Starting July 19, 2026, large fashion companies operating in the European Union will be prohibited from destroying unsold clothing, accessories, and footwear. The regulation — adopted by the European Commission on February 9, 2026 under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) — marks the first time the EU has imposed an outright ban on this practice for the textile sector.
The scale of the problem is significant. According to the Commission, an estimated 4–9% of unsold textiles in Europe are destroyed before ever being worn, generating approximately 5.6 million tonnes of CO₂ emissions annually — roughly equivalent to Sweden's total net emissions in 2021.
What Changes on July 19
The ban applies immediately to large enterprises. Medium-sized companies will follow by 2030. Small and micro enterprises are currently exempt.
Alongside the destruction ban, the Commission introduced mandatory disclosure requirements. Large companies must begin publicly reporting the volumes of unsold consumer products they discard, using a standardised format, from February 2027.
The rules do allow for limited exceptions. According to the final Delegated Regulation, destruction remains permitted only where products are deemed dangerous under EU safety regulations, are non-compliant with mandatory EU law, are physically damaged or contaminated, or have been offered for donation to at least three social economy organisations within the EU for a minimum of eight weeks without being accepted. Notably, the final version removed a draft provision that would have allowed destruction based on non-compliance with voluntary company standards — ensuring the exception applies only to mandatory legal requirements.
Companies must maintain records justifying any use of derogations for five years.
Why This Is Different from Previous Sustainability Pledges
Previous circular economy commitments in fashion were largely voluntary. The ESPR changes this by embedding anti-waste principles into enforceable product regulation. As Baker McKenzie noted, failure to comply exposes companies to penalties determined at the Member State level, which must be "effective, proportionate, and dissuasive." The reputational risk may be equally significant given the legislation's high public profile.
The regulation also signals where EU policy is heading next. The Commission is empowered to extend the destruction prohibition to additional product categories through further delegated acts, meaning other consumer goods sectors should prepare for similar requirements.
The Broader ESPR Landscape
The destruction ban is part of a much larger regulatory framework. The ESPR will also introduce Digital Product Passports for textiles — requiring product-level data on materials, environmental footprint, and recyclability, accessible via QR code. Textile-specific requirements are expected to be finalised in delegated acts by late 2026 or early 2027, with compliance anticipated from 2028 onward.
Separately, the revised EU Waste Framework Directive, which entered into force in October 2025, requires all Member States to establish mandatory Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes for textiles within 30 months. The combined effect: fashion brands selling in the EU are entering an era of mandatory transparency, accountability, and circular design.
What This Means for Brands Built on Intention, Not Volume
The destruction ban is fundamentally a consequence of overproduction — a systemic problem driven by fast fashion's model of producing at scale and discarding what doesn't sell. For brands that produce in small, intentional batches, this regulation formalises what was already standard practice.
VIONIS·XY operates on a small-batch production model specifically designed to avoid overstock and waste. Our whole-garment seamless knitting technology reduces fabric waste by up to 30% compared to traditional cut-and-sew manufacturing. Combined with single-fibre construction — 100% cashmere or 100% merino — every piece is not only designed to last, but also easier to recycle at end of life because there are no blended materials to separate.
When the EU mandates what responsible brands have been doing by choice, it is a signal that the market is catching up to the values that should have been the standard all along.
About VIONIS·XY VIONIS·XY sources 100% Alashan cashmere and 100% Australian Merino wool to craft premium knitwear that honours traditional fibre origins. Learn more at vionisxy.com.