Hermès · Authentication
Birkin 30: real vs fake
The Birkin 30 is the sweet spot of the range, and its check is all about horizontal geometry: the 30 × 22 × 16 cm body is clearly wider than it is tall, with handles set farther apart on a flatter arc than the 25. In soft leathers a slight relaxation of shape is acceptable — the skill is telling that apart from a replica’s crooked cut.
What to check on the Birkin 30
Model-specific zones — on top of the brand-level signs.
Proportions: 30 × 22 × 16
The 30’s front is distinctly horizontal: width clearly beats height, and the base is deep. Replicas often land at in-between “neither 30 nor 35” dimensions — verify with a tape measure, not by eye.
Wide-set handles with a flatter arc
Compared to the 25, the handles sit farther apart and curve more gently. Both arcs match in height and lean; handles of different shapes or heights are a typical counterfeit defect.
Sangle length and seating on the lock
The side straps on a 30 are longer than on smaller sizes but land on the turnlock plate just as precisely: tips centered, no rippling, no straining of the leather.
Flap slots
The strap slots are cut cleanly and symmetrically about the flap’s center line. Offset slots or ragged slot edges instantly expose an amateur cut.
Body slouch
In soft leathers (Togo, Clémence) mild side relaxation is normal, but the base keeps its rectangle and the front doesn’t ripple in waves. Structured leathers barely lose shape at all.
Photo angles for the check
- 1 Front
- 2 Logo / hardware
- 3 Interior
- 4 Date code
- 5 Stitching
Check your Birkin 30 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
How is a Birkin 30 different from a 35 in photos?
The 35’s front stretches even wider and tends to look more “luggage-like,” especially in soft leathers. The most reliable test is measuring the base width: 30 vs 35 cm shows up even with a ruler in frame.
The sides have slouched — is that a fake sign?
Not necessarily: moderate settling with wear is normal for Togo and Clémence. What’s suspicious is asymmetry — one side lower than the other, a wavy front panel, or a collapsed base.
Should the handles stand perfectly vertical?
Not on a 30: its handle arc is wider and flatter than the 25’s — that’s a trait of the size. What matters is that both handles are mirror-identical and springy, with no creasing at the bases.