Every cashmere brand in 2026 claims to be sustainable. The word appears on homepages, in product descriptions, and across social media. But sustainability in cashmere is more complex than a label or a colour palette — and many of the claims being made are vague, unverifiable, or misleading.
If you genuinely want to buy from sustainable cashmere brands, you need a framework for evaluating claims rather than trusting marketing copy. Here's what to look for and what to question.
Before evaluating brand claims, understand what the actual problems are:
Overgrazing. Cashmere goats are harder on grassland than sheep — they pull grass up by the roots rather than clipping it. When herds exceed the land's carrying capacity, grassland degradation follows. This is a documented concern in Mongolia and parts of Inner Mongolia.
Herd expansion driven by demand. Rising global demand for cashmere has incentivised herders to increase flock sizes, sometimes beyond sustainable stocking densities.
Chemical processing. Dyeing and finishing cashmere involves chemicals and water. The environmental impact varies enormously depending on the facility's practices and local regulations.
Transportation. Raw cashmere is produced in Central Asia but processed and sold globally, creating a significant logistics footprint.
A genuinely sustainable cashmere brand needs to address at least the first two issues meaningfully. The others are important but secondary.
Vague language without specifics. "We care about the environment" or "sustainably sourced" without explaining what that means in practice. Sustainability claims should be tied to specific actions, certifications, or measurable commitments.
Biodegradable claims used to imply sustainability. Yes, cashmere is biodegradable. So is every natural fibre. Being biodegradable doesn't address overgrazing, chemical processing, or transportation. It's a property of the material, not evidence of sustainable practice.
"Eco-friendly packaging" as the headline sustainability effort. If a brand's sustainability page focuses primarily on recycled shipping boxes and compostable mailers, they're addressing the smallest part of their environmental footprint while ignoring the largest.
No third-party verification. Legitimate sustainability claims are backed by independent certification or auditing. Self-reported sustainability is marketing, not accountability.
Sustainable brands maintain direct relationships with herding communities and can trace their fibre from specific regions. They know which herders produced the fibre, what stocking densities those herders maintain, and whether those densities are within sustainable limits.
Single-origin sourcing (fibre from a specific region like the Alxa area of Inner Mongolia) is inherently more traceable than commodity purchasing on the global cashmere market.
The Sustainable Fibre Alliance (SFA) is the most prominent certification body specifically focused on cashmere sustainability. SFA sets standards for:
Look for brands that reference SFA membership or are working toward SFA certification. Other relevant certifications include GRS (Global Recycled Standard) for brands using recycled cashmere and general textile certifications like OEKO-TEX for chemical safety in processing.
Some brands blend small amounts of cashmere with cheaper fibres (wool, nylon, acrylic) to reduce the amount of cashmere needed per garment. This can be presented as "using less cashmere per garment" — a sustainability argument.
But blending creates products that are harder to recycle (mixed-fibre garments can't be easily separated), less durable (reducing longevity), and often still marketed at near-cashmere prices. A 100% single-fibre garment that lasts a decade is arguably more sustainable than a blended garment that lasts three years.
The most overlooked sustainability metric in fashion is longevity. A garment that lasts 10 years replaces three to five garments that last two to three years each. The total environmental footprint of one premium piece is lower than the cumulative footprint of its replacements.
This is why fibre grade matters for sustainability — not just luxury. Grade A cashmere with long staple length produces garments that maintain their quality for a decade or more. Grade C cashmere that pills apart after two seasons generates waste and repeat purchases.
When assessing any brand's sustainability claims, check for:
If a brand checks fewer than three of these boxes, their sustainability claims are probably more marketing than substance.
Recycled cashmere — made by mechanically shredding and re-spinning discarded cashmere garments — is gaining traction. It addresses waste and reduces demand for new raw material. Several brands now offer recycled cashmere lines.
The tradeoff: mechanical recycling shortens fibre length, producing yarn with shorter staple that pills more and has reduced durability compared to virgin Grade A cashmere. Recycled cashmere is a positive development for the industry, but it's not a direct substitute for premium quality — it's a different product with different performance characteristics.
Finding genuinely sustainable cashmere brands in 2026 requires looking past marketing language and checking for verifiable practices: traceable sourcing, independent certification, transparent fibre testing, and garment quality that supports long-term use. At Vionisxy, we approach sustainability through single-origin Alxa sourcing, SGS-verified fibre composition, and 100% pure cashmere that's designed to last — because the most sustainable garment is the one you don't have to replace.