
May 4, 2026 GOTS-certified facilities grow 15% amid rising regulatory pressure
Nearly 18,000 facilities worldwide are now certified to the Global Organic Textile Standard – a 15 percent increase in a single year. As regulatory pressure on textile supply chains intensifies, the nonprofit behind GOTS is expanding its framework and strengthening the systems designed to keep certification credible.
Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS) certification continued to grow in 2025, with nearly 18,000 certified facilities worldwide, despite ongoing geopolitical uncertainty and rapidly evolving regulatory requirements across global textile supply chains.
New figures released in the 2025 Annual Report for Global Standard – the nonprofit that owns and operates GOTS – show that uptake of independently governed sustainability standards remains a priority for companies seeking to manage risk, substantiate claims and meet rising expectations on transparency and due diligence.
As regulatory frameworks accelerated throughout 2025, scrutiny of supply chains increased and expectations around credible sustainability systems sharpened. Against this backdrop, Global Standard reported steady growth in GOTS certification alongside progress in integrity, digital traceability and alignment with international due diligence frameworks.
“Voluntary sustainability standards are increasingly being used not just to demonstrate intent, but to operationalise complex regulatory and ethical requirements,” said Claudia Kersten, Managing Director of Global Standard.
“In a year of significant regulatory change, our focus has been on strengthening systems that are practical, transparent and credible for global textile supply chains.”
Rahul Bhajekar, Managing Director of Global Standard, added:
“Building on this systems-led approach, the development of GRTS marks an important next step for Global Standard. Together with GOTS, it offers companies a clearer, more coherent way to manage responsibility across different fibres, align with due diligence expectations and strengthen governance and deliver impact across increasingly complex global textile supply chains.”
Advancing GOTS due diligence and system integrity
A major milestone during the year was the OECD Due Diligence Alignment Assessment of GOTS, which found 98 percent of assessed criteria either fully or partially aligned with OECD guidance. The findings positioned GOTS among the most advanced standards evaluated, reflecting its role as a system addressing environmental, human and labor rights risks across the textile value chain.
Investment in digital infrastructure continued to strengthen system integrity and oversight. Tools including Global Trace Base, first mile fiber registries and impact monitoring mechanisms enhanced traceability, data quality and transparency across certified supply chains, while ongoing quality assurance processes supported consistent implementation.
GOTS standard development and regulatory alignment
The revision process for GOTS Version 8.0 progressed throughout 2025, with two public consultations and decisions guided by a multi-stakeholder Standard Revision Committee operating in line with ISEAL guidelines. GOTS 8.0 reflects the latest developments in environmental and social responsibility, circular economy principles and regulatory frameworks. The updated standard was released in March 2026, with mandatory adherence beginning March 1, 2027.
Beyond organic textiles, Global Standard also completed the first public consultation of the Global Responsible Textile Standard (GRTS) in 2025. GRTS applies the same holistic, system-based logic that has made GOTS successful to responsible, non-organic fibers. It establishes a credible baseline for responsible textile processing where organic definitions do not apply, translating scientific and social expectations into direct and verifiable requirements. GRTS is expected to be released in autumn 2026, following a second consultation.
Education, technology and capacity building
Education and capacity building were central to Global Standard’s work in 2025. In response to increasing regulatory and implementation complexity, the organization expanded training, guidance and knowledge-sharing activities for auditors, Certification Bodies and Certified Entities. Key initiatives included the launch of the Global Standard Academy, new due diligence handbooks and targeted auditor training programs supported by funding from the ISEAL Innovations Fund.
Global Standard also continued to advance its Space Cotton pilot – a collaboration with AI firm Marple and the European Space Agency that uses satellite imagery to map cotton cultivation. Following successful implementation in India, the project expanded to Turkey in 2025, supporting efforts to facilitate certification and increase the availability of certified organic cotton globally.
Looking ahead with GOTS and GRTS
Together, GOTS and GRTS will form a unified, systems-level framework to make responsible textile production credible, scalable and workable in practice. Global Standard remains focused on ensuring voluntary sustainability standards deliver measurable impact, operational value and lasting credibility across global textile value chains.
About Global Standard
Global Standard is the nonprofit organization that owns and operates the Global Organic Textile Standard (GOTS), the world’s leading processing standard for textiles made from certified organic fibres. In 2025, nearly 18,000 facilities across 95 countries held GOTS certification. Global Standard is also developing the Global Responsible Textile Standard (GRTS), expected for release in autumn 2026.
Lead image: Jan Eric Euler

