Sustainability Commitment
At Healla, sustainability is not treated as a marketing claim. It is part of the responsibility that sits behind how we source, produce, package, and deliver our products.
We work with natural ingredients, traditional systems, and everyday wellness products, so our choices must respect more than the final product. They must also consider the people, land, materials, packaging, supply chain, and long-term impact behind what reaches each home.
Responsible Sourcing
Healla aims to work with suppliers, growers, producers, and manufacturing partners who align with our values around quality, responsibility, and respect for natural resources.
Where possible, we prioritise ingredients and materials that are responsibly sourced, plant-based, natural, minimally processed, and suitable for the product’s intended purpose.
Our sourcing decisions may evolve over time as availability, quality, compliance, sustainability standards, supplier relationships, and product requirements change.
Product Development
We design our products with care, purpose, and practical use in mind.
Our focus is on creating products that belong in everyday life without unnecessary complexity, excess, or waste. We aim to avoid careless formulation, unnecessary additives, and trend-driven product development that does not serve a clear purpose.
As our product range grows, we will continue to review ingredients, production methods, packaging options, and supplier practices to support better long-term decisions.
Packaging
Healla aims to use packaging that protects product quality while reducing unnecessary waste wherever practical.
We avoid unnecessary individual outer packaging where it does not serve a clear purpose. For example, where a bottle, jar, pouch, or container is already secure, compliant, and suitable for sale, we do not add extra cardboard boxes simply for appearance.
Packaging decisions must balance sustainability, product safety, hygiene, shelf life, transport durability, compliance requirements, customer experience, and availability of suitable materials.
Where possible, we will continue to explore recyclable, reusable, compostable, reduced-plastic, paper-based, lightweight, or lower-impact packaging options. Packaging materials may vary depending on product type, market, supplier availability, fulfilment location, and regulatory requirements.
This is the cleanest wording. It says what you mean without locking you into “we never use outer packaging,” because some products may legally, practically, or commercially need it later.
Shipping and Fulfilment
We aim to use practical and responsible shipping materials while ensuring products are protected during transit.
Where possible, we reduce unnecessary outer packaging, use suitable protective materials, and work with fulfilment partners who support efficient and responsible delivery practices.
Because Healla operates through an Australia–India fulfilment structure, shipping materials and dispatch practices may vary by region, product type, warehouse, carrier, and destination.
Waste Reduction
Healla aims to reduce avoidable waste across product development, packaging, stock management, fulfilment, and business operations.
This includes careful batch planning, responsible inventory management, practical packaging choices, and ongoing review of materials and processes as the business grows.
Continuous Improvement
Sustainability is an ongoing responsibility, not a fixed statement.
As better materials, suppliers, production methods, fulfilment options, and compliance pathways become available, Healla will continue improving its practices where practical and commercially responsible.
We do not claim perfection. We commit to making better decisions wherever possible, while protecting product safety, quality, integrity, and trust.
Our Standard
Healla’s sustainability commitment is simple: to build a wellness business that respects nature, protects product integrity, reduces unnecessary waste, and makes responsible choices across the supply chain wherever possible.
Our goal is to keep improving — carefully, honestly, and without making claims that cannot be upheld across every product, batch, market, or fulfilment location.
