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Oeko-Tex Standard 100 for Scarves: Complete Guide for Buyers
What Oeko-Tex certification means, which product class applies to scarves, and how to verify a factory’s certificate.
What Is Oeko-Tex Standard 100?
Oeko-Tex Standard 100 is an international certification system for textile safety. It tests finished textile products for harmful substances across hundreds of regulated chemicals — including formaldehyde, heavy metals (lead, cadmium, mercury), pesticides, chlorinated phenols, phthalates, PFAS, allergenic dyes, and extractable heavy metals.
Unlike self-declared “safe” claims, Oeko-Tex requires audited laboratory testing of the actual product. The certification is valid for 12 months, after which the product must be retested.
For scarf buyers: Oeko-Tex is required by most European retailers as a baseline compliance standard for imported textiles. A scarf without Oeko-Tex certification is often rejected at goods-in by major retail accounts.
Oeko-Tex Product Classes — Which One Applies to Scarves?
Oeko-Tex Standard 100 has four product classes, based on the intended use of the textile:
| Product Class | Description | Testing Stringency | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Class I | Products for babies and toddlers up to 36 months | Most stringent | Baby clothing, bedding, soft toys |
| Class II | Products with direct skin contact | High | Scarves, t-shirts, underwear, bed linens |
| Class III | Products with no or little direct skin contact | Moderate | Jackets, coats, outerwear linings |
| Class IV | Home textiles and decorative materials | Base level | Tablecloths, curtains, upholstery fabrics |
For scarves worn around the neck (direct skin contact), Oeko-Tex Class II applies. This is the standard you should request from your factory.
What Oeko-Tex Tests For
The Oeko-Tex testing scope includes hundreds of regulated and monitored substances. Key test categories include:
- Formaldehyde: Regulated limit depends on product class. Class II scarves: 75 mg/kg limit (US) or 100 mg/kg (EU).
- Heavy metals: Lead, cadmium, mercury, chromium, nickel. Extractable limits vary by metal and product class.
- Pesticides and chlorinated phenols: Testing for >50 individual pesticide residues.
- Phthalates (plasticizers): Restricted in Class II products if intended for children; for adult scarves, limits apply but are less restrictive.
- PFAS (per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances): Increasingly regulated; Oeko-Tex tests for PFAS compounds used in water- and stain-resistant finishes.
- Allergenic and carcinogenic dyes: Prohibited or restricted based on REACH Annex XVII.
- Extractable heavy metals: Antimony, arsenic, lead, cadmium, chromium, cobalt, copper, nickel, mercury.
A product that passes Oeko-Tec testing has been verified below regulated limits for all these categories at the time of testing.
How to Verify a Factory’s Oeko-Tex Certificate
Do not accept a PDF as proof — PDFs can be fabricated. Follow this verification process:
- Ask the factory for their Oeko-Tex certificate number (format example: “BEST 123456”)
- Go to the Oeko-Tex public database at oeko-tex.com
- Search by certificate number or company name
- Verify that the certificate is Active (not Expired or Revoked)
- Check that Product Class II and the specific product category (e.g., “knitted scarves”) are explicitly listed in the scope
- Verify the issue date and expiry date (valid for 12 months — ask if they have renewed for the current year)
A factory that hesitates to give you the certificate number or says “we are applying for it” does not currently hold the certification. Do not proceed without it.
Oeko-Tex vs GRS: What Is the Difference?
| Aspect | Oeko-Tex Standard 100 | GRS (Global Recycled Standard) |
|---|---|---|
| What it verifies | Chemical safety — absence of harmful substances | Recycled content + chain-of-custody + social/environmental compliance |
| Testing focus | Finished textile product (tested in lab) | Supply chain documentation and facility audits |
| Recycled content claim? | No — Oeko-Tex does not verify recycled content | Yes — core requirement |
| Required for EU retail? | Yes — baseline safety standard for most accounts | Yes — for recycled content claims; optional otherwise |
| Relevance to scarves | All scarves sold to EU retailers | rPET / recycled content scarves |
Many buyers need both: Oeko-Tex for safety compliance, plus GRS for recycled content claims if their scarf uses rPET.
Common Mistakes Buyers Make with Oeko-Tex
- Mistake: Assuming Oeko-Tex covers environmental claims. Reality: Oeko-Tex is about harmful substances, not carbon footprint or recycled content.
- Mistake: Accepting a certificate that is expired or about to expire. Reality: Oeko-Tex is valid for 12 months; verify issue and expiry dates.
- Mistake: Assuming Oeko-Tex Class I applies to scarves. Reality: Class II is the correct class for scarves. Class I is for baby products and has stricter limits — but is not required.
- Mistake: Not verifying the certificate online. Reality: Always verify the certificate number on the Oeko-Tex database.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Is Oeko-Tex required for scarves sold in the US?
A: Not legally required, but large US retailers (Target, Walmart, Amazon) often require Oeko-Tex or equivalent safety testing. Check your customer’s compliance manual.
Q: How long does Oeko-Tex certification take?
A: For a factory, initial certification takes 2-4 weeks including sample testing. For a new product line, additional testing may be required.
Q: Does Oeko-Tex cover REACH compliance?
A: Oeko-Tex testing is aligned with REACH Annex XVII and other EU chemical regulations. A product that passes Oeko-Tec Class II is generally REACH-compliant for the tested parameters.
Q: Can a factory hold Oeko-Tex for some products but not others?
A: Yes. Certificates are product-specific. Verify that “knitted scarves” or “woven scarves” are explicitly listed in the scope. Do not assume blanket coverage.
What Buyers Should Request from Their Factory
- Oeko-Tex Standard 100 certificate number (not a PDF — ask for the number first)
- Confirmation that Product Class II applies to your scarf product
- A copy of the certificate (PDF) after verifying the number
- Confirmation of the testing date — certificates expire after 12 months
Related Resources
- Our Certifications (Oeko-Tex)
- GRS Certification Guide
- ESPR Compliance Guide
- Glossary of Textile Terms
Based on Oeko-Tex Standard 100 testing criteria version January 2026.