BOST Fragrance-Free Shampoos Low-Scent Field Report
Field Report — Fragrance-Free Shampoo Investigation

Fragrance-Free
Shampoos That
Don’t Smell.

Eight products tested in hot water and steam. Not all fragrance-free shampoos are low-scent. Some release strong chemical or botanical odours when heated — even without added perfume. Results as found.

A Field Report — cross-product comparison within the Fragrance-Free Shampoo Investigation. Ranked findings, not recommendations.

An investigator at work testing fragrance-free shampoos in field conditions.
Fig. I — field conditions: hot water, chalk aquifer
Why this field report exists

The label says fragrance-free.
The shower disagrees.

The gap in the label

Fragrance-free means no added parfum compounds. It says nothing about the smell of surfactants, preservatives, or botanicals — all of which are detectable in hot water. The label describes an absence of one ingredient.

Heat changes everything

Many raw materials that smell faint or neutral at room temperature bloom significantly under steam. The product smelled fine in the shop. The shower is a different environment.

Unpredictability is the problem

Sensory distress is usually caused by mismatch. A product that should be neutral but isn’t is harder to manage than one that is known to have a scent. Expectation is part of the load.

What this report does

Tests eight fragrance-free shampoos at cold, lathered, and in-shower steam stages. Ranked by scent intrusion — not pleasantness. The aim is predictability.

This report covers intensity, unpredictability, and persistence of smell — not allergens. It is for people reacting to sensory overload, not diagnosis.

What the investigation found

Why fragrance-free shampoos still smell — and what causes it

The smell is in the formula, not the perfume. Surfactants, fatty alcohols, preservatives, and botanical extracts all carry detectable odour compounds. At room temperature these may be faint or unnoticeable. At 40°C in a steam-filled bathroom, the same compounds can bloom significantly. The fragrance-free claim is accurate on its own terms. It is just a very narrow claim.

Source of smellWhat it smells like and when
Raw surfactantsA faint soap or detergent note — present in most shampoos regardless of fragrance status. Usually mild at cold, more detectable under steam. Sodium laureth sulfate and sodium lauryl sulfate both carry it; sulfate-free alternatives often less so.
Botanical extractsThe most unpredictable source. Plant-derived ingredients — aloe, chamomile, tea tree, nettle, wheat protein — can release strong warm, vegetal, or earthy notes under heat. Often the primary cause of overwhelm in products labelled “natural” and “fragrance-free”.
PreservativesPhenoxyethanol, sodium benzoate, and similar preservatives contribute a mild chemical or antiseptic note. More detectable in products with higher water content. Usually a background note rather than the dominant smell.
Fatty componentsPEG compounds and fatty alcohols can produce a faint waxy or glue-like odour under heat — noticeable in some formulas but absent in others depending on concentration and combination with other ingredients.
Scent intrusion — all tested products, hot water and steam conditions
Almost nothingFaintNoticeableStrong
Abena
Almost none
Faith in Nature
Faint
Vanicream
Noticeable
Noughty
Noticeable
Simple
Noticeable
Urtekram
Strong
E45
Strong
bio-d
Strong
Cleared — low scent in hot water
The smell stayed absent

Cleared

Tested cold, lathered, and in hot steam. Scent intrusion remained below threshold at all three stages.

Faith In Nature Natural Shampoo – Fragrance Free — Sensory Review

Near-odourless in a hot shower, no squeak, fast rinse — the strongest all-round sensory performer in the test batch. One truly irritating cap.

Strength: Barely perceptible cold; almost entirely absent in hot water

Character: A very faint chemical note cold — nothing detectable in heat

Lingering: Nothing detectable on hair or hands after drying

Cleared — low scent in hot water
Abena Fragrance Free Shampoo — Sensory Review

A genuinely low-scent, low-foam, and unusually calm in use. Cleans effectively without squeak. Still relies on sulfates.

Strength: No smell from the bottle, in cold water, or in hot water and steam. Least detectable of the brands tested.

Character: Smells of almost nothing.

Lingering: No residual scent on hair or hands after drying. No detectable smell the following morning. This is less common than the label suggests.

