Scanning Fashion: The Rise Of Transparency

Fashion is one of the most globalized industries in the world, yet it’s also one of the least transparent. A single garment can touch dozens of countries, suppliers, and production stages before it ever reaches a store. For years, brands have struggled to clearly prove where their products come from, how they were made, and whether sustainability or labor claims are truly accurate.

Enter Digital Product Passports (DPPs) , a system that is fundamentally changing how fashion supply chains are tracked, regulated, and communicated to consumers. Driven largely by new European Union regulations, DPPs are turning fashion products into scannable, traceable objects with their own digital story.

This shift isn’t just about sustainability. It affects compliance, trade policy, anti-counterfeiting, resale, brand trust, and consumer choice. The big question facing the fashion industry today isn’t if Digital Product Passports are coming, it’s how fast brands and suppliers can adapt.

Digital Passports effect how fashion supply chains are regulated.

Image by Alexandra Oakland via Canva

What Is a Digital Product Passport?

A Digital Product Passport is a digital record connected to a physical product, most commonly through a QR code, NFC chip, or barcode embedded in the garment label. When scanned, the passport reveals structured information about the product across its entire life cycle.

A fashion DPP can include:

  • Material details: fiber type, recycled content, trims

  • Origin data: where fibers were grown, spun, woven, dyed, and assembled

  • Environmental impact: carbon footprint, water use, chemical inputs

  • Social responsibility: factory locations, certifications, labor compliance

  • Use & care: washing instructions, durability tips, repair guidance

  • End-of-life options: recyclability details, take-back or resale programs

In simple terms, a Digital Product Passport answers three key questions:
Where did this product come from? Who made it? And what should happen to it after use?

Clothing with QR codes on tags.

Image via New Look

Why the EU Is Pushing DPPs

Digital Product Passports are part of the EU’s Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation (ESPR). Under this framework, most physical products sold in or imported into the European Union will eventually be required to carry a digital record.

Textiles are a priority category, meaning fashion brands selling in the EU will soon need DPP-style data just to access the market.

The European Union is taking the lead on Digital Product Passports because fashion’s environmental and social impacts extend far beyond European borders. By requiring transparency at the product level, the EU aims to influence how garments are designed, produced, and managed throughout their lifecycle. This approach shifts responsibility upstream, encouraging brands to consider sustainability early in the design phase rather than at the point of sale.

Digital Product Passports align closely with the EU’s broader Green Deal goals, which prioritize lower emissions, waste reduction, and responsible resource use. For fashion brands, this means product data is no longer optional marketing material but regulated information tied directly to market access. Companies that can quickly adapt their supply chains to provide accurate, verifiable data will gain a competitive advantage, while those that cannot may face delays, penalties, or exclusion from the EU market.

By setting clear standards, the EU is also creating pressure for global alignment. As one of the world’s largest apparel markets, EU policy has the power to reshape fashion supply chains worldwide, even influencing brands that do not primarily operate in Europe.

Why Fashion Needs Digital Product Passports

Fashion’s Supply Chains Are Long and Complex

Unlike many industries, fashion production follows a fragmented, multi-step process:

Fiber → yarn → fabric → dyeing/finishing → cut-and-sew → distribution → retail

These steps often occur across different continents, making traceability extremely difficult. Historically, brands have relied on supplier declarations, audits, or certifications — many of which are hard to verify or update in real time.

Environmental and Social Pressure Is Rising

The EU has identified textiles as one of the most environmentally damaging industries due to:

  • High waste volumes and low recycling rates

  • Microplastic pollution from synthetic fibers

  • Chemical-intensive processes like dyeing and finishing

  • Labor risks in garment-producing countries

Digital Product Passports are designed to support a shift toward circular textiles, making it easier to reuse, repair, resell, and recycle products while holding brands accountable for their claims.

Digital Passport explained: how it is helping fashion.

Image via TexSPACE Today

How Does a Digital Product Passport Actually Work?

Every garment receives a unique digital identifier, usually embedded in a smart label. When scanned, that identifier links to a centralized data system, often cloud-based, and sometimes supported by blockchain technology for added security and immutability.

What Data Can a Fashion DPP Contain?

1. Production & Origin Data

  • Fiber sourcing locations

  • Yarn spinning mills

  • Fabric and dye houses

  • Final garment factories

2. Social & Environmental Information

  • Certifications (OEKO-TEX®, GRS, Fair Trade, etc.)

  • Carbon emissions and water usage

  • Chemical compliance and restrictions

3. Use Phase Information

  • Care and washing instructions

  • Repair services or spare parts

  • Authorized resale or rental platforms

4. End-of-Life Guidance

  • Recycling instructions by material type

  • Brand take-back programs

  • Sorting and disassembly tips

Unlike static care labels, Digital Product Passports are dynamic, they can be updated over time as products are repaired, resold, or recycled.

Fashion Brands Already Using DPP-Style Digital IDs

Case Study: H&M Group

H&M Group is one of the first major mass-market brands to test Digital Product IDs at scale. The company introduced QR-based digital IDs within its Men’s Essentials collection, allowing customers to scan garments and access:

  • Material composition and sourcing details

  • Country of manufacture

  • Care instructions

  • Circular service options like resale and recycling

This initiative supports H&M’s broader circular fashion strategy while preparing the brand for upcoming EU regulatory requirements.

H&M turns to using Digital Passports.

