An independent side-by-side ethics comparison of Elizabeth L. Cline and Dr. Bronner's across certifications, average sustainability score and product range.
88/100 avg ethics
1 products tracked
Certifications
97.2/100 avg ethics
20 products tracked
Certifications

An essential guide to sustainable fashion that teaches readers how to build an ethical wardrobe without sacrificing style.

The gold standard for multi-use automotive cleaning, this biodegradable soap is fair-trade certified and effective for everything from dashboard wipes to exterior washes.

The gold standard of ethical soaps, this concentrated formula uses organic oils and fair-trade ingredients in 100% post-consumer recycled packaging.

A concentrate of organic oils and fair-trade ingredients that serves as a powerful, non-toxic pet shampoo while supporting regenerative farming.

The gold standard of ethical gifting: a versatile, organic, and fair-trade soap set that supports regenerative farming and fair wages.

A gold-standard pantry staple produced through regenerative organic farming that restores soil health and supports Sri Lankan smallholder farmers.

An industry gold standard for ethical home care, this ultra-concentrated soap uses organic oils and fair-trade ingredients to replace dozens of single-use cleaners.
Dr. Bronner's scores higher on independent ethics scoring: Elizabeth L. Cline averages 88/100 vs Dr. Bronner's at 97.2/100.
Elizabeth L. Cline appears with 1 verified certification (FSC Certified). Dr. Bronner's appears with 8 (Fair Trade, USDA Organic, B Corp, Leaping Bunny, Non-GMO).
Yes. Both brands are scored by the same methodology — never paid placement. See our methodology page for the weighting.