What Is SGS Certification? Why Third-Party Lab Testing Matters for Your Knitwear
The cashmere sweater in your hands feels soft. The label says 100% cashmere. The price seems reasonable. But how do you actually know what you are wearing? In a global textile market worth tens of billions of dollars, where supply chains span continents and fiber fraud is well-documented, the honest answer for most consumers is: you don't. Unless someone tested it.
That someone, in the most rigorous cases, is SGS — the world's leading third-party inspection, verification, testing, and certification company. An SGS fiber composition certificate is the closest thing the textile industry has to an indisputable statement of fact. Lab results do not lie. Marketing copy, unfortunately, often does.
Understanding what SGS certification means, how the testing works, and why most brands avoid it will fundamentally change how you evaluate knitwear purchases — and help you separate genuine quality from well-packaged deception.
What Is SGS?
SGS SA, headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, was founded in 1878 as a grain inspection house. Over nearly 150 years, it has grown into the global benchmark for independent verification across virtually every industry that requires trust in physical goods. The company employs over 98,000 people and operates in more than 120 countries, running a worldwide network of laboratories, inspection offices, and certification centers.
In textiles, SGS occupies a position analogous to what a forensic laboratory occupies in criminal justice: it provides objective, scientifically rigorous evidence about the physical composition and properties of materials. When a brand submits a garment or yarn sample to SGS for testing, the result is not an opinion or an estimate. It is a laboratory finding, produced using internationally standardized methods, documented in a formal report, and backed by the institutional credibility of one of the world's most recognized testing organizations.
This independence is the critical factor. SGS has no financial interest in the outcome of its tests. It does not sell fiber. It does not manufacture garments. It does not benefit from a sample testing as cashmere rather than yak hair. Its business model depends entirely on the accuracy and impartiality of its results. That structural independence is what gives an SGS certificate its authority.
What Does SGS Test in Textiles?
SGS textile testing covers a broad range of properties, each addressing a different dimension of quality and compliance. For knitwear buyers, the most relevant categories include:
Fiber composition analysis determines exactly what fibers are present in a textile and in what proportions. This is the test that answers the fundamental question: is this garment actually made from the fiber claimed on its label? A sample labeled "100% cashmere" will be tested to confirm the presence and percentage of cashmere fiber versus any other animal, plant, or synthetic fiber.
Micron measurement quantifies the diameter of individual fibers, typically reported in micrometers. This metric directly correlates with softness and quality grade. Cashmere fibers at 14.5 microns, for example, represent an exceptionally fine grade — noticeably softer than coarser fibers at 17 or 18 microns that still technically qualify as cashmere. Similarly, ultrafine Merino wool at 16 microns occupies the premium end of the wool spectrum, far removed from the 22- to 25-micron fibers used in commodity wool products.
Tensile strength testing measures how much force a fiber or fabric can withstand before breaking, indicating durability and resistance to wear. Color fastness testing evaluates how well dyes resist fading through washing, light exposure, and friction. Chemical safety testing screens for restricted substances — heavy metals, formaldehyde, azo dyes, and other compounds regulated under international safety standards — ensuring the garment is safe for prolonged skin contact.
Together, these tests create a comprehensive material profile that no amount of brand storytelling can fabricate or replicate.
How Fiber Composition Testing Works
The process of determining what a textile is actually made of is more complex — and more fascinating — than most consumers realize. SGS laboratories employ multiple complementary techniques to achieve definitive identification.
Optical microscopy is typically the first step. Technicians examine individual fibers under high magnification, analyzing their surface scale patterns, cross-sectional shapes, and medullary structures. Different animal fibers have characteristic scale patterns: cashmere fibers display a distinctive irregular, mosaic-like scale pattern that differs visibly from the smoother, more regular scales of standard sheep wool, or the flat, overlapping scales of yak hair. An experienced fiber analyst can often identify the species of origin from microscopy alone, though this alone is not considered sufficient for certification-grade results.
Chemical dissolution testing provides quantitative composition data. Different fibers dissolve at different rates in specific chemical solutions. By subjecting a sample to a controlled sequence of solvents and measuring the remaining mass at each stage, technicians can calculate the precise percentage of each fiber type present. This is how a laboratory can state, with scientific confidence, that a garment contains 100% cashmere with zero detectable blending — or, conversely, that a garment labeled as pure cashmere actually contains 40% yak hair and 15% wool.
Fourier Transform Infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy adds another layer of identification. This technique passes infrared light through a fiber sample and measures which wavelengths are absorbed. Different proteins and polymers produce unique absorption spectra — essentially molecular fingerprints. FTIR can distinguish not only between natural and synthetic fibers but between closely related natural fibers that may appear similar under microscopy. It is particularly valuable for detecting synthetic fiber contamination in ostensibly pure natural fiber products.
The combination of these methods — visual, chemical, and spectroscopic — creates a multi-layered verification process that is extremely difficult to deceive. Each technique cross-validates the others, and the result is a level of certainty that no handfeel test, price comparison, or brand reputation can match.
