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Why European consumers are spending more but buying less fashion

For much of the last two decades, the European fashion industry operated under the assumption that rising consumer wealth would naturally translate into higher apparel demand. Instead, the opposite has unfolded. Consumer spending across Europe’s largest economies has grown since 2005, yet fashion’s share of household expenditure has steadily declined.
Research compiled by World Data Lab and analyzed by FashionSIGHTS points to a deeper transformation inside mature consumer economies. The issue confronting apparel retailers is no longer temporary inflation pressure or cyclical weakness. European consumers still have purchasing power, but increasingly they are choosing to direct it elsewhere. The result is a growing relevance crisis for an industry historically dependent on constant wardrobe renewal, rapid trend cycles, and rising unit volumes.
Spending growth, fashion decline
Across Germany, Spain, and the UK, consumer expenditure has grown aggressively over the last 20 years. Trillions of euros have entered these economies through wage growth, asset expansion, and broader consumption recovery. Yet apparel has consistently lost wallet share during the same period.
Table: Changing consumer spending across major European countires
|
Market |
Consumer spending (2005) |
Consumer spending (2025) |
Net increase |
Long-term market dynamics |
|
Germany |
€1,290 bn |
€2,180 bn |
+€890 bn |
Broad-based market expansion; severe compression of apparel share of wallet. |
|
Spain |
€539 bn |
€911 billion |
+€372 bn |
Robust post-crisis recovery; spending redirected entirely away from material accumulation. |
|
UK |
€1,320 bn |
€2,110 bn |
+€790 bn |
Sustained long-term demand curve; structural shift toward digital and experiential ecosystems. |
This difference exposes a challenge for the apparel sector. Consumers are not spending less overall; they are simply assigning lower importance to clothing purchases. For decades, fashion benefited from a consumption culture tied to identity creation, social signalling, and fast-cycle trend participation. That equation is now weakening. In mature European markets, wardrobes are already saturated, reducing the incentive for repeated discretionary purchases.
The industry’s traditional growth model, driven by faster collections, higher volumes, and perpetual discounting is misaligned with changing consumer priorities.
Aging consumers, slower fashion cycles
Demographic change is increasing the problem. Europe’s population is aging rapidly, thereby altering consumption patterns. Between 2005 and 2025, Spain’s median age climbed from roughly 40 to 47 years, Germany’s increased by approximately 4.5 years, and the UK’s rose by about two years. Meanwhile, the proportion of citizens aged 65 and above grew steadily across all three markets.
This demographic shift carries major implications for apparel demand because older consumers purchase fashion differently from younger generations. Younger consumers have led high-frequency apparel spending through career-building, active social lives, and identity experimentation. Older demographics typically prioritize comfort, practicality, and wardrobe stability. As consumers age, the biological and lifestyle need for constant wardrobe updates declines sharply.
The implications are structural rather than cyclical. Mature consumers prefer durable garments, timeless silhouettes, and utility-focused purchases over fast-moving seasonal trends. This weakens the foundation of the traditional fashion calendar, which relied heavily on rapid product turnover and youth-driven aspiration. For brands built around trend growth and volume expansion, Europe’s aging population represents a long-term demand headwind that is unlikely to reverse.
New priorities of consumer spending
At the same time, discretionary income is shifting toward sectors perceived to deliver stronger emotional or functional returns. Once consumers reach wardrobe saturation, the incremental value of purchasing additional apparel declines; the 20th T-shirt or fifth winter coat carries limited utility compared to spending on travel, wellness, or digital experiences. This behavioral reallocation is reshaping the broader retail economy.
Experiential spending has emerged as one of the largest beneficiaries of this shift. Travel, hospitality, live events, and cultural experiences are now viewed as stronger expressions of identity and status than physical ownership. Post-pandemic consumer psychology has boosted this transition, with many households prioritizing experiences over accumulation.
The beauty and wellness sector has also become a major destination for discretionary spending. What was once viewed as a cyclical ‘lipstick effect’ has evolved into a sustained wellness economy centered on longevity, self-optimization, preventive health, and premium skincare. Consumers are investing more heavily in personal wellbeing than in fashion-driven external presentation.
