Pick up ten cleaning products at any supermarket. Count how many list every single ingredient by name, not as a percentage range or a vague category. Most will not.
What 'no harsh chemicals' usually means on a label
It usually means nothing has been measured. The phrase carries no regulatory definition. A product can carry it and still contain parabens, trace heavy metals, or surfactants that strip the skin barrier with repeated use.
What full disclosure actually looks like
OUTCOME Pet Environment Care Spray: Benzalkonium Chloride, Lactic Acid, Phenoxyethanol, Non-Ionic Surfactant, EDTA, Iso-Propyl Alcohol, Fragrance. Seven ingredients. Seven names. Nothing abbreviated.
OUTCOME Hand Wash: Aloe Vera, Green Tea Extract, Glycerin, Cocamidopropyl Betaine, Lactic Acid. Five ingredients, each one explained on the Ingredient Guide with what it does and why it is there.
Why most brands do not do this
A full ingredient list invites questions. Most formulas are built to a price point, and the cheapest ingredient that does the job is rarely the one a customer would choose if shown the alternative side by side. Listing everything by name removes that gap.
One question to ask before buying any cleaning product
Can you read the full ingredient list on the bottle and understand what every single line does? If the answer is no, that is the only red flag that matters.