The best eco-friendly gifts at every price point

Thoughtful in more ways than one.
By Leah Stodart  on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.
photo collage featuring people wearing athleisure sets, a bluetooth tracker, reusable sandwich bags, cornstarch toothbrushes, and silicone food huggers
Credit: girlfriend collective / chipolo / stasher / grin / food huggers store / mashable photo composite

I've always gone out of my way to recycle, conserve electricity, and vote for government officials who take climate change seriously. But I didn't understand the true gravity of environmental decline until I watched A Plastic Ocean on Netflix a few years ago. As I immediately purchased reusable water bottles for myself and every member of my family, the way I thought about shopping drastically changed.

Guilt about over-indulgent holiday shopping is a growing sentiment. We all get giddy when we find the perfect gift for someone, but consumerism really puts a damper on holiday cheer, especially when you think about how much packaging will be used, how many old tech items will be tossed to make room for new devices, or how many underpaid workers are putting in extra hours to get you that extra-cheap outfit on Black Friday.

As the climate crisis becomes harder to ignore, many of us wonder what we can do to help. Though ceasing plane travel and going zero-waste would be ideal on an individual level, they just aren't feasible for the average person. However, environmentally friendly gifts that have a positive impact on our planet offer a tangible way to get involved — including products made from materials already in circulation or sustainable versions of items that are usually single-use.

This isn't to dismiss the fact that big corporations and their disastrous polluting habits are the root of the problem. We can't talk about "sustainable gift ideas" without acknowledging that the whole idea of carbon footprints was created and fed to us by BP, one of the world's biggest corporate carbon contributors, to shift the blame to people throwing straws away.

But making a point to be more eco-friendly on an individual level is still a good idea. The single-use plastic that we toss after 12 minutes will either sit in a landfill and release methane for hundreds of years or join the 8 million metric tons of plastic dumped in the ocean every year that end up in our drinking water and have deadly effects on marine life.

We haven't hit the point of no return yet. If nothing else, that pack of reusable straws could be the gift that sparks a friend's interest in the bigger sustainability movement.

Below, you'll find a list of eco-friendly gift ideas and sustainable gifts you can shop at different price points. Affordable add-ons like biodegradable toothbrushes or dishwasher-safe sandwich bags are just a less wasteful version of something they use every day. Bumping up your budget allows you to get them something that was probably on their list anyway, like a matching workout set or the comfiest comforter ever — both of which happen to be made from recycled plastic bottles. There's a gift for every point on the journey to go green.

Person putting carrots in silicone sandwich bag
Credit: STASHER

Reusable sandwich bags

Best for people with kids

There's no point in buying single-use Ziploc bags. Not only do they take at least 200 years to totally decompose in a landfill, but the cost of replenishing the household sandwich bag stock every month adds up fast. Parents who pack a lot of lunches will appreciate these resealable silicone bags that are reusable (and dishwasher safe!) just like leftover containers.
Buying Options
$11.99 from AMAZON Amazon Prime
Person holding phone and Bluetooth tracker over water
Credit: CHIPOLO

An upcycled Bluetooth tracker

Best for people who lose everything

Need a neutral gift exchange idea? Chipolo has created an Ocean Edition of its Bluetooth trackers made from recycled fishing nets, and $1 from every purchase goes toward ocean cleanup. Your giftee can stick the tracker on any item they lose regularly and track it down on the app if it disappears. If their phone is the missing thing, double-clicking on another Chipolo will make it ring (even on silent).
Buying Options
$29 from CHIPOLO
Three people wearing gray athleisure sets
Credit: GIRLFRIEND

Activewear from Girlfriend

Best for athleisure aficionados

High-end workout leggings have come for the hard pants in our closet. But there's something that makes the ones from Girlfriend Collective more badass than the rest: Each pair is made from 25 recycled water bottles. They come in multiple styles and colors, and reviews mention that they feel like Spandex but a bit looser. Bonus: The company is women-owned.
Person wearing blue backpack and using phone charger
Credit: Solgaard

Solgaard Lifepack Backpack

Best for students

Solgaard's flagship backpack does a lot. It has a cushioned laptop sleeve and secret pockets. It charges devices via solar power. Its fabric was made from upcycled ocean plastic. Whether your giftee is a student or frequent traveler, the Lifepack is a durable, trusty sidekick.
Buying Options
See Details
Doggie bags and packaging on blue and green background
Credit: give a shit / mashable photo composite

Compostable dog poop bags

Best for dog parents

If they're a dog owner, even the most devoted reusable bag users can't escape the need for doggie bags. The bags from Give a Shit are 100% compostable and more landfill friendly than plastic ones. And no, it's definitely not weird to gift dog poop bags when the box is funny.
Buying Options
$11.69 from Amazon

Bite toothpaste bits

Best for people who brush religiously

The thought of chewable toothpaste isn't nearly as freaky as the thought of a heap of plastic tubes chilling in a landfill for eons. After trying one toothpaste tablet from Bite, your recipient won't need any convincing: The mint taste is great, they foam like regular toothpaste, and the recyclable glass bottle looks way classier on a counter than a crusty tube.