Technology spending has similarly grown its share of household budgets. Smartphones, wearables, gaming ecosystems, and digital infrastructure now occupy a central role in modern lifestyle consumption, particularly in hybrid work and entertainment environments. For apparel retailers, the challenge is no longer limited to competition within fashion itself. The industry is now competing against entire lifestyle ecosystems for relevance.
Winners and losers
The difference between apparel segments highlights how consumer expectations have changed over time. Mass-market retailers dependent on basics-driven assortments and constant promotional activity have seen growing pressure on both margins and volume growth. Consumers increasingly view commoditized apparel as interchangeable and easily replaceable, eroding pricing power across the sector. At the same time, a smaller group of brands has managed to maintain stronger wallet share by repositioning apparel as either functional gear or cultural capital.
Technical outerwear, performance-driven apparel, and specialized utility products continue to attract demand because consumers perceive them as essential rather than disposable. Similarly, culturally differentiated brands capable of creating emotional resonance or exclusivity retain pricing leverage even in slower markets. This suggests the future of fashion growth in mature economies will depend less on quantity and more on perceived indispensability.
Reinventing fashion’s value proposition
The broader message emerging from Europe’s retail market is clear: fashion can no longer rely on historical consumer habits to drive growth. For many consumers, clothing has shifted from aspirational acquisition to maintenance spending. In markets where wardrobes are already full and demographic aging is accelerating, simply producing more inventory is unlikely to restore momentum.
The challenge ahead for fashion brands is rebuilding emotional and cultural relevance in a world saturated with product. That will require a decisive move away from the commodity trap that has dominated much of mass-market apparel over the last decade. Competing primarily through discounts, rapid inventory churn, and endless assortment expansion has weakened differentiation while conditioning consumers to perceive clothing as low-value and replaceable.
Future growth will depend on creating products that consumers view as meaningful investments rather than impulse purchases. Brands capable of delivering authenticity, functional utility, cultural connection, or emotional engagement are likely to outperform those still relying on volume-driven retail economics.
Europe’s evolving consumer market suggests the fashion industry is no longer dealing just with a temporary slowdown. It is confronting a deeper reset, one that may permanently redefine how apparel competes for consumer attention, spending, and relevance.
Primark expands North America presence with new retail formats in Houston, Indianapolis
Primark is aggressively scaling its presence in the United States, targeting key retail corridors in Houston and Indianapolis to capture the expanding appetite for value-driven fashion. By establishing a physical footprint in these high-traffic urban centers, the retailer aims to challenge incumbent mass-market players through a model that combines fast-fashion agility with competitive pricing. Retail analysts observe that these specific site selections represent a calculated effort to deepen market penetration beyond the Eastern Seaboard, leveraging regional logistics hubs to optimize inventory turnover and satisfy robust consumer demand in the heartland.
Capitalizing on value-driven consumer sentiment
The expansion occurs against a backdrop of tightening household discretionary budgets, where consumers are increasingly prioritizing ‘affordable luxury.’ Unlike traditional big-box retailers, Primark’s experiential model - focused on high-volume, trend-responsive apparel - serves as a primary growth lever. By securing premium space in prominent retail developments, the company is effectively utilizing high-visibility physical storefronts to build long-term customer loyalty. This tactical push ensures that Primark remains a dominant force in the value retail sector, particularly as the company refines its supply chain to mitigate inflationary pressures while maintaining its hallmark price points across its diverse product assortments.
Driving global revenue with US expansion
Primark is an international clothing retailer offering fashion, homeware, and beauty products at value prices. Operating across Europe and the US, it focuses on high-volume apparel. The company plans rapid US growth to drive global revenue. Founded in 1969 in Dublin, it maintains a strategy of low-cost, high-frequency stock updates.
