France Sets New Standard with Clothing Surcharge
France has taken a decisive step in addressing the environmental fallout of fast fashion by approving a new tax on budget garments. The fee will start at €5 per item and rise to €10 by 2030, varying according to each brand’s sustainability record. The levy, capped at half the garment’s pre-tax cost, is designed to reduce waste and overproduction in the fashion sector. The law also introduces a labeling system that will display each product’s environmental impact, giving consumers clearer insight into how their purchases affect the planet.
Brussels Targets Cheap Imports with Customs Overhaul
The European Commission is advancing plans to tighten oversight of imported low-cost apparel that has flooded the EU market. The proposed reforms would remove the current duty exemption for goods valued below €150 and introduce a €2 handling charge for each parcel entering the bloc. Officials say the initiative aims to ensure that non-European retailers face the same fiscal and environmental responsibilities as domestic producers while curbing the tide of ultra-cheap, short-lived clothing shipped from abroad.
National Efforts Boost Repair and Recycling Initiatives
Several European nations are complementing these reforms with local initiatives to reduce textile waste and promote sustainability. Sweden has cut taxes on tailoring and repair services to make clothing maintenance more accessible, while the Netherlands has introduced similar programs encouraging repair over replacement. Spain has gone a step further by requiring fashion brands to fund nationwide textile recycling and collection systems. Collectively, these actions mark a growing European shift toward a circular economy built on reuse, repair, and responsible production.

