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Blueland Dish Soap Powder

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Blueland

Blueland

Dish Soap Powder

No bottle, no plastic, and strong certifications; a 1.

Verified plastic-free
Plastic-FreePlant-Based
1 / 10 Low plastic footprint $$

Highly concentrated powder you scoop onto your sponge. No plastic packaging and no water shipped. B Corp, Cradle to Cradle, and Climate Neutral certified.

How this score breaks down

Plastic-derived chemicals of concern No concerns
No phthalates, bisphenols, or PFAS.
Intentionally added microplastics None added
None
Packaging plastic intensity Plastic-free
Plastic-free; no water shipped
Microfibre / shedding Doesn't shed
Not a textile, so nothing sheds in use or washing.
Transparency and disclosure Fully disclosed
Full ingredient disclosure

Strengths

  • Concentrated powder, no plastic bottle and no shipped water
  • Cradle to Cradle and EPA Safer Choice certified
  • Plant-based; B Corp and Climate Neutral

Trade-offs

  • Powder-on-sponge is a different routine than squeeze-bottle soap

What it's made of

A concentrated dish soap in powder form that you scoop onto a sponge, so no plastic bottle and no water are shipped.

PartMaterial
FormatConcentrated powder
PackagingPlastic-free, compostable refill

Free of Plastic bottle, PVA film, triclosan

Packaging
Plastic-free; no water shipped
Microplastics
None

Certifications

Independent, third-party certifications only. Tap any badge to see what it verifies.

About Blueland

Blueland makes plant-based cleaning designed to cut single-use plastic. Its dish soap is a concentrated powder, so no plastic bottle and no water are shipped. Blueland is a certified B Corp, holds Cradle to Cradle and EPA Safer Choice, and is Climate Neutral.

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Melissa Walker, founder of Thriving Sustainably

Hi, I’m Melissa-founder of Thriving Sustainably

Melissa Walker is the founder of Thriving Sustainably. A mom who started reading the labels after learning how much microplastic ends up in our bodies, she co-leads the environmental pillar of a Fortune 500 company’s employee sustainability program and rates brands against public certification databases so families can lower their microplastic exposure without the guesswork.