Refill Not Landfill is a family-run refillery at 123 Wellington Street. Bring an empty jar. Leave with laundry soap, shampoo, or dish cleaner. Walk out having kept one more piece of plastic out of the waste stream. Multiply that by everyone who does it, and the math gets good.
Refill Not Landfill is the newest addition to Simply Pure Water — a family-run business on Wellington Street that's been keeping bottles out of the landfill since its first day. The refillery takes the same idea and aims it at everything else in your cupboards. Laundry. Shampoo. Dish soap. Counter spray. All of it, refillable.
“We don't need a handful of people doing zero waste perfectly. We need millions of people doing it imperfectly.” — Anne Marie Bonneau
One refill is one less single-use bottle manufactured, shipped, and discarded.
Mason jars. Old shampoo bottles. Cleaning-spray pumps from two years ago. Bring what you already own.
Fill from the tap. Pay by weight. Walk out with the same container and a full one.
Everything in the refillery is Canadian-sourced, plant-based, and ultra-concentrated (which means smaller, lighter, and less transport footprint). Bring your container or grab a reusable from the shelf near the door.
Detergent, stain remover, fabric softener. A little goes a long way — these are concentrates, so don't over-pour.
Come by →Shampoo, conditioner, body wash, hand soap. Vegan, safe around babies and pets, gentle on skin.
Come by →All-purpose, bathroom, kitchen, dish. Full ingredient list on every dispenser — no mystery chemistry.
Come by →Bigger sizes for offices, cleaning services, rental properties, and households that go through it fast.
Come by →Something you already own is ideal — mason jar, old bottle, anything food-safe and clean. Don't have one? We have reusables near the door.
Walk in, tell us what you're looking for, and we'll point you at the right dispenser. First visit always takes a minute longer — after that you know where everything is.
Pour what you need. We weigh it, we label it, you pay by weight. No minimums, no subscriptions, no "monthly quota" nonsense.
When you're empty, come back with the same container. That's the whole cycle. Add up the savings over a year and the numbers get quietly shocking.
Walk in with an empty jar. Walk out with a full one. Leave behind one less piece of plastic for everyone who comes after you.