Skip to main content

Community Best Buy Label

The Community Best Buy label is a new ethical labelling scheme designed for small scale ethical and eco businesses with an annual turnover below £100,000.

The Community Best Buy label reassures customers that their favourite local or small online business is ethically minded. 

The Community Best Buy label is an extension of our long-established Best Buy ethical accreditation scheme.

It is designed for micro enterprises that provide a meaningful social or environmental alternative, but which operate on a smaller scale than the other companies in our magazine guides. 

Community-rooted businesses, sole traders, artisan producers and other small scale innovators are often excluded from conventional ethical certification schemes, so the Community Best Buy was established to spotlight companies which are built on care, not on scale.

What does the label offer?

As with our main Best Buy label scheme, certified companies can use the Community Best buy logo on their websites, packaging, promotional material and shop windows. 

It is our hope that this webpage will grow into something of an ethical directory as the scheme grows. 

Our shopping guides will also point readers towards any certified Community Best Buy companies within their relevant sector.

The label is not limited to particular products or sectors – any business that provides a genuine alternative is welcome to apply. 

Information for businesses

We welcome applications to the Community Best Buy label. 

The Community Best Buy label is an affordable route to ethical accreditation for companies with an annual turnover of under £100,000. 

Find out more on the Information for Businesses page.

We are offering discounted accreditation for the first ten certified companies (from late January 2026).

Any questions? Email the team at communitybestbuys[at]ethicalconsumer.org.

Community Best Buy label holders

We have launched with two ethical businesses signed up already. 

You can read their profiles below, and for transparency we provide their report.

Money / finance businesses

Words Good Green Money

Good Green Money

Ethically minded savers needn’t go to big city firms for ethical financial advice. Good Green Money Ltd is an independent financial adviser based in Blackburn, Lancashire, dedicated to helping people invest in ways that support the health and wellbeing of the planet and its inhabitants.

The company works closely with clients to understand their values, and helps them steer their money away from harmful industries and towards funds with solid environmental and social credentials. Its approach goes beyond box-ticking, using detailed ethical screening and fund monitoring to avoid the greenwash and ensure that investments deliver real-world positive impact.

Ethics are embedded not only in what Good Green Money recommends, but in how it operates. It is also a certified B Corporation, and donates 2% of its revenue to a rewilding foundation. While the company is based in Lancashire, its services are open to customers across the country.  

View Good Green Money's report (opens as a .pdf)

Retailers

 

Words Anything But Plastic

Anything but Plastic

Since 2017, Anything But Plastic has been selling alternatives to plastic products in order to reduce everyday plastic consumption and help tackle plastic pollution. Its online shop sells a curated selection of plastic-free products to make it easy to choose the plastic-free alternative.

This shop wants customers to make informed purchases and promote sustainable buying practices. 

Each product page has several sections that provide detailed information on the product, including the origins of the materials, to encourage a transparent supply chain and help you decide whether each product would be a good swap for you, so that you can make long-term, eco-friendly choices for the everyday items you use. 

Anything But Plastic wants to help its customers feel good about their purchases, and with a dash of optimism and humour in the product descriptions, this shop makes buying everyday items much more entertaining. 

View Anything But Plastic's report (opens as a .pdf)

Why launch the Community Best Buy label?

We’ve been running our Best Buy Label for almost 30 years. Whether you're looking for an ethical bank or coffee company, the Best Buy Label has become a gold standard for guaranteed ethical shopping in the UK.

But the ethical economy is changing. Sustainability-focused brands (some more ethical than others) are more visible than ever, but there is also a growing ecosystem of micro businesses, sole traders and small collectives which are quietly doing things differently. These enterprises are often deeply rooted in their communities, experimenting with new models of ownership, low-impact production and fair trading relationships. Yet many of them have been locked out of formal certification schemes – including, to an extent, ours.

There are practical reasons for this. Until recently, we only certified companies which have been rated in our shopping guides. These guides are designed to help readers navigate national markets, so they tend to focus on better known, widely available companies in a sector. There is only so much space for niche alternatives, however inspiring they may be.

For example, there are around 12,000 independent coffee shops in the UK, some of which are super-ethical. Our latest shopping guide to coffee shops only covered 16 national chains.

We will of course continue to rate and feature small scale alternatives in our magazine guides – the new label is an extension of our coverage of ultra small businesses, not a replacement for it. The Community Best Buy is however limited to companies with a total annual turnover of under £100,000, so targets businesses which are much smaller than the vast majority of companies in our guides.

Smaller businesses like these also face structural disadvantages when it comes to certification. Detailed policies, formal reporting and specialist staff time cost a lot of money. How many sole traders can afford a sustainability team, or the hours needed to complete lengthy application processes?

But we know from our decades of experience that size is not a proxy for impact or integrity. Some of the most innovative and ethically grounded work is happening at a small scale, precisely because these businesses are closer to their suppliers, their workers and their customers. If we are serious about building an economy that works for people and the planet, we need ways to recognise and support them. 

Ethical Consumer has been expanding our focus on Challenging Corporate Power in the past year, and the new label is part of our ambition to move away from large scale for-profit corporations, and to think outside the box to imagine a different economy.
 

Testimonials

"I am delighted to have been accepted by Ethical Consumer as a suitable recipient of this accreditation. I have been a fan of theirs for many years and regularly refer to their thoroughly researched, considered articles before making purchases. To now be acknowledged by them as deserving of this endorsement truly means a great deal to me."

Haydon Waldek, Good Green Money