CIRCULARITY
OUR MATERIALS
Every material that goes into a Burton product is evaluated against environmental and social impact criteria and ranked on a preferred-to-avoid scale. That ranking drives sourcing decisions across Softgoods, Hardgoods, and Packaging, prioritizing lower-impact materials and setting clear phase-out targets for higher-impact ones.
SOFTGOODS MATERIALS PRIORITIES
Recycled nylon and polyester: Nylon and polyester are the backbone of our outerwear, midlayers, and baselayers, they're what make our gear weatherproof, breathable, and durable. They're also derived from fossil fuels, making them among our most carbon-intensive material inputs. Shifting to recycled versions reduces our dependence on virgin feedstocks. As of our Winter 2027 season, 30% of our nylon and 80% of our polyester is recycled.
Organic cotton: Cotton is our primary material in tees, flannels, and hoodies. Conventional cotton is one of the most pesticide- and water-intensive crops globally. Certified organic cotton is grown without synthetic pesticides or fertilizers, reducing chemical load on soils, waterways, and farming communities. As of our Winter 2027 season, 99% of our cotton is certified organic.
Leather Working Group leather: We use leather primarily in our gloves. Leather tanning is a chemical-intensive process with significant water, energy, and effluent impacts. 100% of our leather comes from Leather Working Group Gold certified tanneries, which are audited for environmental management practices including chemical management, water treatment, and energy use.
Responsible Down Standard down: Down insulation is used across our outerwear for its unmatched warmth-to-weight ratio. The Responsible Down Standard sets requirements for animal welfare across the down supply chain, from farm to final product. 100% of our down is sourced from RDS certified farms.
Responsible Wool Standard wool: Wool appears in our socks, beanies, and baselayers for its natural temperature regulation and odor resistance. The Responsible Wool Standard sets requirements for animal welfare and land management on sheep farms. 99% of our wool is sourced from RWS certified farms.
HARDGOODS MATERIALS PRIORITIES
Forest Stewardship Council® Wood: Wood cores are the structural foundation of every snowboard we make; they determine flex, pop, and durability. Sourcing wood responsibly means verifying it comes from forests managed for ecological health. As of our Winter 2027, 70% of our snowboard cores use wood certified to the Forest Stewardship Council® (FSC®-C124994) Chain of Custody standard, which verifies responsible forest management and tracks material from forest to finished product.
Forest Stewardship Counsel
Bio-based Epoxy: Epoxy resin binds the layers of a snowboard together — fiberglass, wood core, base, and topsheet. Conventional epoxy is entirely petroleum-derived. All of our snowboards globally use a bio-based epoxy resin, replacing a portion of petroleum-derived inputs in board construction.
Exploring alternative materials for our highest impact hardgoods materials: Beyond wood and resin, our hardgoods rely heavily on TPU, polycarbonate, and nylon — used across boards, bindings, boots, goggles, and helmets. These are among our most carbon-intensive material inputs on the hardgoods side. We're working with material suppliers to identify recycled and lower-carbon alternatives for these high-impact inputs.
PACKAGING MATERIALS PRIORITIES
At Burton, our approach to packaging centers on three core objectives:
- Sourcing recycled and recyclable packaging materials
- Eliminating as much waste as possible
- Committing to being part of innovating and activating next-generation solutions
A central pillar of this commitment is tackling the single-use plastic problem head-on. Our plan focuses on mono-material design, specifically paper fiber, which benefits from the most widely established recycling infrastructure around the world. We're committed to minimally wasteful designs and non-toxic materials.
We aim for every piece of our packaging to be made from recycled materials, for that packaging to be easy to recycle anywhere in the world, or reusable in a real way. For the few materials that don't yet fit those categories but are still needed to get your gear to you safely, we work closely with material innovators and packaging suppliers to develop lower-impact options for the future.
It's Just Paper! Apparel Polybag Replacement - We Launched a Poly Bag Alternative — it is just paper, designed to protect your Burton product and then be easily recycled.
