EU Regulations Every Fashion Professional Must Know
The definitive regulatory guide for fashion, luxury, retail and eCommerce professionals
- EU Regulations Every Fashion Professional Must Know
- Which European regulations are the most relevant in the fashion sector?
- Why EU regulations are reshaping the fashion industry
- 1. REACH Regulation – Chemicals, materials and product safety
- 2. Textile Labelling Regulation – Transparency at product level
- 3. General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR)
- 4. Ecodesign & ESPR – Sustainability embedded in product design
- 5. Green Claims Directive – Regulating sustainability communication
- 6. Omnibus Directive – Fair marketing and pricing practices
- 7. CSRD – Sustainability reporting becomes mandatory
- 8. CSDDD – Due diligence across the supply chain
- 9. Waste regulation, EPR and circular economy
- 10. GDPR & Cookie Law – Data governance in fashion
- 11. EU AI Act – Governing artificial intelligence
- 12. Pay Transparency Directive – The future of recruitment
- Final takeaway: regulation as a strategic capability
Which European regulations are the most relevant in the fashion sector?
he EU fashion sector is highly regulated. The most relevant regulations include:
- REACH Regulation – governs chemicals and materials used in textiles, leather, footwear and accessories. Brands are responsible for compliance even if production happens outside the EU.
- Textile Labelling Regulation (EU 1007/2011) – defines mandatory fibre composition rules, applicable both offline and online.
- General Product Safety Regulation (EU 2023/988) – strengthens product safety requirements, recalls and risk assessments.
- Ecodesign & ESPR – introduces sustainability-by-design principles and the Digital Product Passport.
- Green Claims Directive (upcoming) – restricts vague or misleading sustainability claims.
- Supply Chain Due Diligence (CSDDD) – extends environmental and social responsibility across the supply chain.
- GDPR – regulates personal data, CRM, marketing and eCommerce activities.
- VAT & cross-border eCommerce rules – essential for selling across the EU.
The key areas for fashion today are materials, transparency, sustainability, product safety, supply-chain responsibility and data protection.
Why EU regulations are reshaping the fashion industry
Over the last decade, the European Union has progressively transformed fashion regulation from a fragmented compliance framework into a systemic governance model. Today, sustainability, transparency, digital responsibility, consumer protection and social accountability are legally enforced pillars of how fashion businesses must operate.
EU regulation no longer impacts only legal departments. It directly affects:
- product design and material choices
- sourcing and supplier selection
- sustainability strategy and ESG reporting
- marketing, communication and pricing
- digital platforms, data, AI and automation
- organisational processes and governance
For fashion brands and retailers, understanding this regulatory ecosystem is now a competitive advantage. This article is designed as a pillar content: a comprehensive, structured reference for professionals who need to navigate EU regulation with clarity and strategic awareness.
1. REACH Regulation – Chemicals, materials and product safety
REACH (EC No. 1907/2006) is the cornerstone of chemical regulation in the EU and one of the most critical frameworks for the fashion industry.
Scope and relevance for fashion
REACH applies to:
- textiles and yarns
- leather and tanning processes
- dyes, pigments and finishing treatments
- accessories, footwear and components
It restricts or bans the use of hazardous substances such as:
- azo dyes
- formaldehyde
- heavy metals
- PFAS and other persistent chemicals
Strategic implications
- Brands must ensure full chemical compliance across the supply chain
- Traceability and documentation are essential
- Compliance responsibility lies with the company placing the product on the EU market, regardless of production location
REACH directly connects product development, sourcing and sustainability credibility.
2. Textile Labelling Regulation – Transparency at product level
Regulation (EU) 1007/2011 governs textile fibre labelling and composition disclosure.
Key obligations
- Use of official EU fibre denominations only
- Accurate fibre composition percentages
- Mandatory information in the language of the country of sale
Digital impact
This regulation applies not only to physical labels but also to:
- product pages on eCommerce websites
- marketplaces
- digital catalogues
Incorrect or misleading fibre information is considered a consumer law violation, not a minor technical error.