Cornstarch toothbrushes

Best add-on gift

Backup toothbrushes are a gift that anyone will use eventually. While plastic ones take up to 400 years to decompose after being tossed, the cornstarch handles on these ones from Grin are biodegradable. The handle feels like the plastic everyone is used to (much comfier than bamboo) and the bristles are just as soft, too. A pack of four colors prevents accidental sharing.
Buying Options
$14.99 from GRIN

The Buffy Cloud comforter

Best for people who cherish their bed

Napping on a cloud looks so damn magical when you're a kid. Turns out you can gift that feeling: The Buffy Cloud comforter is fluffy enough to make even the crappiest beds comfy, and its feathery fill is made from 50 recycled water bottles. The soft fabric is made from eucalyptus, which requires 10 times less water during production than cotton.
Buying Options
$129 from BUFFY
SPONSORED

Aspire Vero Green Laptop

Best deck for your techie

Know someone who wants to level up without giving up their old gear? Enter Acer's Aspire Vero Green Laptop. This eco-friendly laptop is built with post-consumer recycled plastic and designed to help that special someone upgrade their system, while reducing senseless waste. And this green machine sustains the same durability testing as other laptops, so you know it’s built to last.
Buying Options
$899.99 / from ACER
Assorted stuffed animals and a book sitting in sand
Credit: Shore Buddies

A stuffed animal made from plastic bottles

Best for little kids

Shore Buddies put a twist on the universally-good toddler gift that is a stuffed animal. The dolphin, turtle, seal, whale, and seagull plushes are made from yarn spun from six recycled plastic bottles. (Each animal has a name and a story.) Depending on the kid's age, it could be a fun opportunity to teach them about the importance of marine life.
Hand touching metal straw in glass
Credit: FINALSTRAW

Collapsible reusable straws

Best for cocktail sippers

There are bigger environmental fights than the one against plastic straws, but average people minding their daily plastic waste is important nonetheless. Keeping a reusable, collapsible metal straw in the car or a bag will keep them from needing a new single-use one on every McDonald's trip — and serves as a reminder of the depressing viral sea turtle videos they may be preventing. Each FinalStraw comes in a carrying case in the color of your choice.
Assorted cut vegetables with silicone food lids
Credit: FOOD HUGGERS

Silicone food huggers

Best for people who like to cook

In this house, we do NOT use single-use sandwich baggies as storage containers. These silicone seals are an easy, less wasteful way to extend the life of produce. They can be used on halves of veggies or fruits to keep them from drying out, or as lids on jars or bowls. Sets come in an assortment of fun colors and all pieces are dishwasher safe.
Buying Options
$14.99 from AMAZON Amazon Prime

A reusable water bottle

Best for people big on hydrating

According to National Geographic, one million plastic bottles are purchased every minute around the world. Keep someone on your list hydrated 24/7 by gifting a reusable water bottle instead. S'well has a lineup of the prettiest stainless steel bottles that come in lots of attractive patterns. Plus, they're BPA-free, resist condensation, and keep beverages cold for up to 24 hours (or hot for up to 12).
Buying Options
$25 from S'WELL
Notebooks with assorted patterns arranged on wood surface
Credit: DECOMPOSITION

A 100% recycled notebook

Best for people who journal

A new journal could remind your loved one to carve out some personal time — whether that's to practice gratitude, jot down goals, or compose an aesthetically pleasing to-do list. Decomposition's notebooks come in so many adorable patterns and are made from 100% post-consumer waste. According to its site, 40,000 trees and thousands of tons of CO2 have been saved thanks to the company's use of paper already in circulation.
Speckled vases with plants inside
Credit: MADETRADE

