Japan does not appear to have a unified, cosmetics-specific organic standard equivalent to COSMOS or USDA.
That means a bar of soap sold in Tokyo with the word “organic” on the label could contain ingredients at 89–100% certified organic content — or it could simply contain a small amount of plant extract with no third-party verification at all. Both products can sit on the same shelf, described in the same terms. “Organic” and “natural” claims in Japanese cosmetics should be verified case by case against official brand or certification pages.
For anyone used to USDA Organic standards in the United States, EU Organic regulations in Europe, or the UK’s Soil Association framework, this can feel disorienting. International certification bodies — COSMOS, ECOCERT, and USDA/NOP — do operate in Japan, and some brands carry those credentials. This guide evaluates 13 soaps and soap-like cleansers available in Japan using seven criteria, drawing only on claims verifiable through official brand websites and certification body pages.
Quick Summary: Pick by Priority
| If you want… | Look at | Why |
|---|---|---|
| The strongest third-party certification | ARTQ ORGANICS | COSMOS ORGANIC + USDA/NOP certification stated on official site. Organic content 89–100%, disclosed per product |
| Layered verification from multiple bodies | LA CORVETTE | ECOCERT certification plus UPSM label and French government EPV designation |
| A Japan-made product with COSMOS certification | babybuba | Presented as ECOCERT COSMOS NATURAL certified; designed and manufactured in Japan |
| Cold-process, handcrafted soap | SAVONNIÈRE / MiMC / cocowell | No-heat saponification retains naturally occurring glycerin; each brand differs on certification depth |
| ISO 16128-based natural index disclosure | Pax Olie | 100% natural-origin index, self-calculated and disclosed under ISO 16128-1 |
| A Japanese brand with farm-level transparency | neo natural | In-house organic JAS-certified farm; production history publicly documented |
How We Chose These Products
Does Japan certify organic cosmetics? Japan does not appear to have a unified, government-administered certification system specific to organic cosmetics, comparable to COSMOS or USDA Organic. This makes third-party international certification — or documented ingredient-level disclosure — the most reliable public reference point available to consumers.
All 13 products were evaluated against seven criteria. The question for each was simple: is this claim verifiable from an official source? Products not listed here may be doing work that simply isn’t publicly documented in a way we could confirm.
- Third-party certification Does the brand hold COSMOS ORGANIC, COSMOS NATURAL, ECOCERT, USDA/NOP, Nature et Progrès, or another recognized external certification? We confirmed the certification body name, not just the marketing claim.
- Organic content percentage Is the organic ingredient ratio disclosed as a specific number — not just the word “organic”? We required the actual figure, not the standard’s threshold.
- Natural origin index Has the brand calculated and published a natural origin index under ISO 16128-1? This is a transparency framework, not a certification.
- Excluded ingredients Are petroleum-derived surfactants, synthetic fragrances, synthetic dyes, silicones, and GMO ingredients excluded — and is that exclusion backed by a certification standard or only a brand’s self-declaration?
- Manufacturing process verification Is the process from raw material sourcing through filling and packaging covered within a certification or third-party audit scope?
- Traceability Can the origin, producer, and certification status of key ingredients be publicly confirmed?
- Label transparency Are full ingredients (INCI names or Japanese standard nomenclature), certification numbers, and certifying body names publicly disclosed?
All information reflects what was verifiable as of June 2026 from primary sources only.
Related article: Eco-Friendly Bathroom Products: Shampoo Bars & Sustainable Soaps
13 Natural & Organic Soaps and Cleansers Available in Japan
1. Hair & Body Shampoo / babybuba
🏅 Presented as ECOCERT COSMOS NATURAL certified on official site 📊 99.6% natural-origin, 5.38% organic content (product-level figures from brand) 🚫 9 excluded ingredient categories listed publicly ⚙️ Manufactured at ECOCERT-certified domestic factory 📋 Full ingredient list + certification number disclosed
babybuba is a Japanese baby and organic skincare brand based in Kamakura, Kanagawa. The brand’s official site presents its products as holding ECOCERT COSMOS NATURAL certification (the Natural Cosmetics category), with certification managed through three checkpoints: raw materials, manufacturing process, and annual audits. The brand website is primarily in Japanese, but products are available through Amazon.co.jp and select natural cosmetics retailers across Japan.
