Amazon is where most people shop, and non-toxic products are no exception. The convenience of Prime shipping and the ability to read thousands of reviews before buying make it the default for anyone starting to clean up their home.

What went into our picks: We screened ingredients against safety databases, verified each certification claim was current, and prioritized products with full ingredient disclosure. Our testing process The challenge: Amazon is also full of products that market themselves as “natural,” “clean,” or “non-toxic” but aren’t. Greenwashing is rampant. A product with a green label and the word “botanical” in its name can still contain synthetic fragrance, parabens, and SLES.

This guide lists the non-toxic products available on Amazon that NonToxicLab has actually reviewed and verified. Every product is Prime eligible, genuinely safe, and worth your money. Think of this as your Amazon shopping list for a non-toxic home.

How We Chose These Products

Every product on this list meets three criteria:

  1. Reviewed by NonToxicLab. We’ve analyzed the full ingredient list and verified it against our standards.
  2. Available on Amazon with Prime shipping. Because convenience matters for adoption.
  3. Genuinely safe. Not just marketed as natural. Actually free of the ingredients we flag: synthetic fragrance, SLS/SLES, parabens, PFAS, formaldehyde releasers, and other problematic compounds.

Cleaning Products

All-Purpose Cleaners

Dr. Bronner’s Pure-Castile Liquid Soap (32 oz) - $18 The single most versatile product on this list. Diluted, it works as hand soap, body wash, all-purpose cleaner, floor cleaner, and laundry pre-treatment. Organic, Fair Trade, and the ingredient list is pristine. Full review in our non-toxic cleaning products guide.

Branch Basics Concentrate - $33 (starter kit) One concentrate makes all-purpose cleaner, bathroom cleaner, glass cleaner, laundry detergent, and hand soap. Fragrance-free, EWG A-rated. Higher upfront cost but replaces 5+ products.

Laundry

Molly’s Suds Original Laundry Powder - $22 (120 loads) Five ingredients. No fragrance, no enzymes, no SLS. EWG A-rated. $0.18 per load. The cleanest laundry detergent we’ve found. Full review in our non-toxic laundry detergent guide and Tide alternatives article.

ECOS Hypoallergenic Laundry Detergent (Free & Clear) - $12 (100 loads) Plant-based, EPA Safer Choice certified, $0.12/load. Cheaper than Tide. Available in Free & Clear (fragrance-free).

Dish Soap

Dr. Bronner’s Sal Suds Biodegradable Cleaner - $17 (32 oz) Technically an all-purpose cleaner, but it’s the best dish soap substitute on this list. Stronger cleaning power than pure castile soap, cuts grease effectively. Full review in our non-toxic dish soap guide.

Bathroom

Seventh Generation Disinfecting Multi-Surface Cleaner - $5 Thymol-based, EPA-registered disinfectant. The one Seventh Generation product we wholeheartedly recommend. Full review in our Seventh Generation analysis and Lysol alternatives guide.

Air Quality

Moso Natural Air Purifying Bags (200g) - $10 Bamboo charcoal odor absorbers. No chemicals released, just passive absorption. Rechargeable in sunlight, lasts 2 years. Full review in our Febreze alternatives guide.

Personal Care

Body Wash

Dr. Bronner’s Pure-Castile Liquid Soap (Peppermint, 32 oz) - $18 Yes, it’s listed twice because it does double duty. The Peppermint scent works particularly well as body wash. Full review in our body wash guide and men’s body wash guide.

Alaffia Everyday Shea Body Wash (32 oz) - $12 Fair Trade shea butter, moisturizing, affordable. The Vanilla Mint and Lavender scents are universally appealing. Full review in our body wash guide.

Every Man Jack Body Wash (Cedarwood) - $10 EWG Verified, sulfate-free, masculine scent. The easiest switch for guys coming from Old Spice or Axe. Full review in our men’s body wash guide.

Hair Care

Acure Curiously Clarifying Conditioner - $10 Silicone-free, paraben-free, affordable. Good for normal to oily hair. Full review in our non-toxic conditioner guide.

Giovanni 50:50 Balanced Conditioner - $8 The budget workhorse of clean conditioners. No sulfates, no parabens, available everywhere. Full review in our conditioner guide.

Deodorant

Native Deodorant (Coconut & Vanilla) - $13 Aluminum-free, effective odor control, available in Sensitive formula for baking-soda-reactive skin. Full review in our Native deodorant analysis.

Lip Care

Dr. Bronner’s Organic Lip Balm (4-pack) - $14 Organic beeswax, jojoba, avocado oil. Four flavors. The best non-toxic lip balm per dollar. Full review in our lip balm guide.

Sky Organics Organic Lip Balm (6-pack) - $10 USDA Organic, six flavors. Under $2 each. Full review in our lip balm guide.

Oral Care

See our non-toxic toothpaste guide for verified options on Amazon.

Sunscreen

See our non-toxic sunscreen guide for mineral SPF options on Amazon.

Period Products

Cora Organic Cotton Tampons (36 ct) - $9 100% organic cotton, BPA-free applicator, totally chlorine-free. Full review in our non-toxic tampons and pads guide.

Rael Organic Cotton Pads (28 ct) - $8 Organic cotton top sheet, chlorine-free, fragrance-free. Full review in our period products guide.

Saalt Menstrual Cup - $29 Medical-grade silicone, lasts 10 years. Full review in our period products guide.