India leads global textile sourcing stability and opportunity
India has secured the top position in the 2026 Global Textile Sourcing Risk Index (GTSRI), marking a definitive shift in the international apparel supply chain. While China retains a significant volume share, the latest index reveals, India has achieved the largest performance gain among all major economies, climbing 3.8 points. This ascent is attributed to India's unique standing as the only top-tier economy that offers a seamless, integrated supply chain - spanning from raw cotton cultivation to finished garment production - complemented by robust manufacturing investments under the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme.
Diversification and regulatory agility
The global sourcing landscape is currently undergoing its most rapid reconfiguration in a decade, driven by increased scrutiny of labor practices and the impact of tiered trade tariffs. As global brands move to de-risk their portfolios, India’s strategic focus on Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) and digital trade facilitation has made it a preferred alternative to traditional hubs. Industry analysis indicates that while competitors like Vietnam have faced recent setbacks in the index, India’s expansion gets a boost from enhanced logistics resilience and consistent policy support. The current trade reset has compressed the lead held by incumbent manufacturers, and India has successfully leveraged this to cement its status as a foundational partner for global retail, notes a market analyst. By aligning domestic production capabilities with international compliance and sustainability mandates, Indian exporters are effectively capturing a greater share of high-growth markets in the European Union and beyond.
Maintaining an end-to-end textile value chain
India maintains an end-to-end textile value chain covering natural fibers, man-made yarns, and technical textiles. Supported by initiatives like the RoSCTL and PLI schemes, the sector is targeting a US$ 350 billion export capacity by 2030, balancing large-scale manufacturing with increasing global demand for ethical and traceable apparel production.
India achieves new milestone as apparel exports to EU rise to US$ 4.66 billion in FY25-26
India’s apparel sector reached a historic milestone in FY25-26, with exports to the European Union (EU) rising to a record US$ 4.66 billion. This performance signals a decisive transition in India’s manufacturing profile, moving from commodity-heavy trade toward higher-value, innovation-driven supply chains. Following the conclusion of the India-EU FTA negotiations in January 2026, domestic manufacturers have gained a more competitive footing, successfully narrowing the cost and logistics gap against traditional regional rivals. This policy progress has been instrumental in securing India’s position as a preferred sourcing hub for European retailers, who are increasingly favoring trade agreements that promise long-term tariff relief and regulatory predictability.
Operational resilience in a shifting global landscape
The growth trajectory is heavily supported by the industry's widespread adoption of the ‘China+1’ diversification strategy, as global brands seek stable, compliant, and transparent manufacturing partners. Indian firms are rapidly integrating digital trade facilitation and advanced logistics to align with the stringent environmental mandates of the EU market, including the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM). India’s as a primary sourcing destination is now driven by their ability to offer end-to-end traceability and ethical production at scale, states a spokesperson for the Ministry of Textiles. By prioritizing ready-made garments and value-added textiles, manufacturers are successfully capturing a larger share of the European market, which remains the leading destination for India’s diversified export basket.
Targeting US$350 billion textile exports by 2030
The Indian textile industry spans an integrated value chain from fiber to garmenting. Key products include cotton-based apparel, man-made fibers, and technical textiles. The sector is scaling operations to meet a national export goal of US$ 350 billion by 2030, bolstered by government incentives like the RoSCTL and RoDTEP programs.
Lacoste forays into premium lifestyle segment in partnership with Alpine
Lacoste is intensifying its foray into the premium lifestyle segment, moving beyond traditional sportswear to anchor its brand in the realm of high-performance design. The brand has entered into a landmark partnership with the French automotive house Alpine, which serves as a powerful instrument to elevate the brand’s image. Central to this initiative is the ‘Beware of the Crocodile’ project, which bridges motorsport engineering with fashion through a bespoke, all-electric Alpine A290 Rallye vehicle. By utilizing automotive design as a conduit for brand storytelling, Lacoste is successfully repositioning its iconic crocodile motif as a symbol of technical prowess and modern luxury, rather than just classic court-side apparel.