The Cashmere Fraud Problem SGS Helps Solve
The need for rigorous fiber testing is not theoretical. Cashmere fraud is one of the textile industry's most persistent and well-documented problems, and its scale would alarm most consumers.
Multiple independent studies and investigations over the past two decades have revealed systematic mislabeling in the cashmere market. Tests conducted by consumer protection organizations, customs agencies, and independent laboratories have repeatedly found that a significant percentage of products labeled as "cashmere" contain little to no actual cashmere fiber. The most common adulterants include yak hair, fine wool, and in extreme cases, rat hair — materials that can be processed to approximate the feel of cashmere at a fraction of the cost.
Short fiber substitution is another common tactic. Cashmere fiber quality depends significantly on length — longer fibers produce smoother, more durable, less pill-prone garments. Some manufacturers substitute short cashmere waste fibers or trim fibers, which technically qualify as cashmere but produce dramatically inferior products that pill excessively and lose shape within weeks.
Blending is perhaps the most insidious form of fraud because it is the hardest for consumers to detect by hand. A garment containing 70% cashmere and 30% fine wool will feel remarkably similar to pure cashmere to untrained fingers. Only laboratory analysis can reliably detect the difference. At scale, this blending represents a massive cost savings for unscrupulous manufacturers and a corresponding loss for consumers who believe they are purchasing a pure product.
This is precisely the problem that SGS certification solves. A brand that voluntarily submits its products to SGS fiber composition testing and publishes the results is making a verifiable statement about its product integrity. It is inviting scrutiny rather than avoiding it — a distinction that separates genuine quality from marketing performance.
What an SGS Certificate Actually Tells You
An SGS test report is a structured scientific document, and knowing how to read one gives you immediate insight into a product's authenticity. The key elements to look for include:
Fiber composition percentage: This is the headline finding. A report for a genuine 100% cashmere product will state the cashmere content as 100% (within the standard testing tolerance, typically plus or minus 2-3%). Any deviation — 95% cashmere and 5% wool, for instance — indicates blending, regardless of what the garment label claims.
Test method reference: The report will cite the specific international standard used for testing, such as ISO 17751 for animal fiber identification or AATCC 20A for fiber quantification. These references allow anyone to verify that the testing methodology meets globally recognized scientific standards.
Laboratory location: SGS operates testing laboratories in multiple countries. The lab location tells you where the physical analysis was performed, providing an additional layer of traceability. Major textile testing laboratories are located in Geneva, Shanghai, Hong Kong, and other centers with deep textile industry expertise.
Test date and report number: These establish when the testing was conducted and provide a unique identifier that can, in principle, be verified with SGS directly. A current test date — within the past year — is more meaningful than a result from five years ago, as it indicates ongoing quality verification rather than a one-time exercise.
Brands like VIONIS·XY, which SGS-certify their products as 100% Alxa cashmere at 14.5 microns and 100% Australian Merino wool at 16 microns with no blends, are essentially publishing their exam results for public inspection. That level of transparency is rare — and telling.
SGS vs. Other Textile Certifications
SGS certification does not exist in isolation. Several other certification systems operate in the textile space, each addressing different aspects of quality and responsibility. Understanding how they relate helps build a complete picture of product integrity.
The Woolmark certification, administered by The Woolmark Company (a subsidiary of Australian Wool Innovation), certifies that a product meets specific quality standards for wool content and performance. Woolmark is essentially a quality assurance program focused on wool products, with testing requirements for pilling resistance, dimensional stability after washing, and color fastness, in addition to fiber composition.
The Responsible Wool Standard (RWS) addresses animal welfare and land management practices in wool production. RWS certification verifies that wool comes from farms with progressive practices in animal welfare and environmental stewardship. It focuses on how the fiber was produced rather than on the physical properties of the fiber itself.
OEKO-TEX Standard 100 certifies that a textile product has been tested for harmful substances and is safe for human use. It is primarily a chemical safety certification, screening for over 100 regulated and unregulated substances that could pose health risks through skin contact.
These certifications are complementary rather than competing. SGS fiber composition testing tells you what a product is made of. RWS tells you how the animals were treated. OEKO-TEX tells you the product is chemically safe. Woolmark tells you the wool meets performance benchmarks. A product that carries multiple certifications provides a layered assurance that no single certification can deliver alone — and SGS fiber verification forms the foundation of that pyramid, because all other quality claims depend on first knowing what the fiber actually is.
Why Most Fast Fashion Brands Don't Have SGS Certification
If SGS certification is such a powerful trust signal, why don't all brands pursue it? The reasons reveal a great deal about the economics and incentives of the modern fashion industry.
First, cost. SGS testing is not free. Submitting samples for comprehensive fiber analysis, micron measurement, and chemical safety testing represents a real expense per product line. For fast fashion brands operating on razor-thin margins and cycling through hundreds of new styles per month, the testing cost per SKU erodes already minimal profit margins. The business model of fast fashion depends on speed and volume, not verification.
Second, transparency requires confidence in what you are selling. A brand that knows — or suspects — that its "cashmere" blend contains significant non-cashmere fiber has no incentive to submit it for independent testing. SGS certification is a tool for honest brands to prove their honesty. For brands whose business model depends on ambiguity, it is an existential threat.
