Supply Chain Transparency: What to Demand from Brands
Why supply-chain transparency is the strongest signal of brand ethics — and what specifically to look for in 2026.
Why it matters more than logos
A certification only proves what was verified at the audit point. Transparency proves the brand can be held accountable on an ongoing basis. The strongest ethical brands publish their factory list, supplier names, audit results, and remediation actions.
What 'full transparency' looks like in 2026
Tier-1 factory list: where final assembly happens. Most ethical brands publish this.
Tier-2 fabric/material suppliers: spinners, weavers, smelters. Few brands publish this; the ones that do are usually best-in-class.
Tier-3+ raw material origin: cotton fields, mines, farms. Patagonia, Veja and a small number of brands attempt this.
Third-party audit reports (SA8000, Fair Wear, amfori BSCI): summaries should be public, not just executive commitments.
Red flags
"We work only with trusted partners" with no names. "100% ethically sourced" without scope or auditor. "Carbon neutral" via unverified offsets. Annual impact report with no scope-3 emissions data.
How VeggieOS Compare uses this
Brands lose points in our scoring when supply-chain data is missing or unverifiable, even if their product-level certifications look good. Transparency is one of the five pillars in our methodology.