Our SOLUTIONS
Plans
Wherever you are in your CSR journey, we have a solution for you.
Impact Starter
The first step towards your CSR strategy
Includes:
Product LCA based on your data
French Environmental Cost
Digital Passports for end customers
Access to platform & data extracts
Onboarding support
Full Suite
To go further and see your impact
Includes:
Extensive supply chain traceability
Product LCA based on collected data
Digital Passports for end customers
Access to platform & data extracts
Supplier onboarding & webinars
CSR Ultimate
Become a CSR strategist
Includes:
Extensive supply chain traceability
Supplier risk management
Product LCA based on collected data
Play with data & access dashboards
Ecodesign module
Tailor-made offer
Do you have specific needs? Tell us about it to find the most suitable tailored solution.
Pricing
Compare our offers in detail
Traceability
Collect data from Tier 1 up to raw material
Manage suppliers & product documentation
Access your supplier map
Identify suppliers listed in databases
Supply Chain Intelligence
Impact measurement
Carry out LCAs based on your data
Get French Environmental Cost
Carry out LCAs - data traced by Fairly Made
Get PEF Single Score
Monitor the evolution of your impact over time
Interact with data and access dashboards
Communication
Access all your data by CSV Extract or API
Gain access to digital passports for products
Access to marketing analytics
QR code tracking for analysis
Ecodesign
Duplicate product and build new scenarios
Simulate environmental saving & benefits
Compare real products with simulations
Impact benchmark
FAQs
Here is the basic information you need to know to start your adventure with us. If you have more specific questions, reach out to us.
What is Fairly Made?
Fairly Made is the leading European supply chain traceability and environmental impact platform for fashion, textile, and leather brands. Founded in 2018 and based in France, Italy, and the US, it helps brands trace products back to raw materials, measure environmental impact through Life Cycle Assessment (LCA), run ecodesign simulations, and comply with regulations such as the French AGEC law, the French environmental cost (coût environnemental), and the upcoming EU Digital Product Passport. It works with over 100 fashion brands and a network of more than 30,000 suppliers.
How is Fairly Made different from other traceability or LCA providers?
Fairly Made is an all-in-one platform that covers the full chain — from traceability to LCA, ecodesign, and consumer communication — rather than solving only one piece. It pairs software with a team of textile and leather engineers and analysts who collect and verify supplier data. Its impact methodology is built on ADEME's Base Empreinte® and ISO-compliant LCA standards, and it is actively involved in shaping EU standards (Afnor, CEN-CENELEC, CIRPASS, GS1).
How does the traceability process work?
Our team of engineers and textile analysts handle the traceability process in several languages (ENG, IT, FR, ES, PT, CH), tracking production chains as far back as possible—from manufacturing to raw materials. After the supplier onboarding, we engage with every supplier involved in the production chain through a dedicated, easy-to-use supplier interface. We ask suppliers direct, tailored questions based on their specific factory type and materials. Each supplier identifies their preceding partner, allowing us to contact them and continue the chain. We guide your suppliers through the necessary steps to ensure a seamless onboarding process.
Does Fairly Made offer ecodesign tools?
Yes. Fairly Made's ecodesign module lets fashion and textile brands duplicate a product, build alternative design scenarios, and simulate the environmental savings of each one in real time before production. You can compare a live product against a new simulation and benchmark its impact against the industry average for brands with similar positioning.
When will the Digital Product Passport (DPP) be mandatory for textiles?
The Digital Product Passport is already EU law under the Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR, in force since July 2024), but it is not yet enforceable for textiles. The textile-specific delegated act — which defines exactly what data a passport must contain — is expected to be adopted around 2027, followed by an ~18-month transition, so mandatory compliance for new textile products is widely expected around mid-2028. Fairly Made helps brands build the traceability and impact data foundation now so a DPP is a by-product of work already done, not a last-minute implementation.
How much does Fairly Made cost?
