The cashmere market has a fraud problem. Studies and industry reports have repeatedly found that a significant percentage of products labelled "cashmere" contain less cashmere than stated — or none at all. Fibres like fine wool, yak down, and even synthetic microfibre have been found substituting for cashmere in products sold at cashmere prices.
If you've ever bought a "cashmere" sweater that felt rough, pilled aggressively, or lost its shape after one season, you may have been a victim of fibre substitution. Knowing how to tell real vs fake cashmere gives you the tools to protect yourself before and after purchase.
Here are seven methods, ordered from most accessible to most definitive.
Genuine Grade A cashmere (under 15.5 microns) feels distinctly soft — almost slippery — with zero prickle against the skin. Pick up the garment and press it against the inside of your wrist or your cheek, where skin is most sensitive.
Real cashmere feels: buttery, lightweight, immediately warm in your hands. Fake or low-grade "cashmere" feels: slightly scratchy, heavier than expected, or plasticky-smooth (a sign of synthetic fibre coating).
This test isn't definitive — fine Merino wool also feels very soft — but it's a useful first filter. If a garment labelled "cashmere" feels prickly, it's either very low-grade or not cashmere at all.
Cashmere is one of the lightest natural fibres relative to its warmth. A genuine cashmere sweater should feel noticeably lighter in your hands than a comparable wool or synthetic sweater.
If it feels heavy and dense for its size, it likely contains heavier fibres blended in — wool, acrylic, or other substitutes that add weight without adding the insulation-to-weight ratio that defines cashmere.
Take a small section of the fabric (a sleeve cuff or hem edge) and stretch it gently, then release.
Real cashmere: Springs back to its original shape slowly but completely. The fibre has natural memory. Synthetic blends: May snap back too quickly (elastic content) or not recover at all (stretched-out acrylic).
This test checks whether the fibre has the natural protein structure of cashmere. Synthetics and plant-based fibres behave differently under tension.
All cashmere pills to some degree during the first few wears. But there's a difference between the initial settling of high-quality cashmere and the aggressive, continuous pilling of low-grade or blended fibre.
Real, high-quality cashmere: Light pilling in the first season that diminishes after de-pilling two or three times. Fake or very low-grade: Heavy pilling that never stops, even after multiple de-pillings. The fabric thins visibly. This indicates short-staple fibre, heavy blending, or both.
Read the fibre composition label carefully. Legal labelling requirements vary by country, but in most major markets (EU, UK, US, Japan, South Korea), the label must state the fibre composition by percentage.
Watch for: - "Cashmere blend" or "contains cashmere" — this is not 100% cashmere. The cashmere content could be as low as 5%. - "Cashmere-style" or "cashmere-feel" — this means zero cashmere. It's a synthetic designed to mimic the feel. - No origin stated — brands with genuinely premium cashmere typically disclose the region of origin because it adds value. No origin information is a weak signal, not proof of fraud, but worth noting.
The label tells you what a brand is legally required to disclose. The gap between what the label says and what the marketing implies is where misleading claims live.
This is the classic fibre identification test used by textile professionals. If you have a garment you strongly suspect is fake and you're willing to sacrifice a small fibre sample, this test is highly reliable.
Pull a few fibres (not a whole thread — just a few loose fibres from an inside seam) and hold them with tweezers over a flame.
Real cashmere (protein fibre): Burns slowly, smells like burning hair, produces a crushable ash. Synthetic fibre (acrylic, polyester): Burns quickly, may melt and drip, smells chemical or plasticky, produces a hard bead rather than ash. Cotton or plant fibre: Burns like paper, produces a light ash with a wood-like smell.
This test tells you whether the fibre is protein-based (animal origin) or not. It does not distinguish between cashmere and fine wool — for that, you need microscopic or lab analysis.
The only way to verify cashmere composition with certainty is independent laboratory testing. SGS (Société Générale de Surveillance) is the world's largest inspection and certification company, and their fibre analysis testing is the global standard for cashmere verification.
An SGS fibre analysis will confirm: - Whether the fibre is genuinely cashmere (goat undercoat, not wool or synthetic) - The percentage of cashmere versus other fibres - The average fibre diameter (micron count)
As a consumer, you can't run this test yourself. But you can look for brands that publish SGS certification or reference third-party lab testing for their products. A brand that invests in independent fibre verification is signalling confidence in their product — and giving you something verifiable rather than a marketing claim.
This is the same approach Vionisxy takes: every batch of Alxa cashmere is SGS-tested to verify fibre composition and micron count, because the difference between "we say it's Grade A" and "a lab says it's Grade A" is the difference between marketing and evidence.
| Test | What It Checks | Reliability |
|---|---|---|
| Touch | Softness, prickle | Moderate — subjective |
| Weight | Fibre density | Low — useful combined with other tests |
| Stretch | Fibre elasticity and recovery | Moderate |
| Pilling pattern | Staple length and blend quality | Moderate — requires wear time |
| Label | Legal composition disclosure | High — but depends on accurate labelling |
| Burn test | Protein vs synthetic fibre | High — but destructive |
| SGS/Lab certification | Fibre type, percentage, and diameter | Definitive |
The cashmere market rewards scepticism. Don't trust a label at face value — especially if the price seems too low for genuine cashmere. Use the touch, weight, and label tests before buying. Look for brands that disclose micron count, fibre origin, and third-party test results. The more transparent a brand is about its fibre, the less likely you are to end up with a £200 sweater that's actually worth £30.