Versace has no brand-level emissions data, relying on opaque parent-company reporting that obscures actual performance. Supply chain emissions are rising, deforestation commitments arrived years late, and science-based targets lack credible delivery evidence. The company remains a significant sustainability laggard despite incremental policy adoption.
Same formula for every company. No curve. No private weighting.
SINK = (0.3 × Base + 0.7 × Performance) × ScaleStrongest on Controversies & Red Flags and Energy Source (5/10, 4/10). Weakest on Water Impact and Nature & Biodiversity Impact (2/10, 2/10).
7 sources used in this assessment. All publicly available. Each row shows which rubric questions it informed.
Limited data coverage. This assessment is based on 7 sources, 14% of which are self-reported by the company. Scores may change as independent evidence becomes available.
If you believe a source has been misread or a newer version exists, submit a challenge.
Among the 35 major apparel (durable / outdoor) brands we've scored, Versace sits 34th of 35.
Score history begins 9 April 2026.
As Versace's score updates, the trajectory will appear here.
We're backfilling historical scores for FTSE 100 and S&P 100 companies over the coming weeks.
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Versace is an Italian luxury fashion house founded in 1976, headquartered in Milan. Known for high-end apparel, accessories, and fragrance, it operates hundreds of boutiques globally and maintains significant leather and synthetic material sourcing. Acquired by Prada Group in December 2025 after years under Capri Holdings ownership.
Sibling brand under same parent ownership; similarly lacks disaggregated emissions disclosure and deforestation accountability.
View breakdown →Current parent company post-December 2025 acquisition; reporting integration and transparency accountability now intertwined.
View breakdown →Comparable luxury apparel brand with historical deforestation risk and transition to more transparent supply chain reporting.
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