A directory of low-tox products.
Each product links to the brand's own page. Where certifications exist, we show them — and whether they're verified in an official registry or disclosed by the brand.
PFAS-Free
11 products
Home & Kitchen
10 products
Natural Fibres
14 products
Clean Supplements
10 products
Low Tox Barcode Scanner
Open the scanner →Free · Source-cited · Built for Australia
Point your phone at a barcode. See what's actually in it.
Flagged ingredients in seconds before something goes in your trolley. Works at Woolies, Coles & Chemist Warehouse. Personalised for pregnancy, MCAS, eczema, fertility and 13 more — every flag links to the study behind it.
Each (chemical × condition) pair linked to a peer-reviewed source or regulatory finding.
Free shopping guides
All guides →Drop your email, get a vetted shopping list of AU-supermarket products screened against the most-flagged chemicals for your situation. One email per guide. No spam.
Free guide
Mineral-Only Sunscreens
30 sunscreens with zero chemical UV filters.
Get the guide →Free guide
Clean Shampoos in AU
Shampoos without SLS, parabens or hidden fragrance.
Get the guide →Free guide
Eczema-Safe Personal Care
50+ products without formaldehyde releasers or fragrance.
Get the guide →Free guide
Snacks Without Artificial Dyes
40 snacks without the 6 McCann 2007 hyperactivity additives.
Get the guide →Free guide
Pregnancy-Safe Beauty
40 SKUs without retinoids, salicylic acid, phthalates or oxybenzone.
Get the guide →Free guide
Clean Supplements in AU
40 supplements without TiO2, dyes or magnesium stearate.
Get the guide →Our guide to low-tox living
All guidesPFAS in Everyday Products — Where You're Actually Being Exposed
Non-stick cookware, takeaway containers, waterproof clothing, carpets and dental floss. The highest-exposure sources in an Australian household, ranked.
Read the guideWhere to start and what to replace first
VOCs, formaldehyde and flame retardants — what's actually in indoor air, and which swaps reduce exposure most.
MicroplasticsWhat synthetic fabrics are doing to your indoor air
How polyester, nylon and acrylic shed plastic fibres into your laundry water and household dust — and the natural fibres that don't.
SupplementsReading labels and avoiding fillers
Which capsule excipients matter, which brands publish heavy-metal testing, and where Australia's pre-market gaps leave consumers exposed.

