Good On You only uses publicly-available information. It’s fundamental to consumer rights that brands fully, accurately, and consistently report on their impacts. As a consumer, you have a right to know how brands impact on the issues you care about most. Transparency promotes accountability and is crucial in shaping regulations and keeping brands to their promises.
Most trusted methodology
Good On You’s ratings are comprehensive—considering brands’ practices throughout their entire supply chains, from raw fibres to products’ end of use. Altogether, Good On You evaluates up to 1,000 data points across more than 100 key issues and indicators to arrive at each brand’s score. They weigh certifications, standard systems, and other third-party sources according to their scope, the quality of their assurance systems, and outcomes.
Using its proprietary technology, Good On You analysts evaluate each brand with their rigorous methodology, which they developed in consultation with industry experts, academics, and organisations (like Fashion Revolution, Fairtrade, Fashion for Good, and Four Paws). Materiality is key—meaning they assess issues based on what’s widely accepted by experts as having the most impact on people, the planet, and animals.
Easy-to-use ratings
Good On You aims to make it easy for anyone to understand how their choices influence the issues they care about—for consumers, that means checking a brand’s impacts as easily as checking a product’s price tag. For businesses, it means using Good On You’s innovative tech and unparalleled ratings data to understand, improve, and communicate their impacts. For the media, it means being the go-to sustainability expert to help shape and contextualise reporting.
Key issues Good On You rates brands on
Good On You believes you have a right to know where and how your clothes are made—who produces them, what they’re made from, how workers are treated, and what impacts the products have on the environment and animals across their life cycles.
The fashion industry’s complex supply chains mean sustainability issues are inherently complex. To help you focus on what matters most, Good On You organises the issues into three overarching areas: people, the planet, and animals.
People
The people rating assesses how well brands address their impacts on workers across the supply chain. This includes policies and practices on child labour, forced labour, worker safety, freedom of association (ie the right to join a union), gender equality, diversity, and payment of a living wage. Good On You considers how well brands ensure that their policies are implemented, answering essential questions like: do they empower workers, have supportive supplier relationships, and conduct meaningful audits? Do their policies protect workers from the impacts of COVID-19 and public health crises? Are workers treated and compensated fairly? Do they avoid sourcing from areas with high risk of modern slavery, such as cotton from Xinjiang?
Planet
For the planet rating, Good On You digs deep into brands’ environmental policies to help you see through the pervasive greenwashing. Good On You considers each brand’s reported resource use and waste management, including the types of fibres they use, the sustainability of their business model, their product durability, their commitment to circularity, and their textile waste practices. They investigate their policies to address energy use and carbon emissions, impacts on water, biodiversity, microfibre pollution, deforestation, and chemical use and disposal.
Animals
Whether you’re looking for cruelty-free and vegan fashion or simply concerned about animal welfare within fashion’s supply chain, then pay attention to Good On You’s animals rating. They consider how well brands trace and monitor animal welfare across their supply chain, including via better animal welfare certifications. They identify and mark down brands that use wild animals, especially endangered species, fur, angora, and other animal-derived fabrics where there’s a high risk of cruelty. Good On You considers wool use, including “mulesing”, and whether and how the brand uses leather, down, and other animal fibres, giving credit for prioritising recycled or certified fabrics. They also look to see whether the brand has made commitments to eliminate or reduce the quantity of animal products, and ensure that any animal welfare policy has clear mechanisms of implementation.
Within each of the three areas of people, the planet, and animals, Good On You also consider whether brands take positive steps such as providing industry leadership on issues or whether they engage in “positive citizenship” (for example, industry leadership on sustainability initiatives) or “negative citizenship” (for example, political lobbying against the interests of workers or a track record of publishing misleading information).
The methodology from Good On You also distinguishes between large and small brands based on annual turnover or parent companies using the definition set out by the European Commission. They proportionately apply more demanding standards to large brands as they inherently have greater impacts and influence. Smaller brands cannot receive a “We Avoid” rating.
Good On You’s findings
Whilst progress has been made in the fashion industry on sustainability over the last few years, change remains slow, particularly for larger brands. It is clear that the industry as a whole needs to do better on sustainability. The way brands are distributed on Good On You’s rating scale gives an indication of the need for more change.
Of the thousand or so large brands that they have rated:
- 55% are either 1/5 (“We Avoid”) or 2/5 (“Not Good Enough”)
- 24% are 3/5 (“It’s a Start”)
- 20% have received a 4/5 rating (“Good”) or higher