Harmonizing technical precision and apparel
Comprising technical outerwear, polos, and performance accessories, the accompanying capsule collection functions as a retail extension of the automotive project. Retail analysts note, this cross-category collaboration is designed to resonate with an aspirational consumer base that values the intersection of speed, precision, and aesthetic heritage. By embedding signature petit piqué fabrics into automotive interior elements, the partnership creates a tangible sensory link between the driving experience and the consumer’s wardrobe. This approach mirrors Lacoste’s broader retail objective: to cultivate a brand narrative that feels both authentic to its tennis origins and relevant to contemporary luxury consumers who prioritize "experiential retail" over mere product acquisition.
Strategic footprint and market diversification
This collaboration arrives as Lacoste continues to refine its global footprint, balancing a transition toward experiential flagship locations with aggressive expansion in high-growth markets like India. The brand is currently utilizing data-driven insights to penetrate Tier-II urban hubs, where aspirational consumption is rising. By anchoring these growth plans with high-visibility cultural moments like the Alpine partnership, Lacoste maintains a strong ‘halo effect’ that boosts its premium appeal across both mature European markets and emerging retail landscapes. Industry benchmarks indicate, this synthesis of heritage-led identity and avant-garde creative partnerships is critical to sustaining the double-digit growth targets set for the current fiscal cycle.
Focusing on heritage-rich products
Founded in 1933 by tennis champion René Lacoste, the French fashion house is world-renowned for its iconic polo shirts and crocodile insignia. Operating in the premium apparel, footwear, and leather goods sectors, Lacoste focuses on ‘relaxed elegance.’ The brand currently pursues a growth strategy centered on elevated, heritage-rich product lines and geographic expansion into high-potential secondary cities and premium airport retail.
Pact Group boosts circular textile supply chain via stake acquisition in Plan B Circular
Australian industrial packaging leader Pact Group has finalized a strategic investment in Plan B Circular, a United Kingdom-based pioneer in commercial-scale textile-to-textile (T2T) polyester recycling. This partnership marks a significant transition in the global apparel supply chain, as the industry prepares for impending European Union (EU) regulatory mandates. While many fashion brands currently rely on recycled polyethylene terephthalate (rPET) derived from plastic bottle flake, the new investment is designed to shift the market toward high-grade, fiber-to-fiber recycling. By converting post-industrial and post-consumer textile waste back into pellets for yarn production, the collaboration aims to create a closed-loop system that preserves material purity and economic value.
Preparing for the 2028 regulatory horizon
The investment coincides with strict EU legislation expected by 2028, which will likely penalize brands that fail to demonstrate authentic circularity in their material sourcing. Industry experts anticipate that this regulatory shift will render current ‘downcycled’ polyester solutions insufficient, forcing a market-wide transition to verified T2T sources. Pact Group intends to leverage its extensive global retail solutions network - which already includes large-scale hanger reuse and recovery operations - to accelerate the adoption of Plan B’s technology. Trials are already underway with international spinners and fabric mills to ensure that T2T-recycled polyester meets the rigorous performance and quality benchmarks required by high-street and premium fashion retailers alike.
Pact Group is a leading industrial packaging and circular economy solutions provider based in Australia. It specializes in plastic manufacturing, packaging, and resource recovery for the retail and industrial sectors. The company is actively expanding its global footprint by investing in sustainable technologies to support the fashion industry's transition toward 100 per cent circularity.
Why US apparel prices defied inflation while product quality improved

As inflation reshapes nearly every aspect of American household spending, one consumer category continues to stand apart. Housing costs have risen, grocery bills have climbed steadily, and utility expenses have gone up alongside energy prices. Yet apparel and footwear have largely resisted the inflationary pressures that have changed the broader consumer economy.
What makes this particularly remarkable is that clothing prices have remained relatively stable while product quality has improved a lot. Over the past two decades, advances in textile engineering, automated manufacturing, digital design systems, and supply-chain optimization have altered the economics of apparel production. Consumers today are purchasing garments that are more durable, comfortable, and performance-oriented than their 2006 equivalents, often for only marginally higher prices.
Data comparing consumer expenditures between 2006 and 2026 highlights the unusual position occupied by apparel within the broader inflation scenario. While housing costs have more than doubled and food prices have risen significantly, clothing and footwear have seen only modest price increases despite extensive technological upgrades.
