Lululemon PFAS: The 2026 Investigation, Explained
A neutral, evidence-based look at the Texas AG probe, the greenwashing class action, what Lululemon's own pages say, and what plastic-free alternatives now exist.
In April 2026, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton opened a formal investigation into Lululemon over potential PFAS in its products. A separate class-action lawsuit alleges greenwashing. Lululemon has not published comprehensive third-party PFAS lab data. Plastic-free alternatives exist but trade convenience for plant-derived chemistry.
1. What happened in April 2026
On April 16, 2026, the Office of the Texas Attorney General announced an investigation into Lululemon Athletica Inc. The stated basis is the potential presence of per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, the chemicals commonly known as PFAS or forever chemicals, in Lululemon products. The announcement frames the action under Texas Business and Commerce Code consumer-protection provisions, with potential penalties of up to $10,000 per violation. Legal analysis published by Pillsbury notes that the probe targets both the alleged presence of PFAS and the alignment of Lululemon's product safety and sustainability messaging with actual product chemistry. Tech Xplore reported the probe as a watershed for the activewear category.
Important framing: an investigation is not a finding of guilt. The Texas AG has opened a formal inquiry. Lululemon has the opportunity to respond, produce documents, and contest. The relevance for shoppers is that a state attorney general has now publicly questioned whether the brand's chemistry matches its marketing.
2. Timeline of related actions
The Texas AG investigation is one of three concurrent tracks. Each is independent.
- December 2025. As You Sow files a shareholder resolution requesting Lululemon reduce plastic microfiber shedding from its products.
- Q1 2026. Federal class-action lawsuit filed alleging greenwashing. Summarized by Kelley Drye's Ad Law Access. The action argues Lululemon's sustainability messaging is misleading given the actual fiber composition and chemistry of its products.
- April 16, 2026. Texas AG Ken Paxton announces a formal PFAS investigation citing potential consumer-protection violations.
- Ongoing. NRDC's PFAS scorecard and independent lab testing by Mamavation continue to produce data on activewear chemistry. Good On You rates Lululemon Not Good Enough overall.
3. What Lululemon's own materials say
Lululemon publishes an Impact Agenda and a product safety overview on its corporate site. The framing centers fabric performance, recycled content, and ongoing chemical-management programs. The materials describe an internal chemistry restricted-substance list and supplier audits.
What the materials do not currently publish at the SKU level, as of May 2026: independent third-party total-fluorine results for specific products, lot-level certifications, or full chemistry disclosure for the proprietary Nulu, Nulux, Everlux, and Luxtreme fabrics. The marketing pages focus on performance characteristics and recycled content percentages.
Fiber content labels are the regulated source of truth. Lululemon's flagship Align legging fabric content typically lists Nulu, which is composed of nylon and Lycra, both petroleum-derived synthetics. Wunder Under fabric is a polyester and Lycra blend. Even where Lululemon has shifted to recycled inputs, the polymer remains polyester or nylon.
4. The class-action greenwashing case
The federal class-action lawsuit summarized by Kelley Drye argues that Lululemon's environmental and sustainability messaging misleads consumers given the actual chemistry of its products. The case is separate from the Texas AG investigation and proceeds on a different legal theory. Both are pending. As with the AG action, an allegation is not a finding. The legal mechanism matters: greenwashing claims under federal consumer-protection law require the plaintiffs to show that reasonable consumers were misled and suffered cognizable harm.
5. What independent third parties say
Three sources are most cited by journalists and researchers covering the activewear category.
- NRDC PFAS scorecard for apparel brands. Levi Strauss earned an A+. Most outdoor and activewear brands failed. Lululemon's overall outdoor and activewear category placement is among the failing tier.
- Mamavation. Independent lab investigations have repeatedly detected indicator fluorine in leggings and yoga pants from name-brand activewear companies. Their methodology and lab partners are disclosed on the investigation page.
- Good On You. Aggregates publicly available evidence into a single rating. Lululemon currently sits at Not Good Enough.
6. Plastic-free alternatives
If your reason for landing here is to find activewear without these concerns, the honest options are narrow but real. Tencel-based brands like Wolven, GOTS-certified organic cotton lines like Pact, and newer plant-derived performance platforms like OHZEHN-TEX™ sit outside the petroleum-synthetic category entirely. For the long version of how to evaluate fiber content and certifications, see the OHZEHN-TEX plastic-free activewear pillar guide. Further investigation in our blog is ongoing.
7. Frequently asked questions
Does Lululemon contain PFAS?
In April 2026, the Texas Attorney General announced a formal investigation into Lululemon over the potential presence of PFAS in its products. Lululemon has not, as of May 2026, published comprehensive third-party total-fluorine lab data for its activewear line. The brand's own materials emphasize fabric performance rather than specific PFAS testing results, which is why state attorneys general and independent labs are now stepping in to verify.
What did the Texas AG investigation actually allege?
The April 2026 announcement from Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton frames the investigation as a consumer-protection probe under Texas Business and Commerce Code. The action questions whether Lululemon's sustainability and product safety claims align with the actual chemistry of its garments. Penalties under the relevant statute can reach $10,000 per violation. The probe is the highest-profile state-level enforcement action against an activewear brand to date.
What is the Lululemon greenwashing class action?
A separate federal class-action lawsuit accuses Lululemon of engaging in greenwashing. The action argues that Lululemon's sustainability messaging is misleading given its reliance on petroleum-derived synthetic fibers and undisclosed chemistry. The case is summarized by law firm Kelley Drye and remains pending. It is a separate legal track from the Texas AG investigation.
Has Lululemon responded to the PFAS allegations?
Lululemon's public sustainability page describes its product safety program and its commitments to reduce hazardous chemistry. The company has not, as of May 2026, published independent third-party PFAS lab data at the SKU level. Its publicly available statements emphasize ongoing chemical-management programs rather than specific test results.
Are Lululemon leggings made of plastic?
Yes. Lululemon's flagship leggings, including the Align and Wunder Under lines, are made predominantly from nylon, polyester, and elastane, all petroleum-derived plastics. The fiber content labels confirm this. Lululemon also markets recycled-content fabrics. Recycled polyester is still polyester at the molecular level and still sheds microplastic fibers during washing.
What are plastic-free alternatives to Lululemon?
Plastic-free activewear brands include Wolven, which uses Tencel-based fabrics; Pact, which uses GOTS-certified organic cotton; Mate the Label; and newer plant-derived performance lines built on OHZEHN-TEX™, a 99.5 percent plant-derived performance fabric platform. Each has trade-offs in stretch, durability, or price. None are perfect but all are made without petroleum polymers as the primary fiber.
How was Lululemon rated by Good On You?
Good On You's independent assessment of Lululemon ranks the brand Not Good Enough overall on environmental impact, with concerns flagged on fiber composition, chemical management transparency, and supply-chain disclosures. The rating predates the Texas AG investigation and the As You Sow microfiber-shedding resolution.
What did As You Sow file against Lululemon?
In December 2025, shareholder advocacy nonprofit As You Sow filed a resolution requesting that Lululemon reduce plastic microfiber shedding from its products. The resolution argues that the brand's reliance on synthetic fibers contributes to a measurable share of marine microplastic pollution. It is a separate track from the Texas AG investigation and the class-action lawsuit.