Veja
Rated: Excellent
Price: $$
Location: France
Quick verdict
Best for style-conscious consumers who want an ethical sneaker that's genuinely fashionable, not just "sustainable-looking." Veja stands out for its radical transparency (including a dedicated "Limits" page openly detailing its own shortcomings), its B Corp certification (score: 92.7), and a zero-advertising business model that invests entirely in fair wages and materials. Notable caveats include a notoriously stiff break-in period, durability complaints on vegan leather options, and costly return shipping (especially internationally).
Key info
- Headquarters
- Paris, France
- Founded
- 2004
- Product categories
- Shoes, Sneakers
- Price range
- $$
- Key certifications
- B Corp (92.7), GOTS, LWG Gold, Fair for Life, FSC
Veja sustainability rating
Our ratings are based on a scale from 1 (We Avoid) to 5 (Excellent). How we rate
Rating breakdown
Uses organic cotton, Amazonian wild rubber, B-mesh (recycled plastic bottles), and LWG Gold-certified leather. Still relies on some petroleum-based materials and hasn't achieved 100% bio-based alternatives.
Pays cotton farmers above-market rates via 2-year pre-financed contracts. Factory workers earn living wages with 40-hour weeks, paid overtime, and 4 weeks vacation. Traces most of its supply chain.
B Corp certified with shoe recycling program and LWG Gold tanneries. However, has no science-based emissions reduction targets and no evidence of renewable energy adoption in production facilities.
Industry-leading. Publishes supplier lists, chemical test results, audit reports, and a rare "Limits" page discussing shortcomings honestly. B Corp verified.
At $135–$200, sneakers cost more than mainstream brands but less than luxury. Production costs are 5× higher than East Asian-made equivalents due to fair trade materials. Leather styles are durable; vegan options less so.
What they do well
- Zero advertising budget: invests all marketing resources into organic raw materials, fair wages, and supply chain improvements, unique in the sneaker industry
- Amazonian rubber sourcing: directly supports 800+ rubber-tapping families in the Amazon, paying 30%+ above market price while preserving the rainforest economically
- Radical transparency: dedicated "Limits" page on their website openly discusses shortcomings like struggles with natural dyes and petroleum-based material dependencies
- Repair and recycling infrastructure: operates repair/recycling spaces in Paris, Bordeaux, Berlin, Madrid, and New York; accepts shoes from any brand for recycling
- B Corp score of 92.7: well above the 80-point threshold, with 4 of the 5 highest-paid employees being women
Room for improvement
- No science-based emissions targets. Publishes carbon footprint data but hasn't committed to specific, time-bound reduction goals.
About Veja
Veja (meaning "look" in Portuguese) was founded in 2004 by childhood friends Sébastien Kopp and François-Ghislain Morillion, both former bankers who traveled to Brazil and were inspired by organic cotton farmers and Amazonian rubber tappers. The brand launched its first collection in 2005 with a radical premise: flip the traditional sneaker budget model. While most brands spend 70% on advertising and 30% on production, Veja does the inverse.
Key materials include organic cotton from 320 farming families working with NGO ESPLAR in northeast Brazil, wild rubber from the Amazon, B-mesh fabric made from recycled plastic bottles collected in Rio de Janeiro and São Paulo, and ChromeFree leather from LWG Gold-certified tanneries. All sneakers are manufactured in high-standard factories in southern Brazil, with French logistics handled by Ateliers Sans Frontières, a social rehabilitation association.
Veja became B Corp certified in December 2018 with a score of 92.7 (the median business scores 50.9). The certification covers wages, suppliers, team welfare, environment, and governance. Shipping is available worldwide from the US store with free shipping thresholds; returns are accepted within 30 days but the buyer covers return shipping. Pricing ranges from ~$120 (canvas Esplar) to $200+ (running shoes), landing solidly in the mid-tier, more expensive than Nike/Adidas but less than designer sneakers. With 500+ employees and over €260M in revenue, Veja has scaled significantly while maintaining its founding principles.
Product highlights
Campo
Low-top leather sneaker, classic tennis silhouette
$160–$175
Veja's bestseller; ChromeFree leather, slightly elevated footbed for comfort out of the box
Esplar
Low-profile minimalist leather sneaker
$120–$155
Most affordable entry point; organic cotton laces, made famous by Meghan Markle
V-10
Retro athletic sneaker with perforated leather
$175–$185
Sportier look with wild rubber sole and recycled polyester lining
Condor 3
Performance running shoe
$185–$200
Uses L-Foam from sugarcane and banana oil with Amazonian rubber outsole, Veja's answer to petroleum-based running shoes