Making Cheap Clothes Costly: How European Lawmakers Are Fighting Fast Fashion

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Law

Making Cheap Clothes Costly: How European Lawmakers Are Fighting Fast Fashion

Did you know that making one cotton t-shirt uses around 2,700 liters of water, around the amount that a person drinks in three years? Fast fashion may offer cheap, on-trend clothes, but it also generates an annual 12kg of textile waste per person in Europe, only 1 ...

October 31, 2025 - By Albert Navarro García

Making Cheap Clothes Costly: How European Lawmakers Are Fighting Fast Fashion

Image : Unsplash

key points

Europe is cracking down on fast fashion, closing loopholes for inexpensive imports, and cracking down on vague green claims.

France will levy up to €10 per garment by 2030, while France adds repair incentives, and Spain advances a textile EPR scheme.

These measures aim to deprioritize disposable clothing, while reviving repair and recycling and pushing brands toward durability.

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Making Cheap Clothes Costly: How European Lawmakers Are Fighting Fast Fashion

Did you know that making one cotton t-shirt uses around 2,700 liters of water, around the amount that a person drinks in three years? Fast fashion may offer cheap, on-trend clothes, but it also generates an annual 12kg of textile waste per person in Europe, only 1 percent of which is recycled to make new garments. The fast fashion industry produces too much, too fast, too cheap, but there are ways to slow it down – in recent years, the European Union and European countries have begun to propose, and implement, taxes, and legislation that do just this.

Below is a break down of how key markets – from France and Italy to Germany, Spain, Sweden, and the U.K. – are moving: What is already in force, what is on the table, and what it means for brands and retailers.

EU: No more tax breaks for fast fashion

Up until 2021, millions of packages from ultra-fast fashion platforms like Shein and Temu – all those valued at under €22 – arrived in Europe without paying a value-added tax (“VAT”). This gave them an unfair advantage over local businesses, but since 2021, all non-EU imports have been subject to VAT. Meanwhile, the European Commission wants to go further, and has proposed a processing fee of €2 for each shipment to the EU. It also wants to eliminate the current €150 import tariff exemption, so that even small orders will pay customs duties. 

These measures would prevent non-EU sellers from artificially splitting orders and would strengthen control over products that are often manufactured under unsustainable conditions or with poor labor practices. The impact could be huge; in 2024, 91 percent of all e-commerce shipments valued at less than €150 came from China.

In 2024, Brussels approved Directive (EU) 2024/825 to combat greenwashing. From 2026, brands will not be able to present themselves as “carbon neutral” or “eco-friendly” without verifiable evidence, nor will they be able to hide information about the durability or repairability of garments.

France: Tax per fast-fashion garment

France is the first European country to approve a tax on fast fashion – in June 2025, the French Senate gave the green light to a law introducing a progressive penalty system per garment. Ultra-fast fashion brands will have to pay an extra €5 per item, which will make things like cheap T-shirts, dresses and trousers particularly expensive. The figure will gradually increase to €10 in 2030, doubling the tax in just five years. The tax will depend on the environmental impact and practices of each company, and will not exceed 50 percent of the sales price excluding VAT. 

With this measure, the French government is sending a clear message: extremely cheap garments, designed to last barely a season, must pay for the damage they cause. At the same time, brands that manufacture more durable, recyclable clothing with a smaller environmental footprint are rewarded. This model is inspired by the environmental taxes already applied to fuels and single-use plastics.

UK: A penny per garment

In 2019, a British Parliament committee recommended a one-penny tax on every garment sold to fund textile collection and recycling. Although the government did not implement the measure, the proposal sparked a debate on the policy approach of Extended Producer Responsibility, whereby brands pay according to the waste they generate. The lower the quality of their products, the higher the cost; the more durable and recyclable they are, the less they have to pay.

Sweden, Netherlands, France: Repairing instead of replacing

Other countries have chosen to incentivize repairs. In Sweden, VAT on clothing and footwear repairs has been reduced from 25 percent to 12 percent, while in the Netherlands, a reduced rate of 9 percent applies to services such as sewing repairs, replacing zips and adjusting sizes. In France, from 2025 onward, a reduced rate of 5.5 percent will apply to textile and footwear repairs, along with a “repair voucher” that discounts part of the cost for consumers who have their clothes repaired in certified workshops. 

These measures have one clear objective: Making it cheaper to replace a broken zip than it is to buy a whole new garment.

Spain: Advanced regulations, lagging taxation

In Spain, Law 7/2022 stipulates that, from 2025 onwards, textile brands must finance collection and recycling systems, and provide information on the durability and repairability of their products. This is a step forward, as it forces companies to bear costs that, up to now, have been covered by local authorities and taxpayers. However, taxation remains a major challenge. Taxes or tax incentives such as those in France, Sweden and the Netherlands have not yet been adopted, leaving Spain lagging behind in this area.

Do these measures work?

The effects of tax mechanisms are already being felt. The elimination of exemptions has leveled the playing field and forced large international platforms to modify their pricing and logistics strategies. Reduced VAT on repairs is revitalizing local workshops, benefiting small businesses, and gradually changing consumer habits. New taxes, such as those in France, will make disposable clothing more expensive, forcing big brands to improve their design, traceability and materials.

Together, taxation and regulations seek to change the logic of the textile industry. Cheap, disposable items should cease to be the most attractive option, and repairing, reusing or buying quality clothing should become the norm. If these measures are consolidated, the European textile industry could become one of the most advanced in terms of sustainability, positioning Europe as a global leader in the fight against fast fashion.


Albert Navarro García is an Associate Professor of Financial and Tax Law at the University of Girona.

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