The price of high-quality carbon credits has reached record levels in late 2025, according to market intelligence firm Sylvera, signaling a major shift toward integrity-driven demand in the voluntary carbon market. Prices for afforestation, reforestation, and revegetation (ARR) credits rose to $24 per tonne in September, up from $14 at the start of the year. Buyers such as Radisson and Enterprise are focusing on verified projects that demonstrate measurable, durable climate impact and social co-benefits. Sylvera’s CEO, Allister Furey, noted that this growing premium reflects “integrity as the new driver of value,” as corporate buyers become more selective and project developers adopt stricter standards.
The report highlights a tightening supply—credit issuances dropped 18% in Q3 2025—while retirements remain historically high, signaling strong demand for verified, high-grade offsets. Data shows that 57% of retired credits were rated BB or higher, reflecting a growing move away from lower-quality offsets. The trend also underscores the market’s maturation: integrity, transparency, and permanence now outweigh low-cost volume. As Sylvera projects continued growth toward a $50–100 billion global market by 2030, this price surge confirms that credibility and real-world impact are becoming the defining metrics of value in the carbon economy.
