So you’re thinking about taking a diaper load off the planet by switching to eco-friendly diapers and biodegradable baby wipes.

That’s a positively pro-planet-parenting move, we say. Because, traditional baby wipes are made with plastic, harmful chemicals (bad news for sensitive skin), and non-recyclable packaging.

As well as causing gross blockages in the sewers (AKA ‘fatbergs’), wipes also wind up in rivers and oceans, harming wildlife and adding to microplastic pollution.

All things considered, conventional wet wipes are a bum deal for the planet, which is why we need to change over to alternatives. And that’s what we’ve rounded up here for you, a list of baby wipes made by brands who care about the impact of their products, the materials they’re made with and who’s making them.

As we refresh our articles in coming months, we’re using our new Brand Rating System to find the best baby (and adult) brands around. This new system extends what we look for to 22 criteria, like product safety, climate impact, and supply chain practices. To learn more about this new approach, see here.

We independently research all featured brands and we ask them to confirm their claims. In many cases we personally review recommended products. This post contains affiliate links which means we may earn a commission if you buy something. Learn more here.

Eco-Friendly Baby Wipes For Planet-Minded Poo Clean-Up

We have to give kudos to, well…Kudos between their hypoallergenic EWG verified wipes and their 99% purified water and lyocell fabric they’re made of, they’re about as safe as you can get.

If you’re looking for compostable baby wipes, Marley’s Monsters’ reusable cotton cloths are soft on the planet and softer still on baby’s bum,

Index: Sustainable Baby Wipes

  1. Kudos Jump to brand
  2. Marley’s Monsters Jump to brand
  3. Eco By Naty Jump to brand
  4. Esembly Jump to brand
  5. Gina’s Soft Cloth Shop Jump to brand
  6. Burt’s Bees Baby Jump to brand
  7. Ecoriginals Jump to brand

Kudos

Kudos has not been rated.

Kudos’ Baby Wipes

Price Range: $6

Are you searching for biodegradable wipes to add to your changing table? Kudos to you!

Kudos’ hypoallergenic baby wipes take the guesswork out of what to use on your baby’s most sensitive skin, made of 99% purified water and VEOCEL lyocell fabric sourced from sustainably managed forests. EWG verified, these wipes are certified free of concerning chemicals.

About Kudos

Created by MIT engineers — and moms (who geek out on baby diapers and wipes, so you don’t have to!), Kudos offers a biodegradable option for on-the-go families who don’t want to compromise health in haste.

In addition to baby-safe wet wipes, Kudos has created a diaper, the first with organic cotton touching 100% of your baby’s sensitive skin. Not only are their baby diapers and wipes low-impact, but their packaging is petroleum plastic free, consisting of PE sugarcane bags.

Marley’s Monsters

Marley’s Monsters has not been rated.

Marley’s Monsters’ Baby Wipe Alternatives

Price Range: $20–$38

For an alternative to baby wipes, Marley’s Monsters’ compostable baby wipes are made from 100% undyed organic cotton.

These 7”x 8” single-ply Organic Unpaper Towels can be used as baby bum wipes, as well as tissues, face wipes, toilet paper, or reusable paper towels. Handmade in the USA, they feature serged edges for durability and come in sets of six or 12.

About Marley’s Monsters

Marley’s Monsters is a women-owned family business based in Oregon, where they have a brick-and-mortar store and make all products. They’re a one-stop-shop for eco home essentials to replace every day paper products.

The brand is BRING Rethink certified for their sustainability efforts which include plastic-free packaging and re-using scrap fabric.

Eco By Naty

Eco By Naty has not been rated.

Eco by Naty’s Wipes

Price Range: $4–$13

Eco By Naty creates unscented certified compostable baby wipes made out of natural fiber. The wipes contain 99.5% natural ingredients and are Cosmos Natural certified by Ecocert and “Okay Biobased” certified by TÜV Austria.

Water makes up 98.4% of the ingredients, and you won’t find any synthetic perfumes, dyes, or GMO ingredients. They’ve been dermatologically tested as gentle for your baby’s sensitive skin.

Note: While these wipes are marketing as “flushable”, we never recommend flushing wipes because all sewer systems are different and better to be safe than sorry.

About Eco By Naty

Family-owned Eco By Naty is a leading brand for biodegradable nappies made from plant-based ingredients sans chemicals and perfume.

They work with responsible suppliers who follow its code of conduct, uphold workers’ rights, and take steps to reduce their environmental impact as per their sustainability report. Their products use FSC-certified wood pulp and neither ingredients nor final products are tested on animals.

Esembly

Esembly has not been rated.

Esembly’s Organic Cotton Wipes

Price Range: $14

If you want baby wipes without chemicals, you can’t go wrong with plain and simple organic cotton. Esembly’s baby wipes are made responsibly in Pakistan from 100% GOTS certified organic cotton. From your mini-me’s mealtime messes to diaper changes, each large 9” x 9” wipe can be used, washed, and reused for years.

About Esembly

This mum-owned brand is conscious of the materials they use, in both their reusables and skin care products. With diapers made of organic cotton, TPU nappy covers made of 100% recycled plastic, and recycled paper packaging, they’re helping tackle the plastic problem.

Gina’s Soft Cloth Shop

Gina’s Soft Cloth Shop has not been rated.

Gina’s Soft Cloth Shop’s Baby Wipes

Price Range: $10–$11

Gina’s Soft Cloth Shop’s Organic Flannel Little Wipes are some of the best reusable baby wipes. They’re manufactured in West Virginia with 100% GOTS-certified organic cotton, complete with a long-lasting polyester thread along the outer stitch.