Seaweed Helped Protect This Snowboard - The future of snowboarding extends beyond snowboarding tech to every part of the supply chain. This prototyped snowboard protective wrap could replace the problematic films used throughout the industry.
Tom Ford Plastic Innovation Accelerator Impact Report - TOM FORD Plastic Innovation Prize was a global competition set out on a mission to find solutions for one of the Ocean's Greatest challenges: thin film plastic pollution which makes up nearly half of all plastic waste leaking into the ocean each year. This Innovation prize sought out innovators designing new materials to replace Plastics made from fossil fuels and support the ocean's recovery. Burton was a partner with the prize winner, Sway, to activate a pilot with a film that uses seaweed.
CHEMICAL MANAGEMENT INTEGRITY
Chemicals touch every part of how your gear gets made. Burton has spent over a decade making sure we’re choosing how to manage their use. Here's how it works.
Restricted Substances List (RSL): We use the bluesign RSL, which sets strict limits on harmful substances in the materials we test every season. In many cases, these limits go beyond what regulations require. We also require all leather to be sourced from Leather Working Group Gold certified tanneries, which are audited against some of the most rigorous environmental and chemical standards in leather manufacturing. We hit 100% LWG Gold in 2025.
A chemical management program is only as strong as the suppliers behind it. We work directly with our supply chain partners to review chemical inventories, identify gaps, and help facilities when issues come up. We work collaboratively because raising the bar on chemical safety is not something any one brand or facility can do in isolation.
bluesign partnership and bluepass materials: Since 2011, Burton has been one of the longest-standing brand partners of bluesign, a leading system for textile chemical safety. A bluepass certified material means it was produced with chemical inputs managed at every stage of production, from the mill to the final stitch. Unlike regulations that primarily address consumer safety at point of sale, the bluesign system addresses chemical inputs at the factory level, covering worker exposure, emissions, water, and waste in the facilities where your gear is made. When we can't source bluepass certified materials, we specify other vetted chemistry certifications like OEKO-TEX Standard 100. 86% of our materials are bluepass certified as of Winter 2027.*
*bluesign is transitioning to a unified bluepass certification mark in 2026. The standards behind it are unchanged. Learn more about bluepass certification
PFAS-Free Journey: PFAS, also called forever chemicals, never break down in soil, water, or the human body, and they've been found in drinking water, wildlife, and snowpack worldwide. Burton started tackling this problem in 2014, long before it became an industry conversation. We achieved 100% free of intentionally added PFAS across the line with our Winter 2025/26 collection, including every piece of kids' gear. Maintaining that standard across every style and every season requires constant attention, and we're committed to it. Learn more about our journey to being PFAS free.
Industry Partnerships: No brand changes an industry alone. We're committed to pushing progress alongside other brands, suppliers, and industry partners. Burton is an active member of the Winter Sports Sustainability Network (WSN) in the EU and the Outdoor Industry Association (OIA) in the US, including participation in the OIA's Clean Chemistry and Materials Coalition (CCMC).
DURABILITY, REPAIR, LIFE EXTENSION
Gear that's built well, cared for, and passed on is already doing more than most. Your gear has been through every run and every fall. Learn it, take care of it, repair it, and make it last. You'll become a better rider, and waste less.
DESIGNING FOR DURABILITY
DESIGNING FOR EASY REPAIR
Giving Materials a 2nd Lap
The 2nd Lap collection repurposes our surplus materials into unique, limited-run products, keeping materials out of the waste stream. In 2021, we introduced reusable shopping bags from fabric that may have otherwise headed to landfills. Check out our retail stores worldwide for 2nd Lap products. We're also keeping select 2nd quality gear in circulation, offering open-box and direct-from-manufacturer products with minor cosmetic defects at a discount and backing them with our warranty policy. Because you should never let a good thing (or gear) go to waste.
Resale
We're piloting resale programs in select markets to keep Burton gear in use longer. Extending product life is one of the most direct ways to reduce a product's overall footprint, and we'll share more as these pilots develop.