Cleared — low scent in hot water
“Stayed neutral even in hot water. No bloom on lathering. No detectable note at rinse. This is what the label implies and what almost none of the products in this batch deliver.” — BOST Lab test notes, Abena, April 2026
Caution — noticeable under heat
Present but manageable

Caution

Detectable under heat or steam. Whether this crosses a threshold depends on your particular sensitivity. Notes are on each card.

~
Simple Gentle Care Shampoo – Sensory Review

You reached for Simple because the bottle said fragrance-free, and the bottle felt like a promise you could trust. The ingredient list tells a different story. Chamomile and geranium oils sit there in the INCI, quietly contradicting the front label, and in a hot shower you can smell them. This is a review about which of those two documents to believe.

Strength: Faint cold; light citrusy-floral note in heat. Present but not aggressive

Character: Slightly citrusy or grass-like cold; faintly chamomile-floral in heat, consistent with the essential oils listed

Lingering: Nothing detectable on hair after drying

Caution — noticeable under heat
~
Noughty Care Taker Fragrance Free Shampoo — Sensory Review

Sulfate-free with genuinely good hair results — but the gloopy texture, difficult packaging, and a glue-like smell in heat are real barriers for sensory-sensitive users.

Strength: Faint cold; mild to moderate glue-like odour in hot water

Character: Chemical, glue-like — hard to place; not botanical or floral

Lingering: Nothing detectable on hair or hands after drying

Caution — noticeable under heat
Flagged — strong scent despite claims
The smell was significant

Flagged

Listed so they can be avoided without having to find out during a shower. There is no version of this result that qualifies as low-scent.

Vanicream Free & Clear Shampoo — Sensory Review

The most tightly controlled formula in the test — avoids more irritant categories than any competitor. Cleans very hard. Best treated as a troubleshooting shampoo rather than a daily comfort wash.

Strength: Moderate cold; stronger and unusual in heat — product uniquely went cloudy in hot water

Character: Hard-to-place chemical base smell; changed character in heat; unlike any other product tested

Lingering: Nothing detectable on hands or hair after rinsing

Flagged — strong scent despite claims
bio-d Fragrance Free Shampoo — Sensory Review

Fragrance-free but not odourless — a chemical smell in heat, very squeaky results, and the best ethical credentials of any product in the test batch.

Strength: Mild soapy cold; strong chemical odour released in hot water

Character: Chemical cleaning product — rug shampoo or dog wash in heat; specific and sustained

Lingering: Clears completely after rinsing — no detectable smell on hair or hands afterward

Flagged — strong scent despite claims
E45 Dry Scalp Fragrance Free Shampoo — Sensory Review

A legitimate anti-dandruff treatment — with a chemical smell in heat that fragrance-sensitive users will find difficult to ignore.

Strength: Faint cold; moderate to strong in hot water and steam

Character: Plasticky and synthetic cold; medicinal and chemical in heat

Lingering: Faint residual smell detectable on hair after drying

Flagged — strong scent despite claims
Urtekram Fragrance Free Sensitive Scalp Shampoo — Sensory Review

The strongest-smelling product in the test batch. Technically fragrance-free. In a hot shower: glue, play dough, or freshly opened emulsion paint smelling (take your pick).

Strength: Strong cold; very strong and pungent in hot water — sustained throughout the shower

Character: Glue, play dough, or fresh emulsion paint — distinctive and unpleasant

Lingering: Lingering aroma detectable in hair after drying

Flagged — strong scent despite claims
Note for US readers

US availability

Most products in this batch are UK and European brands. Abena is not widely available in the USA. The closest US-available equivalent for smell-sensitive users is Vanicream Free & Clear — cleared on the scent investigation for most users, though it carries a mild chemical base note under heat. Faith in Nature ships internationally and is available on Amazon US. Both are linked on the relevant case file pages.

How scent was assessed. All shampoos tested at three stages: cold from the bottle, lathered in hot water, and in a hot shower with steam. Scent assessed by intensity and persistence — not pleasantness. Hard water conditions throughout (South Downs chalk aquifer). Reviewer is fragrance-sensitive and autistic. Full methodology →
This page contains affiliate links. No sponsored content. All testing done independently by BOST Lab.