A MadeTrade gift card

Best for someone who's moving

Know someone who needs to furnish a new place — or who can't pass up a good decor sale? They'll feel less guilty about an impulse candlestick purchase when it's coming from MadeTrade, an Anthropologie-esque, curated online market that specializes in ethical goods (from home decor to recycled jewelry). Items can also be sorted by categories like fair trade, vegan, and POC-owned. All shipping and returns are 100% carbon offset.
Buying Options
$25 from MADETRADE

A self-filtering water bottle

Best for anti-tap water folks

Your friend who is sketched out by tap water isn't wrong, but do we need to rattle off plastic bottle stats again? Mitigate their Smart Water habit with a water filter bottle. This stainless steel one from Brita offers the chlorine-clearing, taste-improving filtering from Brita that they trust, minus the clunky filter in the fridge.
Buying Options
$26.99 from Amazon
Close up of two people's feet in AllBirds sneakers
Credit: ALLBIRDS

Sneakers from AllBirds

Best for people always on their feet

The nickname "the world's most comfortable shoe" is a bold claim, but Allbirds' sustainable kicks live up to the hype. These shoes are made out of extremely soft, temperature-regulating merino wool (no sheep harmed!) with laces made using 100% post-consumer, recycled plastic bottles. The process uses 60% less energy than what it takes to craft synthetic shoes.
Buying Options
See Details
Hand putting green silverware case into purse
Credit: JOSEPH JOSEPH

A set of portable silverware

Best for fast food frequents

Instead of letting plastic spoons collect in your glove compartment, having reusable silverware on hand can help reduce the number of plastics that end up in landfills or oceans. Joseph Joseph's set includes a stainless steel fork, spoon, and knife, all of which are stored in a compact, spoon-shaped container.
Buying Options
$16 from AMAZON Amazon Prime
Wool dryer balls with penguin design in laundry basket
Credit: Friendship

Cute dryer balls

Best for people who hate soggy towels

Tell 'em, "Surprise, you're ditching your current Bounce sheets for these irresistible Sloth Squad of dryer balls." (Penguins, ladybugs, and other cuties are available.) Dryer sheets release toxins onto your clothes and are, of course, single use. Dryer balls create space between clothing to streamline drying time for heavy items like towels (while still fluffing) — hence less electricity required. Free the Ocean claims that each purchase funds the pulling of plastic out of the ocean.
Buying Options
$32 from Amazon

A solar phone charger

Best for the outdoorsy type

People leaving their chargers plugged in 24/7 adds up to millions of kilowatt hours each year, each of which translates into a pound of CO2 released into the atmosphere. This well-reviewed solar charger can fully juice a new iPhone up to three times, and it's a potentially life-saving gift for those who often venture off the grid.
Buying Options
$28.99 from AMAZON

A refurbished Apple Watch

Best for anyone with an iPhone

E-waste and the mercury, lead, and lithium it leaks are another mammoth contributor to the growing pollution crisis. Apple has a whole section of its site dedicated to certified refurbished items, like the next-to-newest Apple Watch Series 6. They're often up to $100 or $200 cheaper than buying new.
Buying Options
$269 from APPLE
Person taking food out of reusable grocery bag
Credit: CREATIVE GREEN LIFE

Reusable grocery bags

Best for literally anyone

The average person uses a plastic bag from the store for just 12 minutes. Because they're not recyclable with regular containers or bottles, those bags contribute significantly to the millions of tons of plastic dumped in the ocean each year. Reusable grocery bags aren't a luxurious gift, but they can have a massive impact on a household's waste. These can hold up to 30 pounds each, and you'll get three in a set.
Buying Options
$34.99 from AMAZON
Person wearing patterned athletic set
Credit: Wolven Threads

A gift card to Wolven

Best for fashionistas who love a good matching set

Gifting to someone who's into fashion is a breeze when you let them pick the fit themselves — you just pay for it. Wolven has blown up for its fun patterns, but the brand's biggest claim to fame is "making sustainability sexy" with all women's and men's designs made from 100% recycled materials. Your giftee can use their gift card on athleisure, joggers, reversible swimwear, and more.
Buying Options
$25 from Wolven
Indoor planter with herbs
Credit: CLICK & GROW

An indoor smart garden

Best for farmers market fans

The amount of single-use plastic packaging used by produce suppliers is dumb. Help someone skip the grocery store while making their urban farm dreams come true with the Click & Grow Smart Garden 3. Energy-efficient LED lights give plants what they need to prosper in the nursery that's small enough to chill on the kitchen counter. Pre-seeded, biodegradable pods include strawberries, tomatoes, and arugula.
Buying Options
$99.95 from AMAZON
Hand soap with paper labels
Credit: MUDDYMINT

