Counterfeits have never been more convincing, and a fake designer bag can cost you hundreds. Whether you’re buying secondhand or reselling a piece from your own closet, knowing how to authenticate matters. Here’s a practical 2026 guide to spotting a fake designer bag – the five checks the experts use, the biggest red flags, and how to buy and sell luxury with confidence.
The 5 checks that reveal a fake
1. Stitching
Authentic designer bags have neat, even stitching with a high stitch count and no loose threads. Counterfeits cut corners with sparse, crooked or uneven stitching, and fewer stitches per inch – which also makes the bag less durable. Compare the stitching against official product photos of the same model.
2. Hardware
Real hardware is heavy, solid and precisely engraved. Tap it – genuine brass, gold or silver feels dense and won’t sound hollow. Look for consistent colour, smooth finishes and crisp engraving with no rough edges or spelling errors. Lightweight, tinny or sloppily stamped hardware is a classic fake giveaway.
3. Serial / date codes
Authentic serial or date codes are embossed (pressed in), evenly spaced and cleanly formed. If the code is printed on, stuck on a sticker, or has irregular spacing or shallow engraving, it’s almost certainly counterfeit. Know where the brand places its codes (usually a leather tab inside or a stamp in the lining).
4. Logos, fonts & spelling
Genuine logos are sharp, correctly proportioned and consistently placed, with monograms aligned at the seams. Fakes often have off-centre logos, wrong fonts, irregular spacing or – the dead giveaway – misspellings. A misspelled brand name is an instant fail.
5. Materials & overall feel
You can often feel a real bag the moment you pick it up: genuine leather is supple, with a substantial heft and a natural smell. Counterfeits tend to feel stiff, plasticky or oddly light. Linings, zippers and edge-painting on a real bag are all finished to a high standard.
Biggest red flags at a glance
| Red flag | What it usually means |
|---|---|
| Misspelled logo or brand name | Definite fake |
| Printed (not embossed) serial number | Almost certainly fake |
| Lightweight, hollow-sounding hardware | Strong fake signal |
| Uneven or sparse stitching | Strong fake signal |
| Price too good to be true | Proceed with extreme caution |
| Seller won’t share close-up photos | Walk away |
How to buy designer secondhand safely
Before buying, ask the seller for close-ups of the logo, hardware, serial/date code, stitching and any flaws. Compare them against official brand images. For high-value pieces, use a professional authentication service or a platform that authenticates luxury in-house – a small fee is cheap insurance. Keep payment and messages on-platform so you’re covered if the item isn’t as described.
Have a genuine designer piece to sell? List it free and keep 100% of the sale.
FAQ
How can you tell if a designer bag is real or fake?
Check stitching (neat, high count), hardware (heavy, precisely engraved), serial codes (embossed, evenly spaced), logos (sharp, no misspellings) and overall feel (supple leather, real heft). Misspellings, printed serials or flimsy hardware mean fake.
Where is the serial number on a designer bag?
Usually on an interior leather tab, stamped in the lining or on a metal plate. Genuine codes are embossed and evenly spaced; printed or stickered numbers are red flags.
Are authentication services worth it?
For high-value items, yes – they verify against brand databases for a small fee. For everyday pieces, careful photo checks are usually enough.
What are the biggest red flags of a fake designer bag?
Misspelled logos, too-good prices, printed serials, hollow hardware, sloppy stitching, and a seller who won’t send close-up photos.