Kitchen

Cookware

Lodge 10.25” Cast Iron Skillet - $30 American-made, pre-seasoned, zero coatings, lasts a lifetime. The best $30 you can spend in a kitchen. Full review in our cookware under $100 guide.

Tramontina Tri-Ply Clad 10” Fry Pan - $35 Tri-ply stainless steel comparable to pans 3x the price. No coatings to degrade. Full review in our cookware under $100 guide.

Lodge 12” Carbon Steel Skillet - $45 Lighter than cast iron, seasons the same way. Great for high-heat cooking. Full review in our cookware under $100 guide.

GreenPan Mini Ceramic Non-Stick 8” Fry Pan - $30 PFAS-free ceramic nonstick. For eggs and delicate cooking without Teflon. Full review in our Teflon alternatives guide.

Food Storage

See our non-toxic food storage guide for glass and stainless steel options on Amazon.

Water Bottles

See our non-toxic water bottles guide for verified picks.

Home

Candles

P.F. Candle Co. Soy Candle - $22 Domestically sourced soy, cotton wicks, phthalate-free fragrance. Full review in our candle guide and candle gift guide.

Fontana Candle Company Classic Soy - $28 Full ingredient transparency, excellent burn time. Full review in our candle guide.

Bluecorn Beeswax Candle - $32 100% U.S. beeswax, zero additives, 60+ hour burn. Full review in our candle guide.

Bedding

See our guides to non-toxic bed sheets, non-toxic pillows, and non-toxic mattress toppers for Amazon-available options.

The Complete Amazon Shopping List

Here’s the total if you bought one of everything above:

CategoryProductPrice
All-purposeDr. Bronner’s Castile$18
LaundryMolly’s Suds$22
DisinfectantSeventh Gen Thymol$5
Odor controlMoso Natural Bags$10
Body washAlaffia Shea$12
ConditionerAcure Clarifying$10
DeodorantNative$13
Lip balmDr. Bronner’s 4-pack$14
TamponsCora Organic$9
Cast ironLodge Skillet$30
StainlessTramontina Pan$35
CandleP.F. Candle Co.$22
Total$200

For $200, you can replace the most chemically concerning products in your home with genuinely safe alternatives. That’s less than many people spend on a single pair of shoes.

How to Avoid Greenwashing on Amazon

Amazon is full of products that look non-toxic but aren’t. Here’s how to spot the fakes.

Check the actual ingredient list. Not the front-of-label claims. Flip to the ingredients. If you see “fragrance,” “parfum,” SLS, SLES, parabens, or PEGs, the “natural” marketing is misleading.

Look for specific certifications. EWG Verified, USDA Organic, EPA Safer Choice, GOTS, GOLS. These involve third-party auditing. “Natural,” “clean,” “green,” and “eco-friendly” are unregulated marketing terms.

Be skeptical of “free from” lists. A product that says “free from 200+ chemicals” might still contain synthetic fragrance with undisclosed compounds. The “free from” claim is only meaningful if the ingredient list is also clean.

Check EWG databases. The EWG Skin Deep database (for personal care) and Guide to Healthy Cleaning (for household products) let you look up specific products and see ingredient-level safety ratings.

Read reviews critically. Look for reviews mentioning specific ingredient concerns rather than general “love it” or “hate it” feedback.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are Amazon non-toxic products the same as what’s sold on brand websites?

Generally yes. Most brands sell the identical product through Amazon and their own website. The exception: some brands offer exclusive formulations or bundles through their direct website. Check ingredient lists to confirm.

Is it safe to buy personal care products from Amazon third-party sellers?

Stick to “Sold by Amazon” or “Sold by [Brand Name]” listings. Third-party sellers occasionally sell expired, counterfeit, or damaged products. For personal care items that go on your skin, buying from verified sellers matters.

Do Amazon’s “Climate Pledge Friendly” labels mean the product is non-toxic?

No. Climate Pledge Friendly certifications focus on environmental sustainability (packaging, carbon footprint, recyclability), not ingredient safety. A product can be Climate Pledge Friendly and still contain synthetic fragrance and SLS.

How do I start if $200 feels like a lot?

Start with the three products that give you the most impact per dollar: Dr. Bronner’s Castile Soap ($18, replaces body wash, hand soap, and cleaner), Molly’s Suds ($22, replaces laundry detergent), and a Lodge Cast Iron Skillet ($30, replaces Teflon). That’s $70 for the three biggest upgrades.

Does Amazon Subscribe & Save work for these products?

Many of the products on this list are eligible for Subscribe & Save, which gives you 5-15% off and automatic delivery. This is particularly useful for consumables like body wash, laundry detergent, and tampons.

Our Take

Amazon makes non-toxic living accessible. You don’t need to visit specialty stores, pay boutique shipping rates, or wait weeks for delivery. Every product on this list arrives in two days with Prime, and most cost the same as or less than their conventional equivalents.

The hardest part isn’t finding the products. It’s distinguishing the genuinely safe ones from the greenwashed ones. That’s what NonToxicLab is for. Use this list as your starting point, and dive into our individual product guides when you want the full analysis.

For a room-by-room approach to non-toxic shopping with a specific budget, see our $500 non-toxic home plan.

Last updated: April 2027. Prices may vary. We independently research and test the products we recommend. When you purchase through our links, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

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