Fun hand soaps

Best for hand soap hoarders

If you know someone who can't say no to a five for $20 deal at Bath & Body Works, help them skip the plastic bottles and pumps with these handmade soaps. Etsy shop MuddyMint offers ornate, palm oil-free bars in scents like Garden Mint, Coffee & Clove, Orange Patchouli, and Mountain Man. (The latter is a bestselling shampoo/body soap with a coconut milk base and swirls of raw Colorado honey and black walnut hull powder — yum.) Whichever you choose, they're sure to spruce up any bathroom counter.
Buying Options
$8.50 from ETSY
Person tying shoe while wearing gray puffer coat
Credit: THE NORTH FACE

The North Face ThermoBall Eco

Best for anyone who deals with winter

Everyone's favorite puffer jacket now features recycled polyester fabric insulation. The fibers in each ThermoBall Eco coat's lining are crafted from at least five plastic bottles taken from a landfill, all while providing down-alternative warmth and wet weather performance. Both men's and women's collection are available in a rainbow of colors, plus other styles like vests.
Person putting food scraps into countertop composter
Credit: VITAMIX

The Vitamix FoodCycler

Best for people with a garden

Composting is the eco-friendly art of recycling food scraps (instead of dumping them in a landfill) that will eventually turn into natural fertilizer. The FoodCycler makes composting possible even for people who don't want to deal with worms. It's no bigger than a toaster oven and silently composts food in four to eight hours — and prevents a trash can reeking of rotting leftovers.
Buying Options
$399.95 from AMAZON
Sparkling water maker sitting on countertop
Credit: SODASTREAM

The Sodastream Fizzi

Best for people who like it bubbly

We'll take an at-home vodka soda — but hold the single-use plastic bottles, please. Spritzy cocktail and La Croix lovers can now make their own carbonated drinks with Sodastream: that slick little machine that adds bubbles to your beverages. If they prefer a taste other than plain sparkling water, the site offers flavor pods for fruit juice, colas, ginger ale, and more.

A Nest thermostat

Best for people who are always hot

Coming home to a comfortable temperature is possible without blasting the AC or heat all day. The Google Nest Thermostat makes it easy to create an energy-efficient schedule, offering suggestions about how to save more and automatically turning the heat or cold air down when you leave. Everything can be controlled in the Google Home app, ultimately reducing your electricity usage as well as money spent on bills.
Buying Options
$99 from AMAZON
Subscription box holding assorted sustainable home products
Credit: GREENUP

A greenUP subscription

Best for eco-friendly newbies

If you know someone who wants to live a more sustainable lifestyle but doesn't know where to start (fair), sign them up for greenUP. The award-winning subscription box ships seasonally with personal care products and home goods that can be swapped for single-use plastic items in their daily routine. (Think biodegradable dental floss, stainless steel lunch boxes, and vegan wax food wraps.) Everything arrives in compostable packaging and the company's pledged to be carbon neutral by 2023.
Buying Options
$49.95 from CRATEJOY
Person wearing patterned face mask
Credit: ECO RIGHT

A reusable face mask

Best for people who like to switch up their mask

The conservation organization OceansAsia estimates that over 1.56 billion disposable face masks wound up in our oceans in 2020, resulting in between 5,160 to 6,880 tons of marine plastic pollution — so that's, uh, not great. Reusable ones are definitely the move as we continue to mask up for the foreseeable future. These cotton face masks with adjustable ear loops are made in ethically-certified manufacturing facilities that run on solar power, and they ship in 100% compostable packaging.
Buying Options
$11.95 from AMAZON Amazon Prime
Chapstick on wood surface
Credit: BURT'S BEES

Burt's Bees lip balm

Best for dedicated chapstick users

Burt's Bees has been the ~cool~ chapstick since the early 2000s. The formula gained its fame from the comforting flavors — that hint of peppermint always hits different — but the company itself deserves credit for its mission to save the bees (and the planet). The natural ingredients in the Lip Balm are sustainably sourced, and the company has committed to sending zero factory waste to landfills.
Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers essential home tech like vacuums and TVs as well as sustainable swaps and travel. Her ever-growing experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.

Leah graduated from Penn State University in 2016 with dual degrees in Sociology and Media Studies. When she's not writing about shopping (or shopping online for herself), she's almost definitely watching a horror movie, "RuPaul's Drag Race," or "The Office." You can follow her on X at @notleah or email her at [email protected].


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