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The Year of Accountability: What Changed in Apparel in 2025

Jan 7, 2026 10:50:28 AM

While there are hardly any year-end wrap-ups that look back and claim the year was calm, 2025 was a particularly dynamic year in apparel. 

With regulatory shifts solidifying, consumer priorities shifting, and technology emerging, 2025 was the year that ideas became cemented into action. The industry entered the year preparing for change and finished it operating at a new baseline. Here are three of the most substantial shifts that defined 2025.

1. Regulations moved from planning to practice

For years, apparel teams have been tracking upcoming European regulations, but 2025 was the first year the policy landscape became detailed enough to affect daily decision-making. 

The European Commission’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR) Working Plan was set for 2025 through 2030, formally categorizing textiles and footwear as priority products. With this designation came clearer expectations around durability, recyclability and repairability.

The policy conversation also widened. For years, brands have used broad sustainability language without strict parameters. In 2025, EU guidance introduced more defined criteria, which began shaping how claims could be communicated.

Additional initiatives surfaced to address fast fashion and reduce the use of harmful chemicals. Even though many policies were still in progress, there was enough detail for brands to start preparing in a more concrete way

2. Supply chain transparency became a minimum requirement

Alongside regulatory detail came rising expectations for visibility. Transparency has been a recurring conversation in the industry but this year, it became clear how much it influences consumer trust. Reporting from California Apparel News described transparency as “crucial” for fashion in 2025 because of increases in regulatory pressure and rapid changes in consumer expectations.

The industry was also granted with clearer benchmarks to work with. A global review found that only 54% of businesses knew more than half of their suppliers, illustrating that most brands are still far from having the level of documentation that emerging regulations and retailer partners will require. Notably, though, this was a 2% increase from Q2 2024.

As a result, supply chain mapping, fibre-origin documentation and vendor-tier visibility were no longer treated as side projects in 2025. They became necessary components of risk management and a growing part of how apparel teams prepared for the regulatory environment developing in Europe and other regions.

3. Digital identification and data standards took a significant step forward

Perhaps most importantly, 2025 was the year when Digital Product Passport (DPP) preparation became a real operational topic. Analysts advised that apparel brands begin mapping data requirements and label formats because timelines under the ESPR were becoming clearer.

One of the clearest shifts this year was the move toward more structured product data. Reports showed that the global market for Digital Product Passports reached $183 million in 2024 and was projected to grow rapidly as textile regulations move toward finalization.

The growth reflects a broader shift: brands are beginning to treat product-level data as a long-term asset that must be consistent, accessible and tied to the physical product.

In parallel, adoption of item-level technologies continued to rise. Market reporting highlighted growth in the use of UHF RFID hang tags for apparel, noting operational needs like real-time inventory visibility and accuracy improvement as key drivers.

Taken together, 2025 was the year brands began laying the groundwork for data systems that will eventually support DPP compliance, circularity requirements and more connected customer experiences.

2025, wrapped

2025 did not deliver every regulatory finalization or complete clarity, but it reshaped what the industry considers foundational. Regulations gained specificity, transparency expectations solidified and product-level data systems matured. 

These shifts created a new starting point for apparel teams heading into 2026. If you and your team are looking to get prepared for upcoming changes, don’t hesitate to reach out to our experts.

Topics: Apparel
Rich Ringeisen

Written by Rich Ringeisen

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