The words "natural," "eco-friendly," "plant-based," and "sustainable" are legally unregulated in the US. Any brand can print them on any product. Here's the system for telling apart genuine eco-credentials from greenwashing — in 5 minutes per product.
Greenwashing is the practice of making false or misleading claims about the environmental benefits of a product, service, or company policy. It's not rare — it's the norm. A 2021 study by the European Commission found that 42% of green claims online were exaggerated, false, or deceptive. In the US, the FTC regulates "green claims" but enforcement is slow and fines are small relative to marketing budgets.
The result: consumers who try to make eco-friendly choices often end up buying greenwashed products that are marginally better than conventional — or no different at all.
The word "eco-friendly," "natural," "sustainable," or "green" on a label means nothing. These are marketing claims with no legal definition or verification requirement in the US. Treat them as noise.
What you're looking for: third-party certification logos from organizations that test products against verifiable standards.
Certifications that mean something:
Certifications that mean less (or nothing):
If a product carries no third-party certification, the ingredient list is your only other signal. Here's what to look for:
Red-flag ingredients in cleaning products:
What a genuinely non-toxic ingredient list looks like:
The Environmental Working Group maintains the most comprehensive consumer product ingredient database available. Visit ewg.org/cleaners for cleaning products or ewg.org/skindeep for personal care. Search any product to see:
EWG Verified products have the lowest possible scores and full ingredient transparency. Products that score 5+ are typically no safer than conventional alternatives despite eco-branding.
Greenwashing tactics on labels to recognize:
"Made with natural ingredients" — could be 1% natural ingredients and 99% conventional. Look for a percentage.
"Gentle on the environment" — tested by whom? Under what standards? No independent verification means this is a feeling, not a fact.
"Our formula is better for the planet" — compared to what? Without a baseline and methodology, this claim is empty.
Green packaging (color, imagery) — companies frequently use green colors and nature imagery on products with no eco-credentials. Packaging aesthetics are not evidence.
Vague certifications — "Certified by XYZ Organization" means nothing if XYZ is unknown or unverifiable. Legitimate certifications are from organizations with published standards, audited processes, and searchable product databases.
Any legitimate certification organization maintains a searchable database of certified products. If a brand claims a certification:
Certification fraud isn't common, but certification exaggeration is. A brand certified for one product in its line may imply all products are certified. Verify the specific product, not just the brand.
Worst offenders: Mrs. Meyer's (synthetic fragrance, BIT preservatives), Puracy (BIT, ethoxylates, benzisothiazolinone), Method (no MADE SAFE or EPA Safer Choice verification).
Genuine picks: Branch Basics (MADE SAFE + EWG Verified), Blueland (EPA Safer Choice + B-Corp), ECOS (EPA Safer Choice + EWG Verified).
Worst offenders: Any bag claiming "compostable" or "biodegradable" without BPI certification. Many bags use this marketing without testing to ASTM D6400 or EN 13432.
How to verify: Look for the BPI logo specifically. The BPI website (bpiworld.org) has a searchable database of certified products. If the bag isn't in there, the compostability claim is self-reported.
Worst offenders: Any brand using "clean beauty" language without EWG Verified or MADE SAFE certification. "Clean" is entirely a marketing construct with no regulatory meaning.
How to verify: Check ewg.org/skindeep for any personal care product. EWG Verified products have 1-2 hazard scores across all ingredients.
Worst offenders: Bamboo products claiming to be more sustainable without Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) certification or proof of responsible sourcing.
What to look for: FSC Certified (for wood-based products), or products made from 100% recycled post-consumer content with verification.
When you're standing in a store aisle or scrolling an e-commerce page:
That's it. Two minutes per product, and you'll avoid 90% of greenwashing on store shelves.
Greenwashing isn't just a consumer frustration — it actively harms environmental progress. When a brand successfully markets a conventional product as "eco-friendly," it captures the market share of genuinely sustainable companies, reducing their ability to grow and invest in better manufacturing. It also creates confusion that makes consumers cynical about all eco-claims, including legitimate ones.
Buying certified products creates economic incentives for companies to pursue real certifications — which require real changes to formulas, manufacturing processes, and supply chains. Every purchase from a MADE SAFE-certified or EPA Safer Choice-verified brand is a vote for higher standards across the industry.
| Certification | Best For | Where to Verify |
|---|---|---|
| EPA Safer Choice | Cleaning products | epa.gov/greenerproducts |
| MADE SAFE | All consumer products | madesafe.org |
| EWG Verified | Cleaners + personal care | ewg.org/cleaners, ewg.org/skindeep |
| BPI Certified | Compostable products | bpiworld.org |
| USDA Organic | Food, ag products | ams.usda.gov/nop |
| FSC Certified | Paper, wood products | fsc.org/en/fsc-labels |
| B-Corp Certified | Company-level standards | bcorporation.net |
| Leaping Bunny | Cruelty-free verification | leapingbunny.org |
Every product on Goodshelf has been independently verified for the sustainability claims it carries. No greenwashing. No paid placements.