Thread Report · 1,055 products analyzed · Updated June 18, 2026

What is Pull&Bear made of?

It depends what you buy. Pull&Bear is a mixed bag — some categories are mostly natural, others are mostly plastic. Here's where to shop smart.

According to Fibr's Thread Report (June 2026), 22% of Pull&Bear's 1,055 analysed products are majority-synthetic, with an average natural-fibre content of 58.6%.

1,055Products Analyzed
58.6%Avg Natural Fibre
22%Polyester-Heavy
41.2%Nearly All-Natural

Pull&Bear's jeanss are 97.3% natural fibre, but their blazers are just 13.3%. That's a 84-point gap — where you shop within Pull&Bear matters as much as whether you shop there at all.

The full picture on Pull&Bear.

Pull&Bear sits in the middle of the pack with an average of 58.6% natural fibre across 1,055 products — a mix of natural and synthetic. About 22% of products are polyester-heavy, a notable but not dominant share. On the bright side, 41.2% of Pull&Bear products are made almost entirely from natural fibres (95%+). The most common fibre across Pull&Bear products is Cotton, appearing in 56.5% of items.

How Products Break Down

1,055Products
  • Synthetic

    <30% natural fibre · 351 products

    33.3%
  • Blend

    30–85% natural fibre · 243 products

    23%
  • Natural

    85–100% natural fibre · 461 products

    43.7%

Most Common Fibres (% of products containing)

Cotton
56.5%
Elastane
36.2%
Polyester
32.4%
Viscose
16.4%
Polyamide
11.4%

Where to buy (and avoid).

Not all categories at Pull&Bearare equal. Here's where the natural fibres are.

What we found.

Across 1,055 products analyzed, Pull&Bear averages 58.6% natural fibre content.

22% of Pull&Bear products are majority polyester — that's 232 items made mostly from plastic.

Pull&Bear jeanss are their strongest category at 97.3% natural fibre (141 products).

Their weakest category: blazers at just 13.3% natural (16 products).

Only 41.2% of products (435 items) are 95%+ natural fibre.

All categories ranked by natural fibre percentage
CategoryProductsAvg Natural %
Jeans14197.3%
T-Shirt16790.4%
Shorts6480.8%
Shirt5275.3%
Hoodie3872%
Pants11255.6%
Dress5948.2%
Jacket3746.9%
Skirt3544.1%
Coat1543.8%
Sweater2633.4%
Blazer1613.3%

Sample Products

A selection of Pull&Bear products from our database — from most natural to most synthetic. Click to view on the retailer's site.

High-waist wide-leg jeans100% Natural
High-waist wide-leg jeans
Cotton 100%
High-waist wide-leg jeans100% Natural
High-waist wide-leg jeans
Cotton 100%
High-waist wide-leg jeans100% Natural
High-waist wide-leg jeans
Cotton 100%
High-waist wide-leg jeans100% Natural
High-waist wide-leg jeans
Cotton 100%
High-waist skinny jeans84% Mixed
High-waist skinny jeans
Cotton 84%Polyester 14%Elastane 2%
High-waist skinny jeans84% Mixed
High-waist skinny jeans
Cotton 84%Polyester 14%Elastane 2%
High-waist skinny jeans84% Mixed
High-waist skinny jeans
Cotton 84%Polyester 14%Elastane 2%
Balloon fit tracksuit trousers84% Mixed
Balloon fit tracksuit trousers
Cotton 84%Polyester 16%
Cutwork rib jumper30% Synthetic
Cutwork rib jumper
Polyester 65%Cotton 25%Viscose 10%
Short sleeve buttoned cardigan29% Synthetic
Short sleeve buttoned cardigan
Acrylic 58%Lyocell 26%Linen 16%
Purl knit strappy top29% Synthetic
Purl knit strappy top
Acrylic 58%Lyocell 26%Linen 16%
Soft-touch wide-leg trousers28% Synthetic
Soft-touch wide-leg trousers
Modal 55%Polyester 40%Elastane 5%

The verdict.

Pull&Bear isn't great, but it's not the worst either. You can find natural fibre products here if you know where to look. Stick to the categories we flagged as safe zones, and check individual items with Fibr before buying.

Members only

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  • Per-category breakdown with sample products
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  • Downloadable PDF report for every brand we track
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Frequently asked questions.

What is Pull&Bear clothing made of?

Based on our analysis of 1,055 Pull&Bear products, the average garment is 58.6% natural fibre. The most common single fibre is Cotton (in 56.5% of products). The remaining material is typically synthetic — polyester, polyamide, or acrylic.

Is Pull&Bear cotton?

Sometimes — cotton appears in 56.5% of the 1,055 Pull&Bear products we analyzed, but it's usually blended with synthetics. Only 41.2% of items are nearly all-natural (95%+ natural fibre), so check the composition before assuming a piece is pure cotton.

Is Pull&Bear 100% cotton?

Some pieces are. Of the 1,055 Pull&Bear products we analyzed, 425 are 100% cotton (or near-pure, 95%+) — that's 40.3% of the catalog. The rest are blends.

How much polyester does Pull&Bear use?

22% of Pull&Bear products are polyester-heavy, meaning polyester makes up 50% or more of the garment. This is below average for fast fashion retailers.

Is Pull&Bear mostly synthetic?

22% of Pull&Bear products are polyester-heavy (50%+ polyester). Average natural fibre content is 58.6%, so the rest of the catalog is mixed.

Does Pull&Bear use natural fabrics?

41.2% of Pull&Bear products are nearly all-natural (95%+ natural fibre). A decent portion of their range avoids synthetic fibres entirely.

Is Pull&Bear sustainable in terms of fabric?

Fabric composition is one factor in sustainability. With an average of 58.6% natural fibre, Pull&Bear is about average on this measure. Natural fibres generally biodegrade and shed fewer microplastics than synthetics.

Methodology: We analyzed 1,055 Pull&Bearproduct pages, extracting the fabric composition listed by the retailer. Products are categorized by name keywords. Natural fibre percentage is the sum of all natural fibres (cotton, linen, silk, wool, viscose, lyocell, etc.) in each product's composition. Data is refreshed monthly.

Use this data.

The Thread Report is openly licensed. Cite it, download it, query it directly — just link back to the source page.

Last updated
License
Free to cite with attribution
Raw dataset (JSON)
info.tryfibr.app/pullandbear.json ↓
Computed stats (JSON)
/api/thread-report/pullandbear

Suggested citation

Fibr Thread Report — Pull&Bear, 2026-06-18. tryfibr.app/thread-report/pullandbear

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