The official site publishes product-level figures for specific products: 99.6% natural-origin ingredients and 5.38% organic content. These are brand-disclosed figures for individual products, not a blanket company-wide specification. The distinction between COSMOS NATURAL and COSMOS ORGANIC matters here — COSMOS NATURAL certifies a high percentage of natural-origin ingredients but does not require the elevated organic content threshold that COSMOS ORGANIC demands. The nine publicly stated exclusions include parabens, synthetic colorants, synthetic fragrances, petroleum-based surfactants, synthetic polymers, silicones, and solid nanomaterials. Manufacturing takes place at a domestic ECOCERT-certified factory. Full ingredient lists and a certification number are available on the official site.
Editor’s Take: The certification tier here is COSMOS NATURAL, not COSMOS ORGANIC — a distinction worth checking when reading third-party listings, as the two are not equivalent. The brand’s own site states the certification clearly. Japan-made and Japan-designed positioning is internally consistent for a brand oriented toward the domestic market.
Trade-offs: The 5.38% organic content figure reflects the COSMOS NATURAL standard. Descriptions claiming “95% or more organic ingredients” that sometimes appear in third-party listings reference a COSMOS NATURAL certification requirement threshold — not this product’s actual measured organic content.
2. Savon de Marseille Olive / LA CORVETTE
🏅 ECOCERT certified 🏛️ UPSM (Union of Marseille Soap Manufacturers) label 🇫🇷 French government EPV designation 🚫 No synthetic colorants, fragrances, preservatives, or animal fats per ingredient list 📋 Five-ingredient formula publicly disclosed
LA CORVETTE is produced by Savonnerie du Midi, a Marseille-based soap factory in operation since 1894. The product carries ECOCERT certification. It also displays the label from the Union of Marseille Soap Manufacturers (UPSM — Union des Professionnels du Savon de Marseille), which requires manufacturing in the Marseille region, at least 72% plant-based oils, the traditional kettle-cooking (chaudron) method, and no animal fats or synthetic additives from member producers. The brand holds the French government’s Entreprise du Patrimoine Vivant (EPV) designation, awarded to companies preserving exceptional artisan and industrial expertise. The scope and audit depth of UPSM and EPV differ from product-level certifications; details are available on the brand’s official tradition and responsibility page. Products are available in Japan through the Japanese distributor website and Amazon.co.jp.
The full disclosed ingredient list contains five items: sodium olivate, sodium cocoate, water, sodium chloride, sodium hydroxide. No synthetic colorants, fragrances, or preservatives appear in this list. UPSM, ECOCERT, and EPV each address the product from a different institutional vantage point, which is uncommon in a single product.
Editor’s Take: A five-ingredient formula makes the “what’s not in this soap” question straightforward to answer. Some Japanese retail listings describe this product as “COSMOS NATURAL certified,” but the Japanese official site states “ECOCERT certified.” Verify the exact certification designation through the official site.
Trade-offs: No organic content percentage is numerically disclosed for this product. The formula excludes synthetic ingredients as confirmed by the ingredient list, but a published organic-origin ratio is not available on the official Japanese product page.
3. ARTQ Organic Soap T / ARTQ ORGANICS (Aromatique Organics)
🏅 COSMOS ORGANIC + USDA/NOP certification stated on official brand site 📊 Organic content 89–100% per product (disclosed on official site) ⚙️ COSMOS ORGANIC-certified in-house factory in Hokkaido 🚫 No synthetic fragrances, colorants, petroleum derivatives, or silicones 📋 Full INCI ingredient list publicly disclosed
ARTQ ORGANICS is a Tokyo-based Japanese brand specializing in organic aromatherapy, with a boutique in Minami-Aoyama. The brand’s official certification page states that its products carry COSMOS ORGANIC and USDA/NOP certification. COSMOS ORGANIC requires that at least 95% of physically processed agricultural ingredients be organically farmed, and that at least 20% of the total formula consist of certified organic ingredients. (Different thresholds apply to rinse-off products and powders under the COSMOS framework.) Organic content ranges from 89 to 100% across the product line, with figures disclosed per product on the official site. Manufacturing takes place at the brand’s own COSMOS ORGANIC-certified factory in Hokkaido, placing the production facility itself within the certification scope.
Essential oils are sourced directly from certified organic farms in multiple countries, through partnerships built since 2000. The brand states that all product fragrance comes exclusively from certified organic essential oils.