Third, accountability. An SGS certificate creates a documented record that can be referenced by consumers, regulators, and competitors. It transforms a vague marketing claim into a verifiable scientific statement. Brands accustomed to the comfortable imprecision of terms like "cashmere blend," "cashmere feel," or "premium wool" have little to gain from the precision that SGS testing demands.
The absence of third-party testing in a brand's quality assurance practices is, in itself, informative. It may not prove fraud, but it certainly does not demonstrate commitment to transparency. When you encounter a brand that leads with its SGS-certified fiber composition, you are encountering a fundamentally different approach to the relationship between producer and consumer.
How to Use SGS Certification as a Buying Tool
Armed with an understanding of what SGS certification means and how it works, you can deploy this knowledge as a practical filter when evaluating knitwear purchases.
Ask brands directly. Before purchasing a cashmere or Merino wool product — particularly at higher price points — ask the brand whether it has SGS or equivalent third-party fiber composition testing for its products. A brand confident in its fiber quality will answer promptly and positively. Evasion, deflection, or vague references to "internal quality control" are red flags.
Check test dates. A single SGS test conducted years ago does not guarantee ongoing quality. Supply chains change. Fiber sources shift. Look for brands that test regularly — ideally with each production run or at least each season — demonstrating continuous commitment to verification rather than a one-time marketing exercise.
Verify lab locations. SGS operates accredited laboratories worldwide. A report from an established SGS textile testing facility carries full institutional weight. If a brand claims SGS certification but cannot specify which laboratory conducted the testing, ask for the report number — it should be verifiable.
Understand the tolerances. No fiber testing is accurate to the last hundredth of a percent. Standard testing tolerances of 2-3% are normal and expected. A result of 98% cashmere and 2% wool on a garment labeled "100% cashmere" falls within acceptable testing variance and does not indicate fraud. However, a result of 85% cashmere and 15% wool on the same label does.
Look for micron data. Fiber composition alone does not tell the full quality story. Two garments can both be 100% cashmere, but if one uses 14.5-micron fiber and the other uses 18-micron fiber, the difference in softness, drape, and overall quality will be immediately apparent to the wearer. Brands like VIONIS·XY that publish their micron measurements alongside composition data are providing a more complete quality picture than those that simply state "100% cashmere" without specifying the grade.
In a market where label claims are often the only information available, SGS certification represents something rare and valuable: evidence. It shifts the conversation from trust to proof, from marketing to measurement, from belief to science. For any consumer serious about the quality and authenticity of their knitwear, it is the single most important credential to look for — and the one most brands hope you never ask about.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does SGS fiber testing cost for a brand?
The cost varies depending on the scope of testing, the number of samples, and the specific tests requested. A basic fiber composition analysis typically ranges from $100 to $300 per sample, while more comprehensive testing suites — including micron measurement, tensile strength, color fastness, and chemical safety — can run significantly higher. For a brand producing a focused collection of high-quality items, the per-garment cost of testing is modest relative to the retail price. For fast fashion brands producing thousands of styles at minimal margins, it becomes a meaningful expense — which is a key reason many avoid it.
Can SGS certification be faked?
While any document can theoretically be forged, SGS certificates include specific report numbers, laboratory identifiers, and testing dates that can be verified directly with SGS. The reputational and legal risks of forging an SGS certificate are severe, making it an unlikely fraud vector for any legitimate business. If you have doubts about a certificate's authenticity, contacting SGS directly with the report number is a straightforward way to confirm it.
Does SGS certification guarantee that a product is ethically produced?
No. SGS fiber composition testing verifies the physical material content of a product — what it is made of and at what quality grade. It does not certify animal welfare practices, environmental stewardship, or labor conditions in the supply chain. Those dimensions are addressed by complementary certifications such as the Responsible Wool Standard for animal welfare or brand-level transparency initiatives regarding sourcing practices. SGS certification is one essential piece of the quality and trust puzzle, but it is not the entire picture.
What is the difference between SGS testing and a burn test I can do at home?
The burn test — holding a flame to a fiber and observing the smell, ash, and burning behavior — can broadly distinguish between protein fibers (animal origin, smells like burning hair) and synthetic fibers (plastic origin, melts and smells chemical). However, it cannot distinguish between different animal fibers. Cashmere, wool, yak hair, and even human hair all burn similarly. The burn test is a useful first-pass screening for detecting synthetic content in a supposedly natural fiber garment, but it is entirely inadequate for verifying specific fiber composition. Only laboratory analysis can provide that level of precision.
Should I only buy SGS-certified knitwear?
SGS certification is the gold standard for fiber verification, but it is not the only legitimate form of third-party testing. Other accredited laboratories, including Intertek, Bureau Veritas, and various national wool testing authorities, also provide credible fiber analysis. The key criterion is independence — the testing must be conducted by an organization with no financial stake in the result. What you should be cautious about is brands that make specific fiber claims (such as "100% cashmere") without any form of third-party verification. In the absence of independent testing, a label claim is simply a marketing statement.