3. General Product Safety Regulation (GPSR)
The General Product Safety Regulation (EU) 2023/988, fully applicable from 2024, strengthens horizontal product safety rules across all consumer goods.
What changes for fashion companies
- Mandatory risk assessments
- Clear procedures for recalls and corrective actions
- Enhanced traceability obligations
- Stronger enforcement and penalties
This regulation is particularly relevant for:
- childrenswear
- jewellery and accessories
- footwear
- products with mechanical or chemical risks
Product safety is now closely linked to brand liability and reputation.
4. Ecodesign & ESPR – Sustainability embedded in product design
The Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) represents a paradigm shift: sustainability becomes a design requirement, not a marketing claim.
Core principles
- durability and longevity
- repairability
- recyclability
- reduced environmental impact
Digital Product Passport (DPP)
One of the most disruptive elements of ESPR is the Digital Product Passport, which will contain structured, machine-readable product data, including:
- material composition
- origin and supply chain information
- environmental performance indicators
- instructions for repair, reuse and recycling
Fashion impact
ESPR affects:
- product development and sourcing
- IT architecture (PIM, ERP, PLM)
- eCommerce content
- sustainability communication
This regulation connects physical products with digital infrastructure.
5. Green Claims Directive – Regulating sustainability communication
The upcoming Green Claims Directive directly targets misleading environmental communication.
What will be prohibited
- vague or generic claims such as “eco-friendly”, “green” or “sustainable”
- claims not supported by scientific evidence
- self-created sustainability labels without certification
- selective or partial environmental messaging
Environmental claims will require:
- robust data
- recognised methodologies
- third-party verification
For fashion brands, this fundamentally changes how sustainability storytelling is built.
6. Omnibus Directive – Fair marketing and pricing practices
The so-called Omnibus Directive strengthens EU consumer protection by updating the Unfair Commercial Practices Directive and the Consumer Rights Directive.
What does the Omnibus Directive say about price transparency.
The Omnibus framework is package of EU amendments strengthening consumer protection rules. In fashion, it is especially relevant for:
- Discounts and pricing: reference prices must be the lowest price applied in the previous 30 days.
- Greenwashing: sustainability claims must be accurate, verifiable and not misleading.
The Omnibus rules strongly impact marketing, promotions, eCommerce UX and pricing strategies, and are closely linked to the upcoming Green Claims Directive.
Sustainability and greenwashing
Environmental and ethical claims must be:
- accurate
- verifiable
- presented without misleading emphasis
Pricing and discounts
Fashion retailers must:
- use the lowest price applied in the previous 30 days as reference for discounts
- avoid fake or permanent promotions
This regulation has a direct operational impact on:
- promotions
- seasonal sales
- Black Friday strategies
- outlet and flash-sale models
7. CSRD – Sustainability reporting becomes mandatory
The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) introduces mandatory ESG reporting based on European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS).
Key elements
- environmental, social and governance disclosures
- double materiality analysis
- audited sustainability data
Cascading effect
Even companies not directly subject to CSRD are impacted through:
- supplier questionnaires
- data requests
- contractual sustainability clauses
CSRD transforms sustainability into a structured management discipline.
8. CSDDD – Due diligence across the supply chain
The Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) extends corporate responsibility to the entire value chain.
Obligations include
- identifying environmental and human-rights risks
- preventing and mitigating adverse impacts
- monitoring effectiveness
- documenting due diligence processes
For fashion brands, this includes labour conditions, environmental impacts and sourcing transparency.
9. Waste regulation, EPR and circular economy
EU waste legislation increasingly applies Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) principles.
What it means for fashion
- brands are responsible for the end-of-life of products and packaging
- textile-specific EPR schemes are being introduced
- increased operational costs and reporting requirements
Circularity is evolving from voluntary initiatives to regulated obligations.
10. GDPR & Cookie Law – Data governance in fashion
For fashion eCommerce, cookie compliance is critical because it affects tracking, advertising, CRM, retargeting and marketing automation. Dark patterns or forced consent may also violate consumer protection rules reinforced by the Omnibus Directive.