Editor’s Take: COSMOS ORGANIC combined with USDA/NOP certification in a domestic Japanese brand is uncommon. The official certification page provides the clearest documentation of which certification standards apply. Maintaining consistent certification across skincare, essential oils, and soap makes cross-category shopping more straightforward.
Trade-offs: Price is at the higher end of this guide. When purchasing through third-party EC sites, cross-reference ingredient lists with the official brand website to confirm you’re seeing current product specifications.
4. Red Clay & Karité Butter / SAVONNIÈRE
🏅 Nature et Progrès certified workshop ⚙️ Cold-process method with over one month of curing, per official product page 🚫 No petroleum derivatives, synthetic preservatives, synthetic fragrances, synthetic dyes, or animal fats per brand disclosure 📋 Full ingredients disclosed on official site
SAVONNIÈRE is a small-batch soap brand produced in Provence, southern France, by the brand’s founder. The workshop holds certification from Nature et Progrès, a French organic certification body operated jointly by agricultural and consumer organizations. Nature et Progrès is a distinct institution from ECOCERT and COSMOS and applies its own audit standards, including dimensions related to social and ethical production practices. The scope of its certification should be confirmed on the certifier’s own pages for specifics.
Per the official product page, the soap uses a cold-process saponification method with a curing period of over one month. This manufacturing process is described as part of the certification scope. Ingredients include organic virgin olive oil, shea butter (karité), red clay, and lavender essential oil — disclosed in full on the official site. The brand states exclusion of petroleum derivatives, synthetic preservatives, synthetic fragrances, synthetic dyes, and animal fats. The brand is available in Japan through its Japanese-language distributor site.
Editor’s Take: Most organic cosmetics sold in Japan carry ECOCERT or COSMOS certification. Nature et Progrès represents a different French certification lineage, with different institutional governance. For readers who want to understand the range of certification frameworks operating in this market, this brand offers a useful reference point.
Trade-offs: As a small-batch product, stock levels fluctuate. Individual product page URLs may change; navigating from the brand’s top page is more reliable than saving a direct product link.
5. Soap Series / neo natural
🌾 In-house organic JAS-certified farm; farm-level production history publicly documented ⚙️ Traditional kettle-boiling process, managed internally 🔍 Farm-to-product production history publicly disclosed 🚫 No synthetic surfactants, synthetic fragrances, or preservatives per brand disclosure
neo natural is a Japanese natural cosmetics brand based in Gifu Prefecture with an in-house farm certified under Japan’s organic JAS (Japanese Agricultural Standard) framework. It is important to note that organic JAS certification applies to agricultural production and ingredients — it does not automatically certify that finished cosmetic products meet a particular organic standard. The brand held COSMOS certification for multiple product lines for several years, then published an announcement on its official site in 2024 regarding the end of that certification. The specific reason and scope of that change should be confirmed directly on the brand’s official announcement. The brand states that organic ingredient ratios are maintained at the same level as during the certified period, with figures continued to be disclosed on the official site.
The soap line is manufactured using a traditional kettle-boiling process through the brand’s internal production facility. Synthetic surfactants, synthetic fragrances, and preservatives are excluded per brand disclosure. Production history from the in-house farm through to the finished product is publicly documented. The brand website is primarily in Japanese; products are available on Amazon.co.jp and the brand’s own EC site.
Editor’s Take: Publicly disclosing a certification discontinuation is not something every brand does. The brand’s farm transparency and continued ingredient ratio disclosure provide a documented basis for evaluation, even without current external certification. Whether that documentation is sufficient depends on what standard of evidence you’re looking for.
Trade-offs: With COSMOS certification lapsed, the “organic” framing rests on the brand’s own disclosures and farm certification rather than an active cosmetics-specific third-party audit. Current external certification status should be verified separately on the official site.
6. Biosoap Turtle Soap / Melvita
🏅 ECOCERT & Cosmebio certified (confirm current certification on official product page) 🚫 No synthetic surfactants, synthetic fragrances, synthetic colorants, or silicones per brand disclosure 📋 Plant-derived ingredients marked with * for organic origin in disclosed ingredient list
Melvita is a French organic cosmetics brand founded in 1983 and an early adopter of ECOCERT certification. The brand holds ECOCERT and Cosmebio certification — confirm current certification status for this specific product on the official product page, as certification scope can vary across product lines. The brand is well established in Japan and available at COSME KITCHEN, Isetan, and online retailers. The Turtle Soap formula uses plant oils and shea butter as its base. Plant-derived ingredients in the formula are marked with an asterisk (*) in the ingredient list, indicating organic cultivation origin — the asterisk notation is visible on the product page itself. Excluded: synthetic surfactants, synthetic fragrances, synthetic colorants, silicones.
