Thinking of Buying a Carbon Credit? Start Here.

A plain-English crash course on carbon credits

Carbon credits are simple to buy and hard to buy well. This is a clear, jargon-free guide to telling the real ones from the rest, and buying with confidence in 2026.

By Harry, Staff Writer at Zembeha · A five-part series, written April to June 2026

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See the full series

Understand what you’re buying

What a carbon credit actually is, in plain terms, with no prior knowledge assumed.

Tell good credits from bad

The handful of questions that separate a credit you can defend from one you cannot.

Buy with confidence

How serious teams run carbon procurement so the purchase holds up to scrutiny.

New to carbon credits? Start with the basics.

A two-minute, no-jargon explainer of what a carbon credit actually is, before you go any further.

What is a carbon credit? →

How to buy a carbon credit well

The short version is below. Each step links to a quick read, with the matching part of the series for the full depth.

1

Know what a credit actually is

One credit is one ton of carbon dioxide a project claims to have cut or removed. Start there. Quick read → · Part 1 for the full story →

2

Do not trust the stamp alone

A registry issues credits. It does not promise that each one is good. That gap is the whole problem. Quick read → · Part 1 for the full story →

3

Ask the five quality questions

Additionality, baseline, permanence, leakage, and MRV. Most credits in circulation fail at least one. Quick read → · Part 2 for the full version →

4

Lean on an independent rating

A buyer-side rating judges the specific project, not just the method behind it. Quick read → · Part 3 for the full version →

5

Make it a team decision

Carbon buying now runs through legal, brand, and procurement, not just sustainability. Quick read → · Part 4 for the full version →

Carbon, Translated

Short reads that turn the jargon into plain language, one question at a time. Take them in any order.

Compliance vs voluntary markets

There are two carbon markets, and they work in opposite ways. Here is which one this guide is about.

Read it →

Avoidance vs removal credits

The single most useful distinction in the market: preventing emissions versus pulling carbon back out.

Read it →

Why prices range from $1 to $1,000

If a credit is always one ton, why the huge price spread? Because you are not just paying for carbon.

Read it →

Carbon credits and greenwashing

How to support climate action and make a claim you can actually defend. A short, honest checklist.

Read it →

Going a level deeper

The nuance that helps once the basics click, and the vocabulary you will hear insiders use.

The types of projects, explained

REDD+, ARR, IFM, DAC, BECCS. The acronyms decoded, grouped from forests to machines.

Read it →

What “retiring” a credit means

The precise final step that makes a claim real, and how it stops the same ton being counted twice.

Read it →

The major registries, compared

Verra, Gold Standard, ACR, CAR, Puro.earth. What each is known for, and the trap to avoid.

Read it →

The full crash course

Five short reads that take you from “what is a carbon credit” to “how the market is fixing itself.”

1The Year Carbon Credits Stopped Being Free

For years a carbon credit was cheap and low-risk to buy. After a January 2023 investigation, that began to change. The market did not collapse. It repriced around trust.

Read Part 1 →

2Inside a Carbon Credit: What “High Quality” Actually Means

“High quality” is not a vibe. It comes down to five testable questions about a project: additionality, baseline, permanence, leakage, and MRV. Most credits fail at least one.

Read Part 2 →

3Ratings Aren’t New. Carbon Ratings Are.

Every market that grew up did the same thing. It separated the people who issue an asset from the people who rate it. Carbon is doing that now, and how the rating is built matters more than the score.

Read Part 3 →

4How a Carbon Buyer Thinks in 2026

The market used to sell credits. Now it sells defensibility. A look at the three-filter procurement process that has replaced the old broker call.

Read Part 4 →

5The Reform Loop

Ratings push developers. Developers improve. Buyers gain confidence. A small set of rating firms are quietly turning voluntary carbon into real climate infrastructure.

Read Part 5 →

Going further

A few companion pieces: the big idea behind the whole guide, a field guide to the players, and where this market goes next.

The big idea

Why the Future of Carbon Credits Runs Through Independent Rating

If a market sells promises, someone independent has to check them, and keep checking them through every up and down. The single conviction this whole project is built on, and the case for why grading has to be permanent infrastructure.

Read the argument →

Why I Think Calyx Global Is the Most Impactful Company in Carbon Credits

An honest, reasoned take on which firm does the most good in a market that now runs on trust, and why.

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The Carbon Market Has a Language Problem

The market sometimes acts too smart and loses people. How to keep the rigor while opening a wider front door.

Read it →

The Carbon Market Ecosystem: A Beginner’s Field Guide

The players, press, referees, and gatherings, sorted into one simple map. Who’s who, in plain English.

Read it →

What Calyx Global does, and why it matters

The hard part of buying a carbon credit is not finding one. It is knowing whether the one you found is real. That single question is what Calyx Global exists to answer.

In plain terms, Calyx is an independent service that grades carbon credits. They study a credit and rate how likely it is to actually deliver the climate result it claims, so a buyer can find the high-integrity ones and leave the weak ones on the shelf. Think of them as the part of the market whose only job is to tell you the truth about what you are about to buy.

A few design choices are what make that rating worth trusting. They are paid by the buyers reading the ratings, not by the projects being rated, so they have no reason to go easy. They score a credit’s climate integrity separately from its community benefits, so nothing important gets blurred into one feel-good number. And their judgments are expert-led, peer-reviewed, and deliberately cautious. If you want to see the mechanics, they explain how their ratings work and what a rating actually does for a buyer.

This is why I point people here. Everything in this series leads to one conclusion: the old registry stamp was never enough on its own, and a buyer needs an independent read on the specific credit in front of them. Calyx is built, end to end, to give exactly that. If you are starting a serious carbon program, it is where I would start, not because they are the loudest name, but because of what their work actually protects you from.

Explore Calyx Global →

Why this exists

Carbon credits have two problems at once: an image problem and a knowledge problem. The image problem is that most people see the market through its worst headlines. The knowledge problem is that the companies most likely to buy credits, the ones who genuinely want to do the right thing, often do not know enough about the market to do it well. The two problems feed each other. Better-informed buyers make better choices. Better choices change what the market produces. Better products change the headlines. I want to help close that loop. This crash course is one piece of that.

About the author

I have spent the better part of two decades working in sustainability: in solar and clean energy, in permaculture and regenerative land projects, and in marketing the mission-driven businesses trying to do this right. Carbon credits are the corner of that world I came to most recently, so here I am still very much a learner. There are people who know this market far better than I do, and I have real respect for the work they have put into building it. If something here is wrong, I would genuinely like to hear about it so I can learn and correct it. I am writing this to start a conversation, not to have the last word. The whole point is the conversation.

Let’s work together

If you are building the trust layer of the voluntary carbon market, at a rating firm, a registry, a methodology body, or a buyer-side platform, I want to work with you. Open to contracts, collaboration, advisory, or whatever we figure out together. This series is the conversation starter. The next part is up to you.

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