LVMH has released its 2025 Social and Environmental Responsibility Report, reinforcing how excellence and responsibility go hand in hand across the Group’s global operations. The document, published in April 2026, details progress on social and environmental roadmaps, while restating a long term vision where sustainability is fully integrated into business performance.
Inside LVMH’s 2025 responsibility report
The new 2025 Social and Environmental Responsibility Report is presented as a comprehensive overview of the Group’s commitments, achievements and remaining challenges. LVMH explains that the report shows how sustainability is now embedded in strategy and is driving the transformation of all activities, regardless of the macroeconomic backdrop.
The Group positions the publication as an annual checkpoint to:
- Share progress made on its social and environmental roadmaps.
- Highlight challenges that remain.
- Reaffirm an ambition that “continues to grow stronger”, with a performance model rooted in excellence, responsibility and long term commitment.
Environmental action and LIFE 360
On the environmental front, the report outlines progress under the LIFE 360 (LVMH Initiatives for the Environment) roadmap. In 2025**
, the Group says it helped preserve or regenerate more than 4.3 million hectares of natural habitats, reflecting efforts around biodiversity and responsible sourcing.
of materials** used in products and packaging now come from recycled or eco designed sources, signalling the acceleration of its circularity strategy.
LVMH notes that it received a Triple A rating from CDP, which it presents as recognition of this climate and environmental approach, and states that growth is now decoupled from its carbon footprint. Through the LIFE 360 Business Partners program, the Group is also working with suppliers and partners to scale impact across value chains.
Culture, craftsmanship and governance
The Report spotlights initiatives at Maisons such as Loro Piana, whose “Resilient Threads” program aims to support cashmere cooperatives while preserving the biodiversity of the Mongolian steppes, and Bvlgari, where an expanded 33,000**
square meter** Manifattura in Italy ties innovation and savoir faire to responsible production.
Cultural commitments remain central: the Fondation Louis Vuitton celebrated its 11th** anniversary** in 2025, surpassing 11 million visitors since opening, while a David Hockney retrospective drew more than 900,000 visitors. LVMH also continued its support for Notre Dame de Paris, including the restoration of 16 statues and the cathedral’s spire.
On governance, the Group highlights the creation of a Comité Vigilance, a body tasked with guiding action on ethics, human rights and environmental issues within LVMH and across its value chains. The company frames this as part of strengthening its overall sustainability governance and risk management.
Performance rooted in responsibility
By publishing the 2025 Social and Environmental Responsibility Report, LVMH says it is reaffirming a vision of performance that combines excellence, responsibility and long term commitment. The report presents social inclusion, environmental transformation, cultural patronage and governance as interconnected pillars of what the Group calls “responsible luxury.”
