SA8000 — Social Accountability
Certify your organisation's commitment to decent work, ethical labour practices, and human rights. SA8000:2026 — the world's leading social accountability standard, developed by Social Accountability International (SAI).
This certificate is issued by CAS without third-party accreditation for this scheme. It is not within the scope of EGAC Schedule 012418B and is not recognised under the IAF MLA. Per IAF MD 23:2023, CAS clearly differentiates accredited and non-accredited services on every page.
SA8000 is the world's leading social certification standard for decent work, developed by Social Accountability International (SAI) and first published in 1997. SA8000:2026 is the current edition, revised through a multi-stakeholder process. The standard is grounded in the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs), ILO Conventions, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and the ETI Base Code. It establishes both principles for human rights protection and specific criteria for organisations to demonstrate respect for workers' rights throughout their operations and business relationships.
Manufacturers, factories, farms, and service organisations in supply chains of major international brands and retailers. Required or preferred by global buyers in apparel, footwear, food, electronics, and consumer goods. Applicable to any organisation regardless of size, sector, or location.
SA8000:2026 is structured around a "Protect, Respect, and Remedy" framework. It consists of a Management System section and nine substantive labour rights elements — each with specific criteria that must be met and documented for certification.
- SA8000:2026 — the world's most credible social accountability certification
- Required or preferred by major international brands and retailers in apparel, food, and consumer goods
- Listed in SAI's global Certified Facilities Database — searchable by buyers worldwide
- Demonstrates ethical sourcing compliance to customers, NGOs, and investors
- Reduces risk of labour abuse findings in buyer supplier audits and media investigations
- Improves worker welfare, engagement, and productivity
- Recognised by ISEAL Alliance, Ethical Trading Initiative (ETI), and major CSR frameworks
- Grounded in ILO Conventions, UNGPs, and international human rights frameworks