Image by Alexandra Oakland via Canva

Digital Product Passports, Trade Policy & Global Supply Chains

Digital Product Passports are not just a sustainability tool, they are becoming a trade requirement.

Under the EU’s ESPR and related textile regulations:

  • Brands must supply verified product data to sell in the EU

  • DPPs act as proof of origin, compliance, and sustainability claims

  • Products without required digital documentation risk market exclusion

Implications for Trade and Customs

DPP data can be used by:

  • Customs authorities to verify country of origin

  • Regulators to check chemical and labor compliance

  • Brands and marketplaces to identify counterfeits

Digital Passports have become a trade requirement.

Image via World Fashion Exchange

Benefits and Opportunities of Digital Product Passports

For Brands and Suppliers

  • Improved traceability across Tier 1, 2, and 3 suppliers

  • Easier regulatory compliance with labor, chemical, and environmental rules

  • Stronger anti-counterfeiting protections

  • New revenue models, including:

    • Repair services

    • Buy-back programs

    • Verified resale and rental platforms

For Consumers

  • Clear, comparable sustainability information

  • Greater confidence in product authenticity

  • Tools to avoid greenwashing

  • Practical guidance on care, repair, and resale

Digital Product Passports are also reshaping how consumers interact with fashion products. Instead of guessing which brand claims are credible, shoppers can access verified product information with a single scan. This transparency empowers consumers to make choices that align with their personal values, whether that means prioritizing recycled materials, ethical labor practices, or durability.

DPPs also encourage longer product lifespans. When consumers have access to repair instructions, resale options, and recycling guidance, garments are less likely to end up as waste after limited use. Over time, this can help shift consumer behavior away from disposable fashion toward more intentional purchasing decisions. As transparency becomes the norm, brands that invest in quality and responsible production are more likely to build loyalty and long-term trust.

Digital Product Passports help rebuild trust between brands and consumers by replacing vague marketing claims with verified, accessible data.

Benefits and Opportunities of Digital Product Passports.

Image by Alexandra Oakland via Canva

Challenges and Open Questions

Despite their promise, Digital Product Passports present real challenges:

  • Data quality & standardization: Brands must agree on what data to share and in what format

  • Cost & tech readiness: Smaller suppliers in countries like Bangladesh or Vietnam may struggle with infrastructure and training

  • Privacy & intellectual property: How much information can be shared without exposing trade secrets?

  • Global alignment: What happens when DPP requirements differ across regions?

These challenges highlight the need for collaboration across brands, suppliers, governments, and technology providers.

Successfully implementing Digital Product Passports will require collaboration across the entire fashion ecosystem. Brands must work closely with suppliers to build reliable data collection systems, while governments and industry groups continue developing shared standards to ensure consistency and fairness. Education and investment will be especially important for smaller suppliers, who play a critical role in global apparel production but may lack access to digital infrastructure.

Despite these challenges, Digital Product Passports represent a major step toward a more transparent and accountable fashion industry. As technology improves and standards stabilize, DPPs have the potential to become as common as care labels, quietly shaping better practices across the global supply chain.

One of the main challenges of DPP: Privacy.

Image by Alexandra Oakland via Canva

Why Digital Product Passports Matter for Fashion’s Future

Digital Product Passports are redefining how fashion products move through global markets. They turn garments into data-rich assets, making sustainability measurable, claims verifiable, and supply chains more accountable.

The shift is already underway, driven by regulation, consumer demand, and advances in fashion technology. For brands, suppliers, and students entering the industry, understanding DPPs is no longer optional.

The future of fashion belongs to brands that are ready to be transparent.

The future can bring many new changes in fashion.

Image via Vecteezy

References

European Commission. (n.d.). Ecodesign for sustainable products regulation (ESPR).
https://commission.europa.eu/energy-climate-change-environment/standards-tools-and-labels/products-labelling-rules-and-requirements/ecodesign-sustainable-products-regulation_en European Commission

European Commission. (2024, September 27). EU’s digital product passport: Advancing transparency and sustainability.
https://data.europa.eu/en/news-events/news/eus-digital-product-passport-advancing-transparency-and-sustainability Data.europa.eu

Ellen MacArthur Foundation. (n.d.). Circular economy for fashion.
https://www.ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/topics/fashion/overview Ellen MacArthur Foundation

World Trade Organization. (n.d.). Trade and environmental sustainability structured discussions (TESSD).
https://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/tessd_e/tessd_e.htm World Trade Organization

One Click LCA. (2025). Digital Product Passport: What’s a DPP?
https://oneclicklca.com/en-us/resources/articles/digital-product-passport-whats-a-dpp One Click LCA

Backlinks

Impinj. (n.d.). Digital product passports.

https://www.impinj.com/digital-product-passports

European Commission. (n.d.). Ecodesign for sustainable products regulation (ESPR). https://commission.europa.eu/energy-climate-change-environment/standards-tools-and-labels/products-labelling-rules-and-requirements/ecodesign-sustainable-products-regulation_en

EON.xyz. (n.d.). H&M – Clients & circular economy partnership.

https://www.eon.xyz/clients/h-m#:~:text=H&M%20Group%20is%20implementing%20Digital,encourage%20participation%20in%20circular%20models.%E2%80%9D

Hohenstein. (n.d.). OEKO-TEX®.

https://www.hohenstein.us/en-us/oeko-tex

Image by Alexandra Oakland via Canva

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