Something has changed in the relationship between luxury brands and the people who buy them. The global active luxury customer base has shrunk from 400 million consumers in 2022 to approximately 330 million by the end of 2025. Bain & Company and Altagammaand in fact returns to the estimated size of 2013. The contraction was largely caused by ambitious buyers leaving the market completely; consumers who went out of their way to partake in luxury during the post-pandemic boom and have since backed out as prices outpaced any corresponding improvement in quality or creativity.
Morgan Stanley now forecasts personal luxury goods growth to reach just 2.5% in 2026, downgraded from a previous projection of 4% to 5%, reflecting a slower-than-expected recovery after two years of contraction. Consumer confidence in the United States fell to the lowest point in the 74-year history of the University of Michigan’s Consumer Sentiment Index in April 2026, falling below levels seen at the depths of the 2008 financial crisis. These numbers are not small fluctuations. They are a structural signal.
The cause of this shift is not purely economic. The BoF-McKinsey State of Fashion 2026 report confirms the diagnosis: after years of price increases without corresponding improvements in quality or creativity, the industry is being forced to rebuild trust with shoppers. Bain Partner Federica Levato described the sentiment among big spenders as emotional “deceived”– prices rose while creativity did not, and in luxury perception is everything.
Between 2023 and 2025, most of the luxury market’s growth came from price increases rather than volume gains, a lever that cannot be pulled indefinitely. Luxury consumers who spend less don’t necessarily do so because they can’t afford to spend more. Many do this on principle.
Luxury consumer spending: The trust deficit
The luxury industry built its post-pandemic recovery on pricing power. Brands aggressively raised prices in 2022 and 2023, initially encountering little resistance from a consumer base flush with pandemic savings and a genuine thirst for quality, exclusivity and experience. The resistance has now arrived. According to Shopify’s Luxury Trends Report 2026, 88% of high-income consumers now define status through experiences, personal values and authenticity rather than visible brand symbols. For a significant portion of the market, the era of logo-forward, price-as-proxy-for-quality is over.
China, which served as the engine of luxury growth for more than a decade, has become a source of structural uncertainty. The luxury market in mainland China declined by about 6% to 8% in 2025. More importantly, 56% of consumers in mainland China planned to buy more domestic brands by 2025, attracted by greater cultural relevance and better value for money. Jeweler Laopu Gold is one of the local brands benefiting from this shift. The hunger for luxury has not disappeared. It’s just been diverted.
What careful spending actually looks like
The luxury consumers who remain active in the market in 2026 will spend differently instead of simply spending less. According to Bain, luxury experiences continue to outperform traditional product categories as consumers prioritize travel, wellness, hospitality and social experiences over conventional luxury purchases. The shift is from ownership to experience, from logos to meaning, and from acquisition to management.
Celebrity behavior reflects this change on a highly visible scale. Gwyneth Paltrows Goop, which combines products with lifestyle experiences, has consistently outperformed simple product-driven companies in audience engagement. Victoria BeckhamMeanwhile, she rebuilt her fashion brand around a more focused and carefully curated collection strategy after years of aggressive expansion. The message from both the market and influential cultural figures is remarkably consistent: less, but better – and with a clear raison d’être.
Resale represents another dimension of this evolution. Consumers who once bought new are increasingly turning to pre-owned luxury, motivated by both value and sustainability. The luxury resale market continues to grow faster than the primary market, prompting major fashion houses to invest in authentication services and resale infrastructure as part of their long-term strategy.
What the industry should do next

The slowdown in the luxury sector is leading to a period of strategic renewal that will determine which brands will emerge stronger and which will continue to struggle. Brands that primarily target consumers with very wealthy businesses continue to post strong results. Those with greater exposure to aspirational buyers face increasing pressure. This K-shaped dynamic is reshaping the competitive landscape and separating brands that can maintain a premium positioning from brands that are now forced to justify their prices more credibly.
Gen Z is watching closely. Bain reports that Generation Z will be responsible for 30% of purchases in the luxury market by 2030, while 43% of consumers within the demographic expect to spend more on personal luxury goods in the coming year. Yet their definition of luxury differs fundamentally from that of previous generations. They are digitally born and values-driven and are not only impressed by products. They expect personalization, real craftsmanship, transparency and a brand story that can withstand scrutiny.
The luxury brands that will win in the next decade are the ones that invest in these expectations today, as the market forces a long-awaited return to authenticity.
Featured image: Courtesy of Chanel
Everything you thought you knew about luxury fashion is being rewritten

