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B Corp: Definition, Advantages, Disadvantages, and Examples

B corp certification is given to companies that meet certain standards for social and environmental performance

Exterior shot of a Ben & Jerry’s store in Miami Exterior shot of a Ben & Jerry’s store in Miami

Jeremy Moeller / Getty Images

What Is a B Corp?

B corps are for-profit companies that have received certification from B Lab, a nonprofit organization that certifies businesses that meet certain social and environmental standards. B Lab reports there are 9,140 certified B corporations across 162 industries in 102 countries worldwide as of August 2024.

Key Takeaways

  • A B corp is a for-profit company that has received certification from B Lab, a nonprofit organization founded in 2006.
  • To be certified as a B corp, a company must meet certain social and environmental criteria.
  • A certified B corp is not the same as a benefit corporation, although the two may share many of the same goals.

How Does a Business Become a Certified B Corp?

To become a certified B corp, companies must apply to B Lab, providing documentation regarding their business practices.

To be approved, a company has to:

  1. Achieve a score of at least 80 on B Lab’s Impact Assessment, which measures social and environmental performance, and pass its risk review. There are baseline standards that multinational corporations must also meet.
  2. Be accountable to all stakeholders, not just shareholders, by making a legal commitment and changing its corporate governance structure. If available in its jurisdiction, a company must also have achieved benefit corporation status. 
  3. Be transparent by agreeing to allow its performance on B Lab’s standards to be publicly available on its B corp profile on B Lab’s website.

In addition, companies must apply for recertification every three years or when there has been a change in ownership or they have made an initial public offering (IPO).

What Is B Lab?

B Lab, based in the United States, is an international organization founded in 2006. It describes itself as a “nonprofit network transforming the global economy to benefit all people, communities, and the planet.” B Lab certified its first 82 corporations in 2007.

B Lab is supported by a group of well-known foundations, corporations, and government agencies, including the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, the Business Development Bank of Canada, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, and Prudential.

In addition to its U.S. offices in Philadelphia and New York City, B Lab works with global regional affiliates in Amsterdam, London, Melbourne, and Sao Paulo. In Latin America, it partners with Sistema B, founded in 2011.

Advantages and Disadvantages of Becoming a B Corp

Companies go through the process of becoming B corps for a variety of reasons and can gain a number of advantages from doing so. At the same time, there may be a few potential drawbacks.

Advantages

According to B Lab, companies that receive B corp certification benefit because they:

  • Build trust with their consumers, communities, and suppliers
  • Are able to attract and retain employees
  • Tend to attract investors who back their mission

And because they must recertify every three years, their focus on improving over time can lead to long-term resiliency.

B Lab Europe puts it a little more simply: “For businesses, becoming a B Corp means attracting more employees, improving their company, and finding power as a community.”

A 2016 Harvard Business Review article that examined companies’ motivations for becoming B corps found “at least two major underlying reasons,” according to its authors.

One was “the increasing efforts of more conventional profit-driven companies to be seen as ‘green’ and ‘good.’” This, in turn, motivated smaller competitors (which many B corps are) to seek certification as a way to stand out as genuinely committed to social and environmental responsibility.

The second, closely related reason was an apparently sincere desire to “‘join the movement of creating a new economy with a new set of rules and ‘redefine the way people perceive success in the business world.’”

In another Harvard Business Review article, Richard Stammer, former president and CEO of Cabot Creamery Cooperative, which became certified as a B corp in 2012, wrote that the process “delivered value beyond our expectations. B Corp certification encouraged more ‘whole-systems thinking’ around our social and environmental practices, which led Cabot to develop even more robust customer and consumer programs, cut operating costs, and strengthen our brand reputation as a sustainability-minded company.”

Disadvantages

A largely positive report on B corps prepared by the Yale Center for Business and the Environment and Patagonia (a well-known B corp) mentioned a few potential drawbacks for companies weighing whether, as it said, “to B or not to B.”

Those included a higher level of scrutiny, in part because companies that make environmental and other claims are often targeted by activists checking to be sure that they live up to those claims.

In addition, the certification process itself can be laborious. “It can take months—and in some cases, years—to become a Certified B Corporation, and the amount of time hinges heavily on whether a company already had a system in place to measure its social and environmental impact,” the report noted, adding that, “It is important for a company to assess whether it has sufficient bandwidth to take on the additional work.”

Finally, the extra expenses associated with being a B corp (such as “paying your employees a living wage”) might result in higher costs to customers and reduced profits for shareholders, at least in the short term.

Which Companies Are Certified B Corps?

Many B corps are small and midsize companies not widely known outside of their countries or particular market niches. Among the larger and more famous U.S. brands on the list are Ben & Jerry’s (food products), Patagonia (apparel), and Seventh Generation (cleaning products).

B Corp Certification Categories

The assessment process used by B Lab looks at a company’s practices across five categories: governance, workers, community, environment, and customers. Its annual “Best for the World” lists recognize top performers in each category, in each region.

Benefit Corporation vs. B Corp

A benefit corporation, sometimes referred to as a B corporation, is a type of company, officially recognized in most states of the U.S., that operates for the benefit of stakeholders such as employees and the larger community rather than simply for its shareholders. In that way, it is similar to a B corp certified by B Lab, and for obvious reasons, the two are often confused.

Although B corps and benefit corporations have similar accountability and transparency requirements, the performance of a benefit corporation is self-reported, whereas a B corp must “pass” the B Lab Impact Assessment and recertify regularly, as noted above.

Filing fees for benefit corporations vary by state and province, but they tend to be lower than B Lab’s certification fees. Companies can only become benefit corporations in the U.S., the British Columbia province of Canada, and a few other countries, whereas any for-profit firm that has been in operation for a least a year can apply to be a B corp.

What Is a Stakeholder?

A stakeholder is an individual or a group with a stake or personal interest in a business enterprise. A company’s stakeholders can include its shareholders, employees, customers, suppliers, and the surrounding community, among others.

What Is Shareholder Primacy?

Shareholder primacy is a theory that corporations should act primarily, if not entirely, in the interests of their shareholders. It conflicts with the belief, exemplified by benefit corporations and B corps, that they should also consider the interests of other stakeholders, such as their employees and customers.

Do B Corps Pay Taxes?

Yes. While B corps and benefit corporations may have a different societal mission than some corporations, they are still subject to the same tax laws as any other for-profit company.

The Bottom Line

B corps are part of a growing movement toward greater social and environmental responsibility by businesses around the world. Their proponents maintain that paying attention to those concerns (and not simply the interests of shareholders) is also good business that pays off in other ways.

Article Sources
Investopedia requires writers to use primary sources to support their work. These include white papers, government data, original reporting, and interviews with industry experts. We also reference original research from other reputable publishers where appropriate. You can learn more about the standards we follow in producing accurate, unbiased content in our editorial policy.
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  2. B Lab. “About B Corp Certification.”

  3. B Lab. "Contact Us."

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  5. B Lab. “FAQs: How Did the B Corp Movement Start?

  6. B Lab Global. "2023 Annual Report."

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  10. Harvard Business Review. “Why Companies Are Becoming B Corporations.”

  11. Harvard Business Review. “It Pays to Become a B Corporation.”

  12. Yale Center for Business and the Environment and Patagonia. “An Entrepreneur’s Guide to Certified B Corporations and Benefit Corporations.” Page 9.

  13. Ben & Jerry’s. “Ben & Jerry’s Joins the B Corp Movement!

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  17. B Lab United States & Canada. “Benefit Corporations.”

  18. U.S. Small Business Administration. “Choose a Business Structure.”