Pact Clothing Brand Review Based on Data Analysis
What materials do Pact use for their clothes?
Hold The Throne scanned all 205 live Pact styles. The headline number is 62.9% plant fibre across the range, which lands Pact firmly in MIXED territory, not the clean pass the homepage implies.
Here is what the scan actually found:
- 122 styles (59.5%) are 100% organic cotton. When Pact is pure, it is genuinely pure, and that is the half of the brand worth celebrating.
- 76 styles (37.1%) are organic cotton blended with synthetic elastane. Just over a third of the catalogue carries plastic. Elastane is petroleum, full stop, and it is the fibre Pact never names out loud on a product card.
- 7 styles (3.4%) are a linen and cotton blend. Plant on plant, the clean kind of blend.
So when you walk Pact’s range, more than one in three things you can buy is part synthetic. That is the gap between the GOTS organic cotton story up front and the fibre tag at the back. The clean half is lovely. The blended half is where the Earth’s Favorite framing starts to wobble, and it is why the Pact range needs reading style by style rather than trusting the brand name.
Pact Products Sustainability Review
Pact last fiber scan: 13 June 2026
The best Pact similar brands and alternatives


Organic cotton basics
Harvest & Mill
If you came to Pact for soft organic cotton everyday basics, Harvest & Mill is the cleaner version of that wish. Hold The Throne scanned their full range and every single style is 100% organic cotton, grown and sewn in the USA with farm-level traceability rather than just a badge. No elastane hiding in the stretch, no overseas certificate gap. This is what a clean pass actually looks like.



Organic cotton underwear
KENT
Pact’s underwear is the part shoppers love most, but a lot of it carries elastane in the waistband. KENT is the plastic-free answer. The Throne Standard scan came back 100% GOTS organic supima cotton across every style, compostable in around 90 days, with no synthetic give woven in. If you want true skin-to-fibre clean underwear, this is the swap.