Even your messiest mess is no match for the Little Wipe, gentle enough for little hands but “thirsty enough to dry big hands, too”. This 8”x8” workhorse of a wipe can be washed and dried with any laundry load and doesn’t require special care. Choose from a rainbow of colors (or the rainbow pack) as the perfect addition to a here-comes-baby gift box.

About Gina’s Soft Cloth Shop

The saying “If you want it done right, do it yourself” rings true for Gina’s Soft Cloth Soap. After searching through manufacturing companies in the US, Gina couldn’t find the level of care, detail, and pride she wanted when constructing her product. So, she opened up a sister company, Romney Cut and Sew.

All fabrics are bought from a Fair Trade factory overseas that values honest work and fair wages.

Burt’s Bees Baby

Burt’s Bees Baby has not been rated.

Burt’s Bees Baby’s Wipes

Price Range: $8

The Burt’s Bees Baby line includes affordable baby washcloths made from 100% GOTS organic cotton that come in a variety of cute prints, including plenty of bee designs. Each 9” x 9” terry cloth is smooth on one side, looped on the other (for stubborn messes), and neatly finished with an organic trim.

These sustainable plant-based baby wipes are meant to be reused until potty training (and beyond!)

About Burt’s Bees Baby

Burt’s Bees Baby is an offshoot from the main Burt’s Bees brand. They’ve kept all the same sustainability credentials and used them to create a range of natural and ethically produced products for your little one, from organic baby blankets and swaddling cloths to clothes.

They work with factories that minimize waste, use renewable energy, adopt water-saving methods, and treat their employees fairly. The brand gives back through volunteering at events like beach cleanups and donating a portion of sales from the Baby Bee Box (a starter kit that includes reusable wipes) to Save the Children.

Ecoriginals

Ecoriginals has not been rated.

Ecoriginals’ Baby Wipes

Price Range: $25–$150

Ecoriginals combines the best-in-class ingredients and materials into one baby-approved wipe. They’re made out of 100% bamboo fibers, and if you’re like us and wondering, “Are bamboo baby wipes biodegradable?”, know that theirs are within 3 weeks.

Made with purified New Zealand water and enhanced with organic aloe vera extract, Vitamin E, chamomile essential oil, and soybean amino acid, even their regular wipe is packed with skin-nourishing ingredients.

Reap the benefits of their Manuka Honey wet wipes (sourced with MG650+ potency rating) that are naturally anti-microbial and anti-inflammatory. Add extra Vitamin E and essential fats to your baby’s sensitive skin with their Goats Milk wet wipes.

About Ecoriginals

Beginning in Byron Bay in 2011, this husband and wife team was searching for eco-alternatives to no avail, so they created their own. Striving for a 100% plastic-free diaper is on the agenda, but their plastic-free baby wipes are already there.

Ecoriginals isn’t messing around when it comes to offsetting their plastic use and company emissions. Planting mangroves in Madagascar, building ethical recycling ecosystems in coastal communities, and Gold Standard certified solar power installation in India prove this company is serious about your baby’s health and the planet on which they toddle.

Tips For Using Sustainable Baby Wipes

Reusable baby wipe tips:

If you’ve got big zero waste baby ambitions (go you!), opting for the reusable wipe route is essential. In the beginning, logistics might seem clear as mud (or other things of a similar color…).

That’s why we’re going to share some first-hand know-how to help clean up the whole situation, baby’s bottom included.

1. Make sure you have plenty:

A rule of thumb is that you’ll need 24-36 wipes to see you through until potty training. If you end up using them for everything like we did (faces, fingers, in the bath…) it’s best to grab more.

If you also want to keep face wipes and bum wipes separate, plan ahead by buying different colors to tell them apart.

2. Wet wipes with water:

Wet your baby’s cloth wipes with water for maximum cleaning effectiveness.

3. Be prepared for on the go:

The best travel wipes are the reusable ones you actually remember to bring, so always replenish the supply of cloth wipes in your day bag before you head out. Once used, store them alongside dirty / wet diapers in your wet bag and remember to transfer them to the wash basket when you get home to wash with cloth nappies.

You might instead choose to use disposable baby wipes when out and about if it feels easier, especially to begin with.

4. Plan ahead for holidays and camping.

If you’re camping and not sure how to manage, there are a couple of options.

If you opt for reusable, pack plenty of wipes and research laundering options in advance. You can either boil a kettle for handwashing or plan to make a laundromat pit stop.

If that all sounds too daunting, opt for biodegradable baby wipes for camping or traveling, but ensure you know of the proper means to dispose of them (i.e. not in the trash or toilet).

5. Repurpose post diaper wearing.

Once your little one’s out of diapers, there are plenty of handy ways to repurpose baby wipes for dust cloths, eco friendly mop pads, shoe wipes, and more.

Compostable Baby Wipe Tips:

1. Never flush compostable or biodegradable baby wipes:

Lots of people ask, “Can you flush biodegradable baby wipes?”. The short answer is no. Never flush wipes—even the ones that say “flushable”.

Wipes just don’t break down quickly enough in the sewage works and are the cause of 90% of sewer blockages in the UK.

2. Do compost them (but only without the poop!):

The best place for compostable baby wipes is in the compost. Not the trash can.

However, it does depend on what you’ve used them for. If they’ve been used for wiping poopy bums, you don’t want that poop going in your compost bin (which you’re then going to spread over veggies!).

In these cases, sending them to a high-heat industrial compost (if you have such services nearby) is ideal. Otherwise consider starting a separate compost bin that you allow to reach higher temperatures and won’t use the compost yield on anything edible.

If they’ve just been used for sticky hands and faces, go ahead and put them in your compost bin along with other home compostable items.

3. Recycle the packaging responsibly

Usually, this means recycling the plastic packaging in a specialized soft plastics collection.