🧾 SA8000:2025/6 – Compliance with BRAND
Overview of SA8000 :2025/6
SA8000 is one of the world’s leading social certification standards for factories and organizations. It is overseen by Social Accountability International (SAI) and sets out robust requirements to protect the rights and well-being of workers.
The 2025/6 revision of SA8000 introduces significant changes, particularly in the areas of:
- Supply chain due diligence
- Risk-based thinking
- Ongoing performance monitoring
- Enhanced requirements for remediation and stakeholder engagement
These changes align SA8000 more closely with international frameworks such as the ILO Conventions, UN Guiding Principles, and OECD Due Diligence Guidance, while also reinforcing the standard’s compatibility with legal obligations such as the EU CSDDD.

Core Content of the Standard (Key Areas)
SA8000 is built around 9 core principles:
Child Labour
Forced or Compulsory Labour
Health and Safety
Freedom of Association and Right to Collective Bargaining
Discrimination
Disciplinary Practices
Working Hours
Remuneration
Management System
New & Strengthened Requirements in SA8000:2025/6
The 2025/6 revision includes detailed supply chain-related obligations under the Management System section. The most relevant updated clauses are:
Clause 9.12 – Supply Chain Due Diligence
“The organisation shall develop and implement a due diligence process to identify, assess, and address actual and potential adverse social impacts in its supply chain.”
This includes:
- Risk assessments by geography, product, or supplier
- Ongoing monitoring and re-evaluation
- Engagement with suppliers to mitigate risks
- Documentation of findings and remediation steps
Clause 9.13 – Evaluation and Monitoring
“The organisation shall maintain documented information to demonstrate conformity with this standard, including evidence from supply chain actors where relevant.”
This expands expectations on:
- Internal performance tracking
- Supplier information management
- Audit trails for data and decision-making
Clause 9.14 – Corrective and Preventive Action
“Where nonconformities are found, the organisation shall take timely action to correct and prevent recurrence—including within its sphere of influence, such as the supply chain.”
How BRAND Enables SA8000:2025/6 Compliance
BRAND is purpose-built to meet both the original and revised requirements of SA8000 through:
Clause 9.12 – Supply Chain Due Diligence
- Supply Chain Mapping: Visualize direct and indirect suppliers across tiers, with location-based risk overlays.
- Risk Assessment Module: Score suppliers by product type, geography, sector, and existing audit data.
- KYC Data Collection: Ensure suppliers are identified, verified, and regularly reassessed.
- Issue Escalation Tools: Create action plans and link them to flagged risks.
Clause 9.13 – Monitoring & Documentation
- Audit & Evidence Repository: Centralize all supplier assessments, social audits, and declarations.
- Clause-Level Document Tagging: Link uploaded documents directly to SA8000 clauses.
- System Logs: Track when evidence was added, updated, or verified—and by whom.
Clause 9.14 – Corrective and Preventive Action
- CAPA Tracker: Assign and monitor corrective actions across supply chain partners.
- Performance Timelines: View progress on actions and overdue flags.
- Stakeholder Records: Attach supplier engagement logs and remediation efforts.
For SA 8000 : 2026
Section 1 - Enables effective due diligence
—a comprehensive and proactive process to identify, prevent, mitigate, and account for the actual and potential adverse impacts that an organization causes, contributes to, or is directly linked to through its operations and business relationships and operating with integrity and efficiency.
Key Steps:
- Leadership Commitment – Senior management drives the process.
- Policy Development – Human rights policies aligned with global standards.
- Risk Assessment – Identify and assess actual/potential impacts.
- Integration – Embed into operations, roles, and supply chains.
- Monitoring – Track performance using KPIs and audits.
- Communication – Transparent stakeholder engagement.
- Remediation – Provide access to grievance mechanisms and resolve issues.
M4.2 – Policy of Mutual Expectations for Business Partners
organizations to create and maintain a clear, documented policy outlining mutual expectations with business partners. This policy ensures alignment with ethical, legal, and human rights standards.
Key Elements:
a) Business partners must respect the Standard’s principles and legal requirements.
b) The organization must perform due diligence on business partners.
c) The organization must take responsibility for its role in any partner’s failure to meet expectations.
d) Clear rules for ending partnerships—ensuring it’s not done abruptly or irresponsibly without considering the impact.
M6.3 – Using Leverage to Address Linked Risks
M6.3 requires organizations to proactively address risks they are directly linked to through their business relationships.
Key Requirement:
- Organizations must collaborate with and influence stakeholders—especially business partners—to:
- End harmful practices
- Prevent and mitigate future risks
- Support remediation where impacts have occurred
M7.4 – Responsible Engagement with Business Partners
M7.4 outlines how organizations should responsibly manage relationships with business partners while upholding ethical standards and minimizing harm.
Key Requirements:
a) Ensure partners are informed and able to communicate about the organization’s policies and processes.
b) Avoid business terms that prevent partners from meeting expectations.
c)Support partners in addressing risks, proportional to the organization’s role.
d)Reduce administrative burden on partners wherever feasible.
e) Only end relationships if:
- The partner fails to act after engagement and support, and
- Ending the relationship does not create greater harm.
Integrated Support for Audit Readiness
Audit Trail Generator
Exportable history of compliance actions and supporting documents
SA8000 Audit Prep Dashboard
Real-time indicators showing status of conformity by clause
Multi-Site Management
Filter compliance data by region, factory, or business unit

Summary
BRAND helps organizations operationalize the new supply chain requirements in SA8000:2025/6—not only to maintain certification but to embed sustainable social performance management throughout their business and supply chain.