Fairly Made offers several modules and plans priced to the level of expertise and number of references a brand needs, where a "reference" is a product with a specific model/material combination. Pricing depends on scope (traceability only, or adding LCA, ecodesign, and communication) and volume. See the Plans page for details, or book a demo for a tailored quote.
What is the French environmental cost (coût environnemental)?
The French environmental cost (coût environnemental), formerly called the French Eco-score, is a single score that communicates a textile product's environmental impact across its full life cycle, calculated with the French government's official method. It came into force on 1 October 2025 as a voluntary scheme for clothing placed on the French market. From October 2026, third parties such as retailers and NGOs can calculate and publish a brand's score without its consent — so brands have a strong incentive to control their own score first. Fairly Made can calculate and file this score on a brand's behalf.
What is the AGEC law?
Article 13 of the AGEC law (loi anti-gaspillage pour une économie circulaire) is French legislation that requires brands to disclose environmental and traceability information about their products to consumers, including the presence of hazardous substances, recycled content, recyclability, and the geographic origin of key production stages. Fairly Made's platform is built to collect and structure exactly the data AGEC requires.
What is the Digital Product Passport (DPP)?
The Digital Product Passport is a scannable digital record — typically reached via a QR code — that holds verified information about a product, including materials, sourcing, durability, repairability, and environmental impact. For textiles it sits under the EU's ESPR framework, with mandatory compliance expected around mid-2028 once the textile delegated act is adopted. Fairly Made turns a brand's traceability and impact data into the structured, supplier-verified record a passport requires.
Does Fairly Made integrate with my existing systems (PLM, ERP)?
Yes. Fairly Made connects to a brand's existing tools — including PLM and ERP systems — through its API, so product and supplier data can flow between systems without manual re-entry.
Why choose Fairly Made?
Brands choose Fairly Made because it covers the full sustainability chain — traceability, LCA impact measurement, ecodesign, and consumer communication — in one platform, backed by a team of textile and leather engineers and analysts who collect and verify supplier data directly rather than relying on self-declaration. Founded in 2018, it is the leading European traceability provider, works with over 100 fashion brands and a network of more than 30,000 suppliers, and operates from France, Italy, and the US. Its methodology is built on ADEME's Base Empreinte® and ISO-compliant LCA standards, and its experts sit on the EU working groups shaping regulations such as the Digital Product Passport.
How do you ensure a high response rate from suppliers?
Fairly Made achieves high supplier response rates by removing friction at every step: forms are purpose-built for the textile and leather industries, suppliers get a dedicated multilingual interface, and the team runs regular onboarding webinars in English, French, Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Mandarin. Each supplier is asked only the questions relevant to their factory type and materials, which prevents survey fatigue. This approach has built a network of more than 30,000 onboarded suppliers.
Why is it important to start traceability now?
Traceability is now a baseline requirement, not a nice-to-have, because transparency is expected by consumers, regulators, and investors alike — and a wave of regulation is making it mandatory. In France, the environmental cost (coût environnemental) has been live since October 2025; across the EU, the Digital Product Passport is expected for textiles around 2028. Starting now means building one clean data foundation that satisfies all of these at once instead of scrambling for each deadline separately, and it turns compliance into a competitive advantage.
How can you help me comply with current legal requirements?
Fairly Made's in-house legal and methodology team tracks regulation continuously and helps brands comply with the frameworks that matter today: the French AGEC law, the environmental cost (coût environnemental), DPP, UFLPA, EUDR. The team also helps shape these standards — contributing to the Digital Product Passport through Afnor, CEN-CENELEC, CIRPASS, and GS1, and listed in the European Commission's transparency register as textile experts. That means the platform is built around live requirements and ready for what's coming next, such as the DPP around 2028.
Do you also consider the social impact of my products?
Yes. Fairly Made assesses social impact alongside environmental impact by assigning each supplier a Certification Score based on 110 social criteria developed with the Fair Wear Foundation and verified through certifications on the platform. This produces an overall social compliance score for each product, helping brands identify at-risk suppliers and prioritize audits.


















