Sustainable & Circular Fashion — 2026-06-01
Major footwear and apparel brands are demanding policy overhauls to enable circular business models, while luxury resale powerhouse Vinted reaches €8 billion valuation. Meanwhile, EU Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) regulations are reshaping textile industry standards, forcing brands to rethink product design and end-of-life responsibility.
Sustainable & Circular Fashion — 2026-06-01
This Week's Top Stories
Footwear Firms Demand Circularity Policy Overhaul
Major brands including Amer Sports, Arc'teryx, Ecoalf, Stella McCartney, and Vivobarefoot are collectively pushing for government policy changes to enable circular business models including resale, repair, and take-back programs. The signatories recognize that without regulatory support and standardized frameworks, scaling circular practices remains economically unviable for individual brands operating in fragmented markets.

Vinted Hits €8 Billion Valuation via Secondary Market Strategy
European secondhand fashion platform Vinted reached an €8 billion valuation through an €880 million share transaction led by EQT, signaling investor confidence in the resale sector's long-term growth. The valuation comes as Vinted simultaneously expands beyond fashion into electronics and books, cementing its position as a multi-category circular commerce leader. The company continues to avoid pursuing a traditional IPO, instead opting for strategic secondary share sales.

Zalando Partners with Vestiaire Collective for Luxury Secondhand
E-commerce giant Zalando announced a strategic partnership with Vestiaire Collective to integrate curated luxury secondhand items directly into its platform. The collaboration signals that mainstream retailers now view resale not as a threat but as a necessary revenue stream and customer retention tool in a market where 127% growth in secondhand sales is forecast through 2026.
Resale & Secondhand Market
Vinted Eyes US Market Expansion Amid European Growth Surge
Vinted is accelerating its push into the American market after achieving strong year-on-year sales growth in Europe. The company's strategy targets Gen Z consumers and aims to replicate the secondhand adoption trends that have already transformed European retail, positioning resale as the default shopping mode for young, value-conscious, and environmentally aware shoppers.
AI Adoption Accelerating Secondhand Platform Growth
Resale platforms including Vinted and Depop are increasingly leveraging artificial intelligence to streamline product discovery, pricing optimization, and seller management. AI-driven features help shoppers find items more efficiently and allow platforms to expand their addressable market, driving secondhand adoption at rates outpacing the overall clothing market.
Vintage Fashion Trends Peak in 2026
Secondhand and vintage fashion has transitioned from niche sustainability play to mainstream shopping category, with Y2K styles, thrifted finds, and sustainable shopping becoming normalized consumer behaviors. The shift reflects both environmental awareness and the cost advantages of resale in an era of inflationary retail pricing.
Brand Spotlight
Expert Consensus: Secondhand is (Conditionally) More Sustainable
National Geographic consulted fashion experts on the environmental validity of secondhand shopping, confirming that resale remains preferable to new purchases—but only if buyers don't use secondhand access as license to increase total clothing consumption. The research underscores the importance of pairing resale growth with demand reduction messaging to maximize environmental benefit.
Materials & Innovation
EU Textile EPR Directive Takes Effect; Reshapes Brand Responsibility
The European Union's Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) Directive for textiles, which came into force on October 16, 2025, is now driving mandatory industry compliance. The regulation shifts financial and operational responsibility for end-of-life textiles to producers, requiring brands to fund collection, sorting, and recycling infrastructure. This regulatory shift is accelerating fiber-to-fiber recycling adoption and design-for-durability initiatives across European apparel and footwear companies.

Textile Recycling Now Mandatory Industry Standard in Europe and Select US States
In 2026, textile recycling has evolved from voluntary environmental action to a mandatory, technology-driven compliance requirement across Europe, Asia, and new US state jurisdictions. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) and digital product passports are now standard tools enabling brands to track textile lifecycles, optimize recycling logistics, and prove compliance with recycled content requirements set to take effect by 2030.

What to Watch
- EU Recycled Content Mandate (2030 Deadline): The Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) requires a significant portion of textile products sold in the EU to contain recycled fibers by 2030—a threshold that will force brands without established recycling partnerships to accelerate investment or exit the market.
- Sustainably Sourced Renewable Materials Definition: EU delegated acts on textile ecodesign are expected to finalize requirements for "sustainably sourced renewable materials" as a distinct product category, complementing recycled content rules and creating dual pathways to circularity.
- Brands' Secondary Market Entry: Following Zalando's move, expect more mainstream retailers to integrate resale partnerships directly into their storefronts, further normalizing secondhand as a core retail channel rather than an afterthought.
- Footwear & Apparel Circularity Coalitions: Watch for formal multi-brand commitments on take-back programs, repair infrastructure, and resale channel integration—likely accelerated by the policy demands now being made by Arc'teryx, Stella McCartney, and other signatories.
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