Guides · Luxury Handbags
How to Tell if a Louis Vuitton Bag Is Real or Fake (2026)
Louis Vuitton is the most counterfeited luxury brand in the world — customs agencies estimate it accounts for a sizable share of all seized fakes. The upside: LV’s production is strictly standardized, so authentic bags carry a set of consistent tells, from the date code format to the exact shade of yellow thread. Here’s what to check.
Real vs fake Louis Vuitton: comparison table
Data current as of July 2026. Replicas evolve, so judge by the combination of signs — never a single one.
| Sign | Authentic | Fake |
|---|---|---|
| Date code / microchip | Before March 2021 — a code of 2 letters (factory) and 4 digits (week/month + year), tucked away on an interior tab or pocket, with a format that matches the year. After that — an RFID microchip and no visible code. | A code in a conveniently visible spot, a wrong format (e.g., SD0000), bold or crooked type — or a “date code” on a 2022+ bag that should have a chip instead. |
| LV monogram | A crisp, symmetrical pattern with even spacing; on classic models (Speedy, Neverfull) the motif is continuous and mirrored, and logos aren’t cut off by seams where they shouldn’t be. | A shifted or tilted pattern, inconsistent spacing, a print that’s washed-out or overly bright, or monograms crudely chopped by seams on classic silhouettes. |
| Stitching | Even, mustard-yellow stitches on the vachetta, with an identical stitch count on symmetrical parts (for example, on the handle anchors). | Thread that’s neon-yellow or too pale, uneven spacing, different stitch counts left vs. right, and stray thread ends. |
| Heat stamp and fonts | “LOUIS VUITTON® PARIS made in France” — thin, crisp, deep lettering; the “O” is perfectly round, the “L” has a short foot, and letters sit close together. | Thick or wobbly letters, an oval “O,” wide letter spacing, or a stamp that’s shallow or flooded with dye. |
| Hardware | Brass hardware with satisfying heft, cleanly engraved LOUIS VUITTON lettering, no chipped plating; zippers glide smoothly. | Lightweight metal, tiny or crooked engraving (or none at all), peeling plating, and zippers that snag. |
| Vachetta (natural leather) | Pale when new, it oxidizes and darkens to a honey tone over time; edges are neatly painted burgundy/red. | Faux leather that never develops a patina, rough unfinished edges, and a chemical smell. |
1. Date code / microchip
Authentic: Before March 2021 — a code of 2 letters (factory) and 4 digits (week/month + year), tucked away on an interior tab or pocket, with a format that matches the year. After that — an RFID microchip and no visible code.
Fake: A code in a conveniently visible spot, a wrong format (e.g., SD0000), bold or crooked type — or a “date code” on a 2022+ bag that should have a chip instead.
2. LV monogram
Authentic: A crisp, symmetrical pattern with even spacing; on classic models (Speedy, Neverfull) the motif is continuous and mirrored, and logos aren’t cut off by seams where they shouldn’t be.
Fake: A shifted or tilted pattern, inconsistent spacing, a print that’s washed-out or overly bright, or monograms crudely chopped by seams on classic silhouettes.
3. Stitching
Authentic: Even, mustard-yellow stitches on the vachetta, with an identical stitch count on symmetrical parts (for example, on the handle anchors).
Fake: Thread that’s neon-yellow or too pale, uneven spacing, different stitch counts left vs. right, and stray thread ends.
4. Heat stamp and fonts
Authentic: “LOUIS VUITTON® PARIS made in France” — thin, crisp, deep lettering; the “O” is perfectly round, the “L” has a short foot, and letters sit close together.
Fake: Thick or wobbly letters, an oval “O,” wide letter spacing, or a stamp that’s shallow or flooded with dye.
5. Hardware
Authentic: Brass hardware with satisfying heft, cleanly engraved LOUIS VUITTON lettering, no chipped plating; zippers glide smoothly.
Fake: Lightweight metal, tiny or crooked engraving (or none at all), peeling plating, and zippers that snag.
6. Vachetta (natural leather)
Authentic: Pale when new, it oxidizes and darkens to a honey tone over time; edges are neatly painted burgundy/red.
Fake: Faux leather that never develops a patina, rough unfinished edges, and a chemical smell.
How to photograph your Louis Vuitton for a check
Shoot in daylight, avoid glare, keep focus sharp. You need 5 angles:
- 1 Full front of the bag
- 2 Monogram close-up
- 3 LOUIS VUITTON heat stamp
- 4 Date code or interior tab
- 5 Hardware and anchor stitching
How to read the result
The AI returns a verdict with a confidence score:
- 75–100% — Authentic: high confidence the item is genuine.
- 60–74% — Likely authentic: probably genuine with minor concerns.
- 40–59% — Uncertain: the photos are not conclusive — retake or add angles.
- 25–39% — Likely fake: several red flags.
- 0–24% — Fake: clear signs of a replica.
Check your Louis Vuitton right now
First check is free. Snap photos of your item and get an AI verdict with a confidence score in about a minute.
FAQ
My new LV bag has no date code — is it fake?
Not necessarily. In March 2021, Louis Vuitton replaced date codes with an embedded microchip that boutiques can scan. If the bag was made after 2021, no code is normal. A visible “date code” on a brand-new model is what should raise your eyebrows.
Can I verify that a date code matches the bag?
Yes: the first two letters encode the factory (country), and the digits encode the week/month and year of production. The format changed from decade to decade. A format that doesn’t match the claimed production year is a red flag. The app tells you where to find the code on your specific model.
The monogram is cut off by a seam — is that a fake?
It depends on the model. On classic Speedy and Neverfull bags the pattern is symmetrical and continuous, but on some models (with exterior pockets, for example) the motif is cropped by design. That’s why you compare against a reference for the exact model — which is what the AI does.
The seller has a boutique receipt. Is that enough?
No. Receipts get faked more often than the bags themselves, and a receipt isn’t tied to a specific item. Judge the bag itself: monogram, heat stamp, stitching, hardware, and the code or chip.