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2026/03/12

What Is the ESPR Regulation and Why Does It Matter for Fashion Brands?

The Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) is the EU's most ambitious sustainability legislation in a generation. Here's what fashion brands need to understand.

If you sell clothing in the EU market, the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) is the most important piece of legislation you'll face this decade. It entered into force in July 2024 and is being rolled out by product category over the next several years — with textiles and apparel among the first targets.

This post explains what ESPR requires, how it relates to the Digital Product Passport, and what the practical compliance obligations look like for a fashion brand.

The Short Version

ESPR requires EU-sold products to:

  1. Meet minimum sustainability standards (durability, repairability, recycled content)
  2. Carry a Digital Product Passport with verified supply chain data
  3. Avoid destruction of unsold inventory (under the anti-waste provisions)
  4. Provide information to consumers and downstream operators

For clothing brands, this means your product data infrastructure becomes a compliance system.

What ESPR Actually Requires

Ecodesign Requirements

The delegated acts for textiles will set specific performance thresholds for:

  • Durability — how many wash cycles can the garment withstand?
  • Recycled content — minimum percentage of recycled fibres
  • Recyclability — can the garment be recycled at end of life? Is it mono-material or mixed?
  • Hazardous substances — REACH compliance, restricted chemicals
  • Water and carbon footprint — potentially declared (not necessarily limited initially)

Digital Product Passport

This is the data layer on top. Every garment sold in the EU will need a unique DPP URL (accessible via QR code on the label) containing:

  • Fibre composition by weight
  • Country of production and material origin
  • Care instructions
  • Certifications held
  • Repair and recycling information
  • Supplier chain information

The DPP is not just for consumers — it's machine-readable and accessible to regulators, customs, recyclers, and re-commerce platforms.

Anti-Waste Provisions

ESPR prohibits large companies (500+ employees or €150M+ turnover) from destroying unsold consumer goods. Fashion brands will need to track what happens to unsold inventory — return to supplier, donate, or recycle.

Why This Matters More Than Previous EU Rules

Previous EU sustainability rules for fashion (like REACH chemical restrictions or EPR packaging laws) were either narrowly scoped or could be addressed with a one-time compliance exercise. ESPR is different:

It's structural. The DPP requirement means every product needs a living data record that's kept accurate over the product's lifecycle. This is a systems problem, not a documentation problem.

It's ongoing. Unlike a certification you renew every three years, a DPP is live. If your supplier changes, your data changes. If your material composition changes, your data changes.

It's upstream. You need data from your manufacturers and fabric suppliers. If they can't provide it in structured form, you're exposed. This creates supply chain pressure that cascades upstream.

What Fashion Brands Should Do Now

Tier 1 (do immediately):

  • Map your product portfolio — which categories will be in scope first?
  • Identify your current data gaps — what material and supplier data do you actually have?
  • Start conversations with key suppliers about DPP data formats

Tier 2 (in the next 12 months):

  • Build or adopt a system to manage product data in DPP-ready structure
  • Start tracking fibre composition at the SKU level (not just the style level)
  • Document supplier certifications with expiry dates

Tier 3 (before the delegated act takes effect):

  • Generate DPP records for your full product range
  • Set up QR code / URL infrastructure per garment
  • Establish an update process for when product data changes

The brands that treat ESPR compliance as a data infrastructure project — rather than a legal checkbox — will come out ahead.

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Toileforge Team

Categories

  • Compliance
The Short VersionWhat ESPR Actually RequiresEcodesign RequirementsDigital Product PassportAnti-Waste ProvisionsWhy This Matters More Than Previous EU RulesWhat Fashion Brands Should Do Now

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