Table: The macro-inflationary divergence (2006 vs. 2026)
|
Consumer category & sub-segment |
Average cost (2006) |
Average cost (2026) |
Estimated growth multiple |
Primary value & quality increase(2006 vs. 2026) |
|
Median Monthly Rent (US Urban) |
$800 |
$2,100 |
2.6X Surge |
Zero quality change; driven by urban real estate density. |
|
Whole Milk (Per Gallon) |
$3.20 |
$4.45 |
1.4X Increase |
Identical nutritional profile; driven by feed & freight logistics. |
|
Mass-Premium Denim (Average Pair) |
$55.00 |
$68.00 |
1.23X Marginal Shift |
Transitioned from rigid, high-shrink 100% cotton to advanced, multi-directional elastane blends with permanent shape retention. |
|
Classic Cotton T-Shirt (Knit) |
$18.00 |
$22.00 |
1.22X Marginal Shift |
Shifted from rough carded open-end cotton to long-staple combed cotton featuring industrial silver-ion antimicrobial treatments. |
|
Casual Athletic Shoes (Pair) |
$65.00 |
$78.00 |
1.20X Marginal Shift |
Upgraded from heavy glued-rubber multi-piece soles to single-unit injection-molded nitrogen-infused foam with 3D-woven seamless uppers. |
The disparity shows a rare productivity success story. Unlike many sectors where higher costs have translated directly into higher consumer prices, apparel manufacturers have offset inflation through efficiency gains and technological innovation.
The transformation is particularly visible in denim, one of the industry’s most mature product categories. Twenty years ago, mainstream jeans were typically constructed from rigid cotton fabrics that required extensive wear before becoming comfortable. Shrinkage, fading and fabric distortion were common consumer complaints. Today’s denim incorporates advanced fiber blends that combine cotton with elastane and high-tensile synthetic cores. These fabrics offer multi-directional stretch, shape retention and improved durability. Equally important, laser-finishing technologies have replaced many traditional chemical bleaching processes, creating desired wash effects without weakening fabric structure. The result is a garment that maintains its appearance and fit for significantly longer periods, effectively increasing the value consumers receive from every purchase.
A similar evolution has occurred in basic knitwear. For long, everyday T-shirts were vulnerable to pilling, seam twisting and collar deformation after repeated washing. Modern spinning technologies, particularly vortex spinning systems, align fibers more efficiently within yarn structures, reducing loose fiber ends and improving surface integrity. At the same time, moisture-management, wrinkle-resistance and antimicrobial treatments that were once reserved for premium performance brands have become increasingly common in mass-market apparel. Consumers now receive technical functionality at price points that would have been unimaginable two decades ago.
Economics of waste elimination
Behind many of these product improvements lies a less visible but equally important transformation: the reduction of manufacturing waste. Fabric remains the single largest variable cost in garment production, often accounting for 50 to 70 per cent of manufacturing expenses. Traditionally, manual pattern placement generated fabric waste rates over 20 per cent, creating inefficiencies across production facilities.
The widespread adoption of computer-aided design systems, automated marker-making software and precision cutting equipment has dramatically altered this equation. Many large-scale apparel manufacturers have reduced material waste to below 3 per cent, allowing them to extract substantially more output from the same volume of fabric. These savings have created a powerful reinvestment cycle. Rather than passing all inflationary pressures through to consumers, manufacturers have been able to redirect efficiency gains into higher-grade raw materials, better finishing processes and enhanced product development. In effect, productivity improvements have subsidized quality upgrades.
Perhaps nowhere is the industry’s technological progress more visible than in footwear. In the mid-2000s, athletic and casual shoes were heavily dependent on stitched synthetic panels and glued constructions. Foam cushioning systems often deteriorated rapidly, leading to diminished performance and comfort after relatively limited use. Modern footwear manufacturing relies on digitally knitted uppers produced from continuous synthetic filaments. These seamless constructions reduce friction points, improve breathability and eliminate numerous assembly stages.