Fashion is a data-driven industry. Key regulations include:
- GDPR for personal data protection
- ePrivacy Directive / Cookie Law for tracking and consent
Key compliance challenges
- consent management
- profiling and personalisation
- CRM and marketing automation
- advertising and analytics
Non-compliance affects both legal exposure and marketing effectiveness.
11. EU AI Act – Governing artificial intelligence
The EU AI Act introduces a risk-based regulatory framework for artificial intelligence. Most fashion use cases fall under limited-risk systems, including chatbots, recommendation engines, AI-generated content and dynamic pricing.
Key obligations include transparency, human oversight and bias prevention. The AI Act intersects with GDPR and consumer protection law, making governance essential for fashion brands using AI in marketing, CRM and eCommerce.
Fashion-relevant use cases
- chatbots and virtual assistants
- recommendation engines
- AI-generated content and imagery
- dynamic pricing systems
Core principles
- transparency when interacting with AI
- human oversight
- bias and discrimination prevention
AI adoption must be governed, documented and explainable.
12. Pay Transparency Directive – The future of recruitment
This refers to the EU Pay Transparency Directive (EU 2023/970). Member States must transpose it by June 2026.
It requires candidates to receive information about salary or salary ranges before interviews and prohibits employers from asking about salary history. Whether salaries must appear directly in job ads depends on national implementation.
Key provisions
- candidates must be informed of salary or salary range before interviews
- employers cannot ask for salary history
- reporting obligations on gender pay gaps
Member States must transpose the directive by June 2026.
And in terms of sustainability, what does European regulation provide for?
EU sustainability regulation is built around the European Green Deal and includes:
- CSRD for ESG reporting
- CSDDD for supply-chain due diligence
- ESPR and Digital Product Passport
- Green Claims Directive
- REACH and chemical safety
- EPR and waste regulation
Sustainability is now regulated, measurable and enforceable, affecting design, IT systems, marketing and supply chains.
Final takeaway: regulation as a strategic capability
EU regulation defines the operating system of the modern fashion industry.
To remain competitive, fashion companies must:
- integrate compliance into design and sourcing
- align sustainability with data and governance
- redesign marketing and pricing strategies
- adapt digital platforms and IT architecture
In the European fashion ecosystem, regulation is no longer a constraint — it is a strategic capability.
📘 Core Legal & Legislative Resources
- EUR-Lex – official database of EU law (regulations, directives, consolidated texts)
👉 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/ - EUR-Lex Directory of EU legislation (browse by subject)
👉 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/browse/directories/legislation.html - Official Journal of the European Union (where binding acts are published)
👉 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/oj/direct-access.html
📜 Specific Regulations & Policy Pages
- REACH Regulation (Reg. EC No. 1907/2006) – official text on EUR-Lex
👉 https://eur-lex.europa.eu/eli/reg/2006/1907/oj/eng - EU Textile Labelling Regulation (Reg. EU 1007/2011) – European Commission page
👉 https://single-market-economy.ec.europa.eu/sectors/textiles-ecosystem/regulation-eu-10072011_en - Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) – European Commission overview
👉 https://commission.europa.eu/energy-climate-change-environment/standards-tools-and-labels/products-labelling-rules-and-requirements/ecodesign-sustainable-products-regulation_en
📊 Sustainability & Corporate Responsibility
- Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) – European Commission info page
👉 https://finance.ec.europa.eu/capital-markets-union-and-financial-markets/company-reporting-and-auditing/company-reporting/corporate-sustainability-reporting_en - EU corporate sustainability & due diligence policies (overview)
👉 https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/policies/corporate-sustainability/
📍 Useful Institutional Portals
- Europa – the official portal of the European Union (general EU info & links)
👉 https://europa.eu/
🧠 How to find any specific regulation text
For any specific directive or regulation by name or number (e.g., GDPR, AI Act, Omnibus-related acts), use:
👉 EUR-Lex Advanced Search — https://eur-lex.europa.eu/advanced-search-form.html
This lets you look up the consolidated text, amendments, and official languages of the legal act you need.
Digital Fashion Academy supports fashion professionals and companies in navigating digital transformation, eCommerce, sustainability and regulatory change.