The recycled cotton yarn market is one of the fastest-growing segments in the global textile industry — valued at roughly USD 1.5 billion in 2025 and projected to more than double by 2034, growing at over nine percent annually. The demand is being driven from two directions at once. In Europe and North America, conventional yarn volumes are flat or declining while brands actively shift programs toward recycled, organic, and Better Cotton certified inputs to meet regulatory and consumer pressure. In Asia, governments are promoting textile recycling as an industrial policy, and India’s textile recycling market alone is projected to reach USD 3.5 billion by 2030. For spinning mills, the technical challenge is real: recycled fibers are shorter and more variable, so producing a consistent, exportable yarn requires careful blending with virgin long-staple cotton, tighter process control in the blow room and carding, and honest lot-level documentation of recycled content. Raghunandan Spintex LLP approaches recycled blends the same way we approach our virgin combed yarns — every lot is tested for count, strength, and evenness against Uster standards, and ships with recycled-content declarations that survive a buyer’s audit. Circularity only works commercially when the quality is non-negotiable.