In the guide
If you sell textiles you need to label them correctly with the fibre content, including fur and other animal parts.
Note: although the United Kingdom has left the European Union, certain EU laws (known as 'retained' laws) will still apply until such time as they are replaced by new UK legislation; this means that you will still see references to EU legislation in our guidance.
This guidance is for England, Scotland and Wales
The Textile Products (Labelling and Fibre Composition) Regulations 2012 require all textile products to carry a label indicating the fibre content. If a product consists of two or more components with different fibre contents, the content of each must be shown. Only certain names can be used for textile fibres and these are listed in the Regulations along with a list of products that are not required to bear fibre content.
There is a general obligation to state the full fibre composition of textile products.
What is a textile product?
A textile product can be defined in any of the following ways:
How should the product be labelled?
It is the responsibility of the manufacturer or importer into the UK to ensure that textile products carry a label indicating the fibre content, either on the item or the packaging.
The label must be in English. However, items imported into the UK and offered for sale before the UK left the European Union may be labelled in the language of the EU manufacturer; they may continue to be offered for sale until 31 January 2022.
The label should be durable, easily legible, visible and accessible. If the product is supplied to a wholesaler the indication may be contained within business documents - the invoice, for example. A textile product consisting of two or more fibres accounting for 85% of the finished product should be marked with the fibre followed by a percentage - for example, 'cotton 80%, polyester 15%, nylon 5%'.
If a product consists of two or more components with different fibre contents - for example, a jacket with a lining - the content of each must be shown. Any decorative matter that makes up 7% or less of the product is excluded from the indication of fibre content. The word 'pure' should only be used where the garment is made up of only one fibre. The word 'silk' cannot be used to describe the texture of any other fibre - for example, 'silk acetate' is not permitted. Only certain names can be used for textile fibres and these are listed in Annex I to Regulation (EU) No 1007/2011 on textile fibre names and related labelling and marking of the fibre composition of textile products (see link in 'Key legislation' below). This list may be updated as new technology produces new fibres.
If you are using, buying or selling a fibre product with a name that does not appear on this list, contact your local trading standards service for advice.
There are special provisions that relate to the required method of labelling of corsetry products, etch-printed and embroidered textiles, velvet and plush textiles (or textiles resembling velvet or plush), and floor coverings and carpets where the backing and pile are composed of different fibres.
Textile products sold in multipacks - such as floor cloths, cleaning cloths, handkerchiefs, bun nets and hair nets, wash gloves, face flannels, etc - of the same type and fibre composition may have inclusive rather than individual labelling. The full list of products to which this allowance may be applied can be found in Annex VI to Regulation (EU) No 1007/2011.
Annex VII to Regulation (EU) No 1007/2011 contains information on textile product components that are not taken into account in determining fibre compositions.
FUR AND OTHER ANIMAL PARTS
Consumers must be made aware when textile products contain parts of animal origin, such as fur, leather, bone, etc.
The use of non-textile parts of animal origin must be clearly labelled or marked using the phrase 'contains non-textile parts of animal origin'. The label can contain further information on the parts of animal origin - such as mink fur or lambskin - but the mandatory phrase must always be used.
This also means that any mis-labelling - for example, labelling real fur as faux fur - is an offence.
Additionally, it is an offence to sell, import or exportcat and dog fur, and products containing such fur.Similar provisions apply to the marketing of seal fur (these are enforced by Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs (HMRC) rather than trading standards services).
Advertisements, catalogues and e-commerce
Where products are advertised in such a way that they can be ordered by reference solely to the description in the advertisement, the Regulations require an indication of fibre content to appear in the advertisement. Advertisements include catalogues, the internet, circulars, price lists and trade literature.
Products that do not have to bear a fibre content indication
Other legislation
In addition to the specific textile legislation, the Consumer Protection from Unfair Trading Regulations 2008 prohibit misleading actions and omissions when describing products and services, as well as misleading prices (see 'Consumer protection from unfair trading').
Further information
The Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy has produced more detailed guidance on the requirements: Textile labelling regulations: Guidance on the Textile Products (Labelling and Fibre Composition) Regulations 2012.
Penalties
Failure to comply with trading standards law can lead to enforcement action and to sanctions, which may include a fine and/or imprisonment. For more information please see 'Trading standards: powers, enforcement and penalties'.
Key legislation
Last reviewed / updated: February 2021
In this update
Correction to the date until which items imported before the UK left the EU, and labelled in the language of an EU country from which they were imported, may be sold
Please note
This information is intended for guidance; only the courts can give an authoritative interpretation of the law.
The guide's 'Key legislation' links may only show the original version of the legislation, although some amending legislation is linked to separately where it is directly related to the content of a guide. Information on amendments to legislation can be found on each link's 'More Resources' tab.
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