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21 Apr

How to Get Involved in Fashion Revolution Week 2026

April means Fashion Revolution Week is upon us. The Week—which runs from 22nd to the 28th—is Fashion Revolution’s annual campaign bringing together the world’s largest fashion activism movement for six days of action. Here’s how you can get involved.

Fashion Revolution Week 2026: Collective Action

Fashion Revolution Week came about after the collapse of the Rana Plaza garment factory in Bangladesh on 24 April 2013, which killed 1,138 people and injured another 2,500. In the decade since the tragedy, Fashion Revolution has become a global movement calling for the industry to value people and the planet over growth and profit. Check out our interview with Fashion Revolution’s former policy and research manager, Liv Simpliciano, to learn about the progress the organisation has made in the last decade.

The fashion industry is built on the exploitation of labour and natural resources, resulting in money and power being concentrated in the hands of a few. Because profit is prioritised over everything else, fashion brands are in a hectic race to produce more, at a quicker pace, and push us to increase the amount we’re buying and shop more often. Those at the top of the supply chain keep cashing bigger cheques, while the people who make our clothes are still underpaid and unable to meet their basic needs. We talk a lot about how brands can protect the earth and be more sustainable, but the truth is, there’s no sustainability without fair pay and safe working conditions.

As a movement we’re going back to our roots, and we’re asking fashion revolutionaries to do the same. Seek connection, ask questions, and take to the streets – for both a better fashion industry and for future generations that follow in our footsteps

Fashion Revolution

This year, the campaign takes place amidst a shifting landscape where funding and corporate support for sustainability initiatives is increasingly hard to come by. Meanwhile, geopolitical crises are pushing up costs and causing small brands to shutter and garment workers to suffer. This past week, Fashion Revolution itself closed its UK headquarters in favour of a “more federated, globally coordinated, and locally led next phase of the work” on a global scale, with funding challenges cited as a contributing factor.

But the organisation isn’t going away, and neither is its global community of campaigners. In the face of continuing exploitation of people, the planet, and animals, this Fashion Revolution Week focuses on what we can all achieve together. “As a movement we’re going back to our roots, and we’re asking fashion revolutionaries to do the same. Seek connection, ask questions, and take to the streets – for both a better fashion industry and for future generations that follow in our footsteps,” the organisation says. 

So, where to start? During the week, you can attend many digital and a few physical conferences, exhibitions, workshops, and even online public demonstrations—all spreading the word about building a more ethical and sustainable fashion industry. Here’s how to join the Fashion Revolution online and offline this year.

Attend Fashion Revolution Week events and workshops

Here are some of the highlights happening during Fashion Revolution Week. And if you can’t find anything in your area, you could attend an online event, or why not get together with friends or family to organise your own?

Post a selfie on your favourite social media platforms, tagging the brand you’re wearing and asking them #WhoMadeMyClothes? and #WhatsInMyClothes?

This is one of the easiest ways to get involved in Fashion Revolution Week this year—and every year. If the brand doesn’t respond, keep asking. And don’t forget to tag Fashion Revolution @fash_rev so they can stay up to date with how—and if—brands respond.

Spread the word

Download Fashion Revolution’s collection of promotional assets, including social media templates, posters and the official campaign branding pack, and get others involved in the movement.

Join the conversation

“Speaking with our family and friends about the global impact of our clothes is a powerful step to change the fashion industry,” says Fashion Revolution. On the organisation’s Talk Climate Change site, you can map your conversations, taking inspiration from Fashion Revolution’s manifesto, and explore the discussions of other Fashion Revolutionaries worldwide.

Write to your favourite brand asking them #WhoMadeMyClothes?

Fashion Revolution has made this super easy to do by providing a PDF template.

And in the Good On You app, you can also send a message directly to a brand urging them to do better or asking a question. You can give positive feedback to brands you feel are doing great, too. To send your message, simply go to the “Your Voice” section at the end of each brand’s listing on the app.

Editor's note

Feature image via Fashion Revolution. Good On You publishes the world’s most comprehensive ratings of fashion brands’ impact on people, the planet, and animals. Use our directory to search thousands of rated brands.

We updated this article on 14 April 2026. Our editors frequently make updates to articles to ensure they’re up to date. We refreshed our selection of events for 2025’s edition of Fashion Revolution Week.

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