multilayer laminates combining plastic and aluminum layers that cannot be separated mechanically. Mono-material PE tubes are now widely available and are compatible with flexible film recycling streams through store drop-off programs where that infrastructure exists, making them the primary sustainable transition in this format. All-PE tube construction maintains the same squeeze and dispensing functionality as conventional tubes and is available with PCR content from several converters.

Jars for face creams, body butters, and hair treatments use glass, PET, or PP as the primary material. Glass jars are infinitely recyclable, provide strong UV and contamination protection for sensitive formulations, and carry a premium positioning signal that aligns well with prestige skincare and cosmetic brands. rPET and PCR PP jars offer a lighter-weight recyclable alternative at lower cost. Airless jar formats that dispense product without pumping air into the container extend shelf life for oxidation-sensitive actives and reduce the need for preservative-heavy formulations, which is a sustainability benefit that goes beyond the material story.

Flexible refill pouches are an increasingly important secondary format in personal care sustainability programs. Lightweight all-PE or all-PP pouches containing concentrated or ready-to-use refill formulas are paired with durable primary containers that stay with the consumer. The weight and material reduction per use is significant: a refill pouch for shampoo uses a fraction of the plastic of a replacement bottle. Store drop-off recycling compatibility for mono-material PE pouches provides a plausible end-of-life pathway in markets with that infrastructure.

Paper-based and bio-based formats are most applicable for solid personal care products including solid shampoo bars, deodorant sticks, solid cleansers, and lip balms. Molded pulp containers from sugarcane fiber or recycled paperboard handle these formats well, offer compostability or recyclability depending on coating, and provide a premium tactile presentation that has become a strong visual signal of sustainability commitment for natural and clean beauty brands. Bio-PE films derived from sugarcane and home compostable PLA and PBAT pouches are emerging options for sample sachets and travel formats where single-use is difficult to avoid entirely.

Sustainable Personal Care Packaging Trade-Offs Worth Understanding

Formulation compatibility is the constraint that most frequently derails personal care packaging sustainability transitions and it is the one that most general sustainability conversations underweight. Personal care formulations contain oils, acids, alcohols, surfactants, and active ingredients that interact with packaging materials in ways that vary by formulation and concentration. A material that is chemically compatible with a water-based lotion may not be appropriate for an oil-rich serum or an alcohol-based toner. Sustainable material substitutions must be validated against your specific formulation before committing to production, not assumed based on general material category compatibility.

Dispensing system recyclability is the second significant complexity. Pumps, sprays, droppers, and applicators frequently contain multiple materials including metal springs, different plastic components, and rubber or silicone elements that make the complete dispensing assembly non-recyclable in most programs regardless of the bottle material. The most practical approaches are specifying pump mechanisms designed for disassembly with clear consumer instructions, switching to pump-free dispensing formats where the formulation allows, or accepting that the dispensing mechanism is a non-recyclable component while focusing recyclability claims on the primary container.

Recycled content in personal care packaging requires food-grade or cosmetic-grade PCR material, which is a higher specification than general industrial recycled content and commands a premium. Not all PCR plastic is appropriate for direct skin-contact or formulation-contact applications, and supplier documentation confirming cosmetic-grade compliance is an essential verification step rather than an assumed standard.

How Brands Choose Sustainable Personal Care Packaging

Personal care packaging supplier selection involves balancing formulation compatibility, dispensing performance, sustainability credentials, and brand aesthetic in ways that few other packaging categories require simultaneously.

Using the 5 P's as a frame: Price for sustainable personal care packaging varies widely by format and material. PCR HDPE bottles at meaningful volumes approach cost parity with virgin equivalents. Mono-material PE tubes are competitive with conventional laminate tubes. Aluminum and glass primaries for refillable programs carry higher unit costs that are justified by the multi-year consumer ownership model and the reduced packaging cost of refill formats over time. Performance means formulation compatibility validation first, followed by dispensing system testing with your specific viscosity and formula, UV and barrier protection requirements for light-sensitive or oxidation-sensitive actives, and shelf life validation under real distribution and retail conditions. Preference reflects your brand positioning and retail channel: prestige and clean beauty brands have different format expectations than mass market personal care programs, and refillable systems that work well in DTC require different retail integration planning than standard single-purchase formats. Proof covers PCR content verification with ISCC or equivalent certification, cosmetic-grade compliance documentation for any recycled plastic in direct formulation contact, recyclability claims backed by material and closure compatibility testing rather than single-material assumptions, and compostability certification to named standards for any compostable format. Partner quality means a supplier with personal care-specific formulation compatibility experience and the ability to provide samples for compatibility and stability testing before volume commitments are made.

Ask suppliers for formulation compatibility data with your specific product type. Ask what the pump or closure is made from and whether it has been designed for disassembly or recyclability. Ask for PCR content certification documentation rather than accepting general recycled content claims.

Frequently Asked Questions about Sustainable Personal Care Packaging: Materials and Suppliers

Why are shampoo bottles hard to recycle even though they are plastic?

Does sustainable personal care packaging affect formulation shelf life?

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Disclaimer: Information provided for educational purposes only. Packaged Sustainable is a marketplace connecting brands with suppliers - we do not manufacture products or guarantee supplier claims. Always conduct your own due diligence and verify certifications, capabilities, and regulatory compliance independently. PS is not responsible for supplier performance or outcomes.