Simultaneously, innovations in foam engineering have transformed midsole performance. Advanced injection-molding processes that utilize nitrogen or carbon-dioxide expansion create lighter, more resilient cushioning structures that maintain performance over significantly greater distances and wear cycles than previous generations of footwear. The result is not merely a better shoe, but a longer-lasting one, effectively lowering the cost of ownership for consumers.
Productivity story hidden in plain sight
The apparel sector’s ability to contain price increases while improving product performance stands as one of the most overlooked productivity achievements in modern manufacturing. Unlike sectors constrained by fixed assets, regulatory costs or limited efficiency gains, global apparel supply chains have leveraged automation, digitalization and material science to continually increase value creation.
The broader significance extends beyond fashion. It shows how technological advancement can offset inflationary pressures when productivity gains are substantial enough to counter rising input costs. For American consumers, the outcome has been unusually favorable. While many household essentials have become substantially more expensive, clothing and footwear have evolved into higher-performing, longer-lasting products without experiencing comparable price escalation.
In an era defined by inflation, the modern wardrobe may represent one of the few areas where consumers are receiving more while paying only marginally more, a rare example of technological progress translating directly into everyday economic value.
The Resale Revolution: Vinted’s marketplace model reshapes European retail

The French fashion market has reached a turning point. In a development that highlights the growing influence of circular commerce, Vinted has emerged as the leading fashion retailer in France in terms of volume of items sold, overtaking a roster of established apparel giants that have long dominated the market. Data compiled by the Institut Français de la Mode (IFM) places the Lithuania-founded peer-to-peer marketplace ahead of traditional retailers, confirming that secondhand commerce has evolved from a niche sustainability trend into a mainstream retail force.
The achievement marks more than a change in market rankings. It reflects a broader transformation in consumer purchasing behavior across Europe, where inflationary pressures, constrained household budgets, and rising environmental awareness are boosting demand for pre-owned fashion. Unlike conventional retailers, Vinted has built its position without manufacturing products, holding inventory, or operating stores. Instead, it has leveraged digital infrastructure, logistics integration, and network effects to become one of Europe’s most influential fashion platforms.
France’s new fashion leader
The latest IFM rankings reveal the scale of the disruption. Vinted now sits above value-fashion chains, global e-commerce platforms, and fast-fashion leaders in terms of items sold within the French market.
Table: Leading fashion retailers in France by items sold
|
Rank |
Market position |
Business model/subsSector |
|
#1 |
Vinted |
Peer-to-Peer Digital Marketplace |
|
#2 |
Kiabi |
Value-Driven Brick-and-Mortar / Digital |
|
#3 |
Amazon |
Multi-Category E-Commerce Platform |
|
#4 |
Decathlon |
Mass-Market Sports & Performance Apparel |
|
#5 |
Shein |
Direct-to-Consumer Ultra-Fast Fashion |
|
#6 |
H&M |
Global High-Street Fast Fashion |
|
#7 |
Intersport |
Multi-Brand Sporting Goods Retailer |
The ranking is particularly notable because it places a resale marketplace ahead of businesses built on large-scale production and inventory ownership. This shift suggests that consumers are prioritizing value, affordability, and access over ownership of newly manufactured apparel.
Growth through infrastructure
Vinted’s ascent has been driven by an operational model that differs sharply from conventional e-commerce. While most online marketplaces charge sellers listing or transaction fees, Vinted removed selling fees altogether. Instead, the platform derives revenue primarily from buyer protection charges and premium visibility services. This structure lowers barriers for participation and encourages a constant influx of inventory. The result is a marketplace with exceptional product depth and liquidity, where buyers can access millions of listings across price points.
Equally important has been the company’s investment in logistics and payments infrastructure. Through Vinted Go, the company has established a network of over 500,000 pick-up and drop-off points across Europe. Combined with the introduction of Vinted Pay and dedicated sorting facilities, these investments reduce dependency on third-party providers while lowering transaction costs.
The strategy enables profit trading even for low-value items, an area where many traditional retailers struggle due to shipping and handling expenses. By minimizing friction at every stage of the transaction, Vinted has transformed operational efficiency into a competitive advantage.
Financial momentum
The company’s