Editor’s Take: Melvita’s long certification track record is a meaningful baseline, but certification scope is best confirmed per product rather than assumed from brand reputation. The per-ingredient asterisk notation in the ingredient list is a straightforward transparency practice that makes it easy to read sourcing claims directly from the label.
Trade-offs: A figure of “99.9% organic ingredients” has appeared in some product listings. As of June 2026, this specific number could not be confirmed on the official Japanese product page. Do not rely on that figure without direct verification from the current official product page.
Official website
7. Body Soap / Pax Olie
🌿 100% natural-origin index under ISO 16128-1 — self-declared by brand, not a third-party certification 🚫 No petroleum-based surfactants, silicones, parabens, synthetic fragrances, or synthetic colorants 📋 Full ingredient list disclosed on official site
Pax Olie is an olive oil-based body care line from Taiyou Yushi (太陽油脂), a Japanese soap manufacturer founded in 1946. The brand’s official site states: “We use only natural ingredients and naturally derived ingredients as defined by ISO 16128-1, and do not use any non-natural ingredients (natural origin index: 100%).” This is a self-declared figure calculated using the ISO 16128-1 framework, which defines how to calculate the natural origin index for cosmetic formulas. ISO 16128 is not a certification system — there is no external auditor, no prohibited ingredient list enforcement, and no annual inspection involved. The brand also references RSPO (Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil) commitments on its official site. Full ingredients: potassium cocoate, propanediol, olea europaea fruit oil, olea europaea leaf extract, and others — disclosed on the official site.
Editor’s Take: Publishing a specific index figure calculated under an international standard, rather than using vague “natural” language, is a different kind of transparency from certification — and less common among Japanese domestic brands. The value is in the explicitness of the methodology, not in a certification-like guarantee.
Trade-offs: ISO 16128 is a self-reported calculation framework. It does not involve the external audit layers, prohibited ingredient lists, or annual inspections that COSMOS or ECOCERT require. “Natural origin index 100%” reflects a calculated result under a defined methodology, not an independently verified quality claim.
8. Omega Fresh Moist Soap / MiMC
⚙️ Cold-process (frame-mold method); brand describes a curing and drying period of 1–2 months 🚫 10 excluded ingredient categories per brand declaration 📋 Full INCI ingredient list disclosed on official site
MiMC (エムアイエムシー) is a Japanese cosmetics brand whose founder developed chemical sensitivity and atopic dermatitis before creating the line. The brand is available at Isetan Shinjuku and online. The soap excludes 10 ingredient categories per the brand’s public declaration: petroleum-based surfactants, mineral oil, synthetic fragrances, synthetic colorants, synthetic preservatives, UV absorbers, silicones, talc, parabens, and alcohol. These exclusions are self-declared and are not backed by a third-party certification audit. Per the brand’s product description, manufacturing uses the cold-process frame-mold method, with a curing and drying period of one to two months — this figure is as stated by the brand; independent verification was not available.
Key disclosed ingredients include cacao butter, coconut oil, olive fruit oil, rice bran oil, sacha inchi oil, and hemp seed oil — full INCI list on the official site. Note: the current product is the Damask Rose & Geranium variant. The previously available Frankincense Blend variant has been replaced. Confirm the current lineup on the official site before purchasing, as product variants are subject to change.
Editor’s Take: The 10-free formula combined with cold-process manufacturing is internally consistent as a design approach. The founder’s personal experience is documented publicly, providing context for the formulation philosophy.
Trade-offs: No third-party certification (COSMOS or equivalent). The “10-free” exclusion list is a self-declared brand standard without external audit verification.