Organic cotton tees
The Classic T-Shirt Company
For the staple tee that does not blend in plastic for shape, The Classic T-Shirt Company holds the line. Their scan returned pure organic cotton with no elastane fillers, built to be the everyday tee you reach for without a second thought about microfibres. A straightforward clean pass where Pact’s tees are mostly clean but the leggings and fitted pieces are not.
What Pact genuinely get right about ethical fashion
Where a Pact outfit is clean, and where the plastic sneaks in
I will not hand you a head-to-toe clean Pact outfit, because the scan will not honestly support one. More than a third of the range carries elastane, so a fully natural Pact look depends entirely on which pieces you pick.
You can build a clean Pact outfit, but only by reading every tag. Here is roughly how it splits:
- Clean and natural: the 100% organic cotton tees, the woven dresses, the crewneck sweats, the boxy basics. These are the 122 pure styles and they are genuinely lovely against the skin.
- Plastic woven in: the leggings, the fitted activewear, the shaping bottoms and anything sold on stretch. That is the 76-style elastane group, around 8% petroleum spandex blended through the cotton.
So a Pact outfit is only as clean as your willingness to skip the stretch.
That is an honest closet from this brand: lovely if you stay in the pure-cotton lane, compromised the moment you reach for the leggings.Â
Pact versus the brands that pass the fibre test clean
The honest way to place Pact is against the brands that do not need an asterisk. A clean passer like Harvest & Mill or KENT scans 100% natural across the whole range, farm to seam. Pact scans 62.9% plant fibre, with elastane laced through 37% of its styles.
That is the difference between a brand that earns the word organic everywhere and a brand that earns it on the tees but quietly blends plastic into the leggings. Pact sits much closer to a blend brand like Mate the Label than it does to a true clean passer, even though its marketing reaches for the clean-passer halo.
None of this makes Pact a villain. The 122 pure organic cotton styles are real and good. It just means Pact is a MIXED brand wearing PASS branding, and the Throne Standard grades the fibre, not the front page. We have the data, and it is all browsable at the clothing data hub.
Why a plastic free wardrobe is a health choice, not just a green one
Elastane, polyester and nylon shed microscopic plastic fibres every time you move and every time you wash. This is not a fringe worry anymore. In 2022, researchers publishing in Environment International found microplastics in human blood for the first time, in roughly 80% of the people they tested, particles small enough to travel through the bloodstream.
That matters here because elastane is the fibre Pact tucks into 76 of its styles under the friendly word stretch. When you sweat and warm a cotton-elastane legging against your skin all day, you are wearing a low-grade plastic shedder, however organic the cotton half is. Skin is your largest organ, and it is in contact with that blend for hours.
This is the whole reason the Throne Standard separates pure-fibre brands from blend brands. The 100% organic cotton half of Pact lifts cleanly above this concern. The elastane half does not, and it sits in the same shedding category as any other part-synthetic blend brand. Knowing which half you are buying is the point.
What would make Pact more transparent about their sustainability
Improvements
The one that stopped me sits in Pact’s own product copy.
On their organic cotton leggings, the brand says the fabric wicks moisture naturally. That raises the red flag.
Cotton is absorbent, not wicking.
Wicking is the property of synthetic performance fabric, which pulls moisture away and dries fast.
Cotton does the opposite: it soaks moisture in and holds it. The only reason these leggings have any performance stretch at all is the 8% elastane Pact blended in, which the marketing celebrates as buttery softness while quietly skipping the word plastic. The scan confirms the blend; the copy obscures it. A brand this committed to organic should describe its own fibre accurately.
The bigger structural flag is traceability past the certificate. Pact sources its cotton from the Chetna Organic cooperative in India and manufactures in Fair Trade certified factories in India. The Fair Trade worker fund and democratic spending model are genuinely good, and I want to praise that openly.
But Indian organic cotton specifically carries a documented history of certificate fraud.
In 2020, GOTS uncovered roughly 20,000 tonnes of fraudulently labelled organic cotton in India, about one-sixth of the country’s production, complete with forged transaction certificates. You can read the official GOTS release on it here. That raises another flag.
This is not an accusation against Pact, whose cooperative relationship is more traceable than most. It is why traceability past the certificate matters, and Pact could close the gap by publishing farm-level provenance rather than leaning on the GOTS mark alone.
A few more honest gaps worth naming:
- Carbon neutral by offset. Carbon neutrality is BS, for any brand.
Pact markets itself as Climate Friendly and Carbon Neutral, but does not clearly break down how much is genuine reduction versus purchased offsets. That raises a flag. Offsetting is not the same as not emitting, and a transparent brand says which it is doing. - The elastane is never named on the card. The leggings are sold as made with Organic Cotton, with the 8% elastane only visible if you hunt the fibre tag. A clean brand leads with the full composition, it does not bury the plastic.
- No clear separation of clean from blended. Pact lets the organic halo cover the whole catalogue, when really only 62.9% of it earns that word. Flagging which styles are pure would let shoppers buy clean on purpose.
Who owns Pact, and do they practise what they preach?
Pact is owned by Revelry Brands, led by CEO Brendan Synnott
Pact was founded in 2009 by Jason Kibbey and Jeff Denby, who met at the Berkeley business school. In 2011 the brand was acquired by Revelry Brands, an investment company in the natural and sustainable consumer space founded by Brendan Synnott, who now runs Pact as CEO out of Boulder, Colorado.
Do they practise what they preach? In real ways, yes. The shift to a Fair Trade certified factory in India in 2013 and the move to buy cotton from the Chetna Organic farming cooperative were substantive, not cosmetic. Pact contributes a percentage of every Fair Trade purchase to a worker-controlled fund that workers vote on democratically, spending it on things like a scholarship fund for workers’ children or community infrastructure. That is genuine ethics, and it is more than most brands at this price point do.
But practising what you preach also means the fibre matching the message, and this is where Pact falls short of its own halo. A brand calling itself Earth’s Favorite while blending petroleum elastane into 37% of its range, and describing absorbent cotton as moisture wicking, is preaching cleaner than it scans. The ownership cares about labour. The catalogue still carries plastic the marketing does not own up to.
Is Pact legit?
Pact is a legitimate organic cotton company with real Fair Trade ethics, but it is not the clean pass its branding claims. That is the honest verdict. Hold The Throne scanned all 205 live styles and found 62.9% plant fibre: 122 styles that are genuinely 100% organic cotton, and 76 styles that blend in synthetic elastane. Just over a third of the range carries plastic.
So what do real customers say? On her blog Organic Beauty Lover, clean-beauty founder Andrea Lee has worn Pact for years and lands balanced. She praises the basics, writing the shelf-bra cami is a great quality staple to have, but she is candid about the rest: the leggings are soft and decent, but not my favorite organic leggings, the underwear is not my favorite organic underwear so far, and the sheets are adequate but not impressive. Across Trustpilot and review sites the pattern repeats: shoppers love the softness and the ethics, then flag inconsistent sizing, see-through fabric on some pieces, and leggings that stretch out over time. The most useful critical thread is durability on the fitted styles, which is exactly the elastane group.
So here is the real trade: buy Pact and you get soft organic cotton from a brand with genuine Fair Trade labour standards, but you have to read the tag to dodge the elastane and accept that the activewear is the weakest, plastic-blended part of the range. Depends what you came for. If you want guaranteed clean, the pure-cotton tees and dresses on the Pact listing deliver, and you skip the leggings.
Want the receipts? Download the Pact data sheet and browse every brand’s raw material data at the clothing data hub.
Thanks for reading to the end, my loves. It takes real time to get to know a brand instead of trusting a badge, and you did it! I am here if you have questions x



