Limango is a German retailer founded in 2007 in Munich, Germany. The multinational clothing-retail company creates fast fashion for men, women, and children.

Limango makes clothing, accessories, shoes, swimwear, eyewear, and jewelry. The Otto Group owns the Limango label and brands like About You, Bonprix, Frankonia, Heine, Lascana, and more.

Limango operates as an international e-commerce and fashion retailer with about 4,000 employees in 30 countries. It also sells homeware, furniture, and home decor.

Limango is working with ambitious targets to minimize its ecological footprint. It considers its impact on the climate, ecosystems, and society and has the long-term goal of achieving climate neutrality.

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Sustainability Rating: 5/10

Rating FAQ

Category: Clothing, accessories, shoes, bags, jewelry

For: Women, men, children

Type: Basics, denim, knitwear, activewear, underwear, loungewear, swimwear, outerwear, nightwear, flats, sandals, sneakers, boots

Style: Casual

Quality: Low

Prices: $

Sizes: petite, 2XS-2XL, 0-14 (US), 2-16 (UK), 32-44 (EU), 4-18 (AU), plus

Fabrics: Cotton, linen, ramie, jute, lyocell, modal, viscose, cupro, acetate, polyester, nylon, spandex, polyethylene, polypropylene, acrylic, neoprene, polyurethane, rubber, leather, wool, silk, down

100% Organic: No

100% Vegan: No

Ethical & Fair: Yes

Recycling: Yes

Producing countries: Turkey, India, China, Bangladesh, Cambodia, Morocco, Pakistan, Vietnam, Tunisia, Egypt, Ethiopia, Uganda, Madagascar, Ukraine, Romania, Moldova, Bulgaria, Serbia, Bosnia,  Albania, Macedonia, Greece, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, Indonesia

Certifications: GOTS, OCS, BCI, GRS, RCS, FSC, Oeko-Tex, Bluesign, SMETA, BSCI, SA8000


Sustainability Practices

Limango takes wide-ranging measures to protect biodiversity, reduce its consumption of water, energy, and other resources, avoid waste, and combat climate change.

It wants to be better and more efficient by looking at every aspect of its value chain to ensure the healthy functioning of our planet. However, the majority of its business remains detrimental to the environment.

Limango only uses a tiny proportion of organic materials like organic cotton or recycled materials such as recycled polyester and regenerated nylon.

Most its fabrics are natural without relevant certifications, such as regular cotton or linen, or synthetic petroleum-based fibers, such as polyester, nylon, acrylic, and more.

Limango also uses a small proportion of semi-synthetic fibers or regenerated cellulosic fabrics such as Tencel lyocell, modal, acetate, and viscose.

Tencel is an eco-friendly fiber made with wood pulp from certified sustainable forests. But only a tiny proportion of the materials used by Limango are environmentally friendly and sustainable.

Limango publishes a list of all its manufacturers and processing facilities on its corporate website, the Otto Group. It aims to ensure compliance with social standards and environmental protection.

The 2022 Fashion Transparency Index gave Otto a score of 18% based on how much the group discloses about its social and environmental policies, practices, and impacts.

Limango manufactures its clothes in Turkey and many other East Asian countries, where human rights and labor law violations happen every day.

The German clothing retailer shows some labor certification standards that ensure good working conditions, health, safety, and other human rights for workers in its supply chain.

Limango has a code of conduct that applies to all its suppliers and subcontractors based on the regulations set by the International Labor Organization (ILO).

Limango assesses compliance with its Code of Conduct by informal visits or third-party audits with or without notice. It works with international and local unions and NGOs to improve the working conditions in its factories.

Limango doesn't use exotic animal skin, hair, fur, or angora. But it uses leather, wool, silk, and down feathers to manufacture many of its clothing pieces.

These animal-derived materials are cruel and unethical. They also harm the environment by producing greenhouse gases and waste. More sustainable alternatives exist.



Sustainability Goals

Limango has committed to reaching climate neutrality by 2030. It will operate its locations on green electricity and use certified offset projects to align its climate targets with the Paris Climate Agreement.

Limango plans to only use FSC-certified wood for its furniture production by 2025. It will also use FSC-certified or EU Ecolabel paper for its catalogs by 2025.



Buy Here

Discover Limango's sustainable collections at Limango.de.



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