9. Coco Soap (Chamomile) / cocowell
⚙️ Cold-process with superfat technique; brand describes a 1-month curing period 🚫 No synthetic preservatives, synthetic fragrances, silicones, or synthetic colorants per brand disclosure 📋 Five-ingredient formula disclosed on official site
cocowell is a Japanese brand specializing in Philippine virgin coconut oil products. The brand’s official site describes a supply chain connected to farming communities in the Philippines, though lot-level supply chain documentation is not published on the official site. The soap uses a five-ingredient formula per the official product page: coconut oil (virgin coconut oil), water, sodium hydroxide, chamomile essential oil, and tocopherol. The brand describes the manufacturing method as cold-process with a superfat technique — intentionally leaving a portion of oil unsaponified — and a curing period of one month. These are brand-stated descriptions. Synthetic preservatives, synthetic fragrances, silicones, and synthetic colorants are excluded per brand disclosure. Other scent variants are available: orange sweet, sampaguita, and rosemary. Products are sold through the brand’s own EC site and Amazon.co.jp.
Editor’s Take: A five-ingredient formula is one of the most straightforward ways a brand can present what’s in — and what’s not in — a product. The Philippine farming community connection is described on the brand’s official site, adding documented social context to the sourcing background.
Trade-offs: No third-party certification. Lot-level traceability data is not publicly available on the official site.
10. L&Y Soap Lavender & Ylang Ylang / John Masters Organics
🚫 No petroleum-based surfactants, silicones, parabens, synthetic preservatives, or synthetic fragrances per brand declaration 📋 Full ingredient list with organic-origin ingredients marked (*) disclosed on official site
John Masters Organics is an American brand founded in New York, available in Japan at LOFT, Plaza, and online retailers including Amazon.co.jp. The full ingredient list — sodium palmate, sodium palm kernelate, water, glycerin, kaolin, olea europaea fruit oil*, and others — is disclosed on the official site, with organic-origin ingredients indicated by an asterisk (*). Excluded per brand declaration: petroleum-based surfactants, silicones, parabens, synthetic preservatives, and synthetic fragrances.
Editor’s Take: Per-ingredient organic origin marking is a practical transparency feature for anyone who reads ingredient lists carefully. The current status of third-party certification could not be confirmed from the official Japanese site in our June 2026 research — if certification status matters for your decision, check the brand’s current official site directly before purchasing.
Trade-offs: Without confirmed current certification status, the “organic” framing relies on the brand’s own ingredient sourcing declarations. For purchases where third-party verification is a priority, the earlier entries in this guide offer more documentation.
11. Wild Rose Soap / Neal’s Yard Remedies
🌴 Palm oil-free formulation per official product page 🚫 No synthetic fragrances, synthetic dyes, silicones, or parabens per brand disclosure 📋 Full ingredients with Soil Association-based organic origin marking (*) on product label
Neal’s Yard Remedies is a British natural and organic cosmetics brand with retail locations in Japan, including Omotesando, and availability through online retailers. The official product page explicitly states a palm oil-free formulation. The formula excludes synthetic fragrances, synthetic dyes, silicones, and parabens per brand disclosure. Full ingredients — sodium cocoate*, water, glycerin*, shea butter*, rosa canina fruit oil*, citrus grandis peel oil*, and others — are disclosed on the official site. The asterisk (*) notation on the ingredient list indicates organic-origin designation, based on the brand’s Soil Association certification. The “100% natural-origin” characterization that appears in some descriptions of this product should be verified against the current official product page, as the specific phrasing and scope of that claim can vary.
Editor’s Take: Explicitly stating “palm oil-free” on a product page is a specific commitment, not a general sustainability statement. The asterisk notation applied to the main plant-derived ingredients makes the organic sourcing claims readable at the ingredient level.
Trade-offs: Full certification number details and certifying body specifics are limited on the Japanese-language site. For complete certification documentation, cross-reference with the UK Neal’s Yard Remedies website.
Official website
12. Delicate Hygiene Soap / ARGITAL
🚫 No petroleum-derived surfactants, silicones, preservatives, synthetic colorants, or synthetic fragrances per brand disclosure 📋 Full ingredients in Japanese standard nomenclature disclosed on official site
ARGITAL is an Italian skincare brand centered on green clay (argilla verde) as a core ingredient, available in Japan through natural cosmetics importers. This product is designed as an intimate hygiene product, formulated with a pH-balanced, low-irritation approach. It is not a general body soap — confirm the intended use before purchasing. Excluded ingredients per brand disclosure: petroleum-derived surfactants, silicones, preservatives, synthetic colorants, and synthetic fragrances. Full ingredients — water, sodium cocoyl glutamate, caprylic/capric glucoside, lactic acid, melaleuca viridiflora leaf oil, and others — are disclosed using Japanese standard nomenclature on the official site. The “100% natural-origin” characterization requires direct confirmation from the current official product page. The brand also produces face and body soap products for those looking for general-use alternatives.
Editor’s Take: The intimate hygiene use case is the defining characteristic of this specific product. The brand’s broader soap line covers different use cases — this entry is included because the ingredient transparency practices are clearly documented on the official site.
Trade-offs: Third-party certification status could not be confirmed on the official Japanese site in our research. This product is designed for intimate hygiene use and is not appropriate as a general body wash.
13. Calendula Baby Wash & Shampoo / WELEDA
🚫 No synthetic preservatives, silicones, petroleum-derived ingredients, synthetic fragrances, or synthetic colorants per brand disclosure 📋 Full ingredients with organic (*) and natural essential oil-derived (♦) distinctions disclosed on official site
WELEDA is a Swiss cosmetics brand with a long history in natural and organic personal care. It is widely available in Japan at pharmacies, LOFT, and online retailers. This product is a liquid body wash and shampoo formulated specifically for infants. It is not a bar soap, and its use case is different from the general adult body care products earlier in this guide — keep that in mind when comparing across the 13 entries.
The formula uses calendula (marigold) flower extract, with calendula grown at WELEDA’s own farms. Full ingredients — water, coco-glucoside, almond oil, ethanol*, sesamum indicum seed oil*, glycerin, carrageenan, calendula officinalis flower extract*, and others — are disclosed publicly, with organic-origin ingredients marked (*) and natural essential oil-derived ingredients marked (♦). Excluded: synthetic preservatives, silicones, petroleum-derived ingredients, synthetic fragrances, and synthetic colorants. WELEDA states on its official site that products in the baby line operate within the NATRUE certification framework — an international third-party natural and organic cosmetics certification body. NATRUE and COSMOS are separate systems and are not interchangeable; the specific certification scope for this product should be confirmed on the brand’s official certification pages.
Editor’s Take: WELEDA’s in-house calendula farming provides documented supply chain context for one key ingredient. NATRUE certification represents a distinct institutional framework from COSMOS — neither supersedes the other, but they should not be conflated.
Trade-offs: This is an infant body wash, not an adult bar soap. Adults looking for a daily body cleanser will find more directly applicable options in the earlier entries.
Official website
カレンドラ ベビーウォッシュ&シャンプーA Note on Finding These Products in Japan
Many Japanese domestic brands in this guide — babybuba, neo natural, Pax Olie, MiMC, cocowell, and ARTQ ORGANICS — operate primarily Japanese-language websites. Most are available on Amazon.co.jp and through the brands’ own EC sites. ARTQ ORGANICS has a physical boutique in Minami-Aoyama, Tokyo.
International brands (Melvita, John Masters Organics, Neal’s Yard Remedies, WELEDA) are available at major retailers including LOFT, Plaza, Isetan, and COSME KITCHEN across Japan’s major cities, as well as through Amazon.co.jp.
Specialty natural cosmetics retailers like COSME KITCHEN carry a curated range of certified products and are a reliable starting point for in-person exploration.
A Closing Thought
Looking at these 13 products together, what becomes visible is less about which soap is “best” and more about how differently brands can approach the same question: what does transparency actually look like?
ARTQ ORGANICS answers with dual international certification and per-product percentage disclosures. LA CORVETTE answers with a five-ingredient list and three institutional attestations from different bodies. neo natural answers with a farm and its own historical disclosures. Pax Olie answers with a self-calculated ISO index. babybuba answers with product-level metrics and a publicly accessible certification number.
Each structure carries different forms of accountability — external auditing, self-calculation, institutional labeling, or farm ownership. Which of those you find most meaningful is a genuine question, not one with a preset answer.
What’s your benchmark when the label says “natural”?
All information in this article was sourced exclusively from official brand websites and certification body pages. We did not use review sites, aggregators, commercial listicles, or EC site product descriptions as references. Every certification name, ingredient figure, and product specification listed here was drawn from a primary source. Claims that could not be confirmed from official sources were not included, regardless of how widely they appear elsewhere.
Information is current as of June 2026. Certification status, product formulations, availability, and pricing are subject to change. Verify current details on each brand’s official site before purchasing.







