Ethical Alternatives to Fast Fashion
How fast fashion harms workers and the planet — and the brands, fibers, and shopping habits that offer a genuine alternative.
Why fast fashion is the problem
Fast fashion compresses design-to-shelf cycles to a few weeks, sells garments at prices below their true cost, and depends on a global supply chain with little transparency. The result: enormous textile waste, low-paid garment workers in unsafe factories, and emissions estimated at 2-8% of the global total.
The cheapest possible price on a $5 t-shirt is mathematically incompatible with paying a living wage and using durable, low-impact materials. The economics force corner-cutting somewhere.
What to look for instead
Prioritize: certified-organic or recycled fibers, transparent supply chains (the brand publishes its factory list), Fair Wear Foundation or Fair Trade Certified production, and Living Wage commitments.
Avoid: virgin polyester (microplastic shedding), conventional cotton (heavy pesticide use), viscose from unverified sources (linked to ancient-forest deforestation), and any brand that releases a new collection every week.
Better fibers, ranked roughly
Generally lower-impact: recycled polyester, Tencel/lyocell, organic linen, organic hemp, organic cotton, recycled cotton, recycled wool.
Generally higher-impact: virgin polyester, conventional cotton, conventional viscose, virgin leather, virgin wool.
No fiber is perfect. The most ethical garment is one you wear 100+ times.
Shopping habits that beat any brand choice
Buy less. Buy secondhand first — thrift stores, eBay, Vinted, Depop, ThredUp. Repair what tears. Wash cold and line-dry to extend life. When you do buy new, buy quality you'll keep for years.
A $150 jacket worn 200 times costs $0.75 per wear. A $30 jacket worn 5 times before it falls apart costs $6 per wear. The expensive option is often cheaper.