Everyone’s using Native. The ads are everywhere. But is it actually clean, or just good at looking it?
Real talk: ‘clean beauty’ is a marketing free-for-all. No rules. So I dug into the cult-favorite deodorant to see what’s real.
It’s a solid stick deodorant. $14. They claim it’s “naturally derived,” aluminum-free, and effective. The scent variety sucked me in.
Aluminum-Free
Standard for natural deos, but doesn’t automatically mean safer.
Naturally Derived
The weasel-word that started this whole investigation.
40+ Scents
From Coconut & Vanilla to weird limited editions like Candy Cane.
Photo: Mindaugas Norvilas / Unsplash
Here’s the thing: “Naturally derived” lets them use lab-modified ingredients from natural sources. The formula is simple—and not all magic.
- Propylene Glycol (from corn): Helps it glide on smooth
- Sodium Bicarbonate (baking soda): The actual odor fighter, can irritate
- Caprylic/Capric Triglyceride (from coconut): Skin conditioner
- Fragrance: The wild card—could be essential oils or a synthetic blend.
Photo: Ira Kuziv / Unsplash
Texture is a waxy, dense cream. Goes on clear—no white streaks on dark tees. Immediate scent is strong, almost perfumey.
By week two, I noticed a faint, musty scent by 3 PM on a busy day. It doesn’t stop sweat (no antiperspirant), just tries to mask odor. The baking soda gave me a slight red rash after shaving.
Photo: Alia Hasan / Unsplash
It works for low-key days. For a tough workout or high stress? You’ll need a reapply. The scent fades, but so does the odor protection.
Photo: Camille Brodard / Unsplash
It’s fine. Not a greenwashing villain, but not a purity hero either. It’s a pretty-smelling deodorant that does an okay job for some people.