There was a time when buying “low tox” cleaning products often meant lowering your expectations too.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!The spray might smell pleasantly of eucalyptus instead of synthetic lemon, but leave streaks across the kitchen bench. The laundry detergent came in beautifully minimalist packaging, yet struggled with muddy sports uniforms. Even the reusable sponge looked the part, however didn’t always survive more than a few weeks of washing up.
Consumers accepted these trade offs because sustainability felt like the bigger priority. And, saw choosing products with fewer harsh ingredients or less plastic packaging as a small sacrifice for the greater good.
Today, however, the conversation has shifted.
As Australians become increasingly ingredient conscious – not just about what they eat or put on their skin, but what they use throughout their homes – the low-tox movement has matured. Eco credentials alone are no longer enough. Consumers want products that clean just as effectively as their conventional counterparts, while also reducing unnecessary chemicals, excess packaging and environmental impact.
In other words, the low-tox home has grown up.
Rather than chasing “green” marketing claims, shoppers are asking more practical questions. Does it actually work? What’s inside it? Does every ingredient serve a purpose? Is there an easier way to reduce waste without creating more work for myself?
It’s a shift that is quietly transforming one of the least glamorous corners of the home: the cupboard under the kitchen sink.
Take laundry detergent, for example. Laundry sheets have become one of the fastest growing categories in household cleaning, offering a lightweight alternative to bulky plastic bottles and concentrated liquids. Their appeal is obvious – pre-measured, compact, easy to store and designed to reduce packaging waste – but performance has become an increasingly common point of discussion.
Many consumers have embraced the convenience, only to question whether some products clean as thoroughly as traditional detergents.
That growing expectation has created space for new Australian brands like Adelaide-based Talk Dirty Co. Founded by sisters and mums Ginetta and Deanna Cammisotto, the business began after their own children experienced unexplained skin irritation, prompting them to examine the ingredients in the everyday products touching their family’s clothes.
The sisters say they quickly realised laundry was the last household product they had thought to question. After experimenting with home made alternatives – which they admit often left clothes feeling greasy – they instead focused on creating detergent sheets that prioritised cleaning performance alongside lower tox ingredients.
Their enzyme powered formula contains four cleaning enzymes while excluding parabens, SLS, SLES, optical brighteners, ethoxylates and phthalates. The founders are also candid about what they see as a weakness within the growing laundry sheet category.
“A lot of laundry sheets are all convenience, no clean,” says co-founder Ginetta Cammisotto. “Some felt like they were washing clothes with hope and positive thinking.”
It’s a telling observation. Consumers no longer want to choose between sustainability and efficacy – they increasingly expect both.

That same evolution is reshaping how Australians think about surface cleaners. Rather than simply replacing one chemical with another, many are becoming interested in ingredients with long histories of practical use.
Australian home care brand Euclove reflects this growing curiosity by combining native eucalyptus with Ayurvedic botanical ingredients that traditional wellness practices have used for thousands of years. Its cleaning range pairs Australian eucalyptus oil – containing naturally occurring cineol, recognised for its antibacterial and purifying properties – with neem and clove oils, both long valued in Ayurvedic traditions for their cleansing, antifungal and antimicrobial qualities.
The result isn’t positioned as an old fashioned home remedy or a DIY cleaning hack. Instead, it represents a broader movement towards ingredient led formulations that draw on botanical functionality while still tackling everyday household cleaning tasks across kitchens, bathrooms, floors and glass surfaces.
The brand’s sustainability efforts also extend beyond what’s inside the bottle. Packaging made from 70 per cent recycled plastic, refill options, cardboard shipping materials and recyclable trigger sprays all reflect another hallmark of today’s low-tox movement: consumers increasingly expect brands to consider the full lifecycle of their products, not simply advertise a handful of “free from” ingredients.

Even the humble kitchen sponge – a product few people think twice about – is undergoing its own reinvention.
New research commissioned by Who Gives A Crap found that almost half of Australians (49 per cent) have never considered what material makes their kitchen sponge. Yet as awareness grows around everyday household waste, consumers are now scrutinising products they once viewed as disposable alongside cleaning sprays and detergents.
Responding to that shift, the company has expanded beyond its toilet paper roots with Sponge Scourers made from natural loofah, wood pulp and water based ink. These sponges allow consumers to reuse them, machine wash them or refresh them by boiling, reflecting a growing interest in products that combine longevity with plant-based materials.
Importantly, the brand hasn’t framed sustainability as an excuse for inferior performance. Instead, it positions design, durability and usability alongside environmental considerations – another sign that consumers increasingly expect products to perform first and foremost.

Taken together, these examples reveal how much the low-tox conversation has evolved.
It is no longer driven solely by fear of chemicals or a desire to make homes look more aesthetically pleasing on social media. Instead, it reflects a broader shift towards intentional consumption. Australians are asking tougher questions about the products they bring into their homes, from ingredient lists and packaging to durability, transparency and cleaning power.
In many ways, the home is following the same path skin care travelled a decade ago. Consumers once bought products because they claimed to be “natural”. Today they read ingredient labels, understand active ingredients and expect efficacy alongside gentler formulations.
Cleaning products appear to be entering that same phase.
The future of low tox living won’t belong to brands that simply remove ingredients or wrap products in earthy packaging. It will belong to those that prove sustainability, thoughtful formulation and high performance can exist in the same bottle, sheet – or even sponge.












