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Gymboree

Kids clothing brand owned by The Children's Place

Gymboree
Gymboree's Sustainability Rating:

Poor

Gymboree has a Poor rating due to an overall lack of sustainability efforts and disclosures, especially at the brand level. We expect more reporting and transparency from a brand of its size.

Commons couldn't find brand-level reporting on materials or packaging for Gymboree. It frequently releases new items, which can lead to overconsumption and excess waste. While its parent company uses a majority of responsibly sourced and more sustainable fabrics, namely Better Cotton, it's lacking initiatives in many other areas. It appears to still rely on plastic packaging, though its parent company is working on increasing recycled content overall.

The Children's Company hasn't provided a clear update on its emissions measurement since 2022, though it did provide updates on its reduction efforts in 2023 and multiple targets were on track.

Gymboree is owned by The Children's Company.


  • Raw Materials

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, doesn't provide reportong on materials at a brand level. It reports that a majority of its products are made with lower emissions or certified materials, primarily cotton sourced through the Better Cotton initiative. It also uses some higher emissions materials like virgin polyester and spandex. It uses materials that have certifications from OEKO-TEX. It has plans to reduce its reliance on high emissions materials, which include achieving 100% responsibly sourced cotton by the end of 2025 and 25% recycled poly by 2030. It has reported on progress towards these goals within the last year, and is on track for some of them.


  • Energy Use & Production

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, doesn't share information on its energy strategy. We hope for more transparency from large brands. The Children's Place sources and manufactures its materials globally, which is standard practice in the textile industry.


  • Packaging & Distribution

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, doesn't share much information on its packaging materials. It appears to use a mix of virgin plastic and cardboard. It has general goals for increasing the volume of recycled content in its packaging. It doesn't appear to have any initiatives to minimize its packaging or shipping emissions.


  • Repair & Care

    Gymboree doesn't offer repair services or support. Gymboree doesn't offer a warranty. It gives basic care instructions that can help extend product lifespan.


  • Take Back Programs

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, sponsors donations through Give Back Box, but it doesn't promote this program to customers, which severely limits its reach and efficacy. This program accepts any brand's clothes for donation. The Children's Place doesn't share details on the efficacy of this program. We expect larger brands to promote these programs and share this information.


  • Slow Fashion

    Gymboree offers some products across multiple seasons but also releases new items frequently throughout the year for partnerships and limited editions.


  • Marketing

    Commons is still evaluating this brand's marketing emails.


  • Transparency & Reporting

    Gymboree doesn't appear to have a sustainability page or centralized source or information on its main consumer-facing site. Its parent company, The Children's Place, has a buried page on its corporate site, but it doesn't link consumers to this resource. It publishes a detailed annual report with a clear, impact-driven strategy and progress reporting. Its last annual report was published in 2023, but was lacking many of the details shared in previous reports.


  • Emissions Tracking

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, measures its emissions, but doesn't share its process and no longer shares its full data. Its last reporting period was 2022, and in this update its estimated emissions footprint was 602,036 tons CO2e.


  • Targets & Offsets

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, has SBTi-approved emissions reduction targets for the medium-term (5-10 years). It last reported on its progress in 2023. In this update it shared that it had achieved some targets, set some new ones, and was on track for the remaining targets. However, it didn't share how it was achieving its targets, and Commons couldn't find evidence that this brand offsets any emissions.


  • Supply Chain & Labor

    Gymboree's parent company, The Children's Place, publishes some information about its supply chain, but doesn't provide details on geography or traceability. We expect larger brands to include sufficient details on sourcing, manufacturing, and other supply chain partners. It publicly shares a supplier code of conduct, which prohibits forced or child labor, ensures the right to collective bargaining, and disallows unauthorized subcontracting. Its code of conduct doesn't ensures a living wage or enforce regular audits.

Our ratings are based on a scale from 1 (harmful) to 5 (best). How we rate →

View sources

https://corporate.childrensplace.com/static/TCP_SUS_IMPACT_2023-5d3f50b1f96c8ef071586695a889e39d.pdf#page=20

https://www.givebackbox.com/betterplace/

https://corporate.childrensplace.com/static/TCP-2022-ESG-Report-Final-85d3db4e7e0d6e97bdfd2425839573c5.pdf

https://sciencebasedtargets.org/target-dashboard

https://corporate.childrensplace.com/static/Vendor_Code_Of_Conduct_short_version_2025-f9a1f58651a4482c7500e64453021a8a.pdf

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Category

Children's Clothing


Tags

Children's Clothing/Accessories


Sustainability information was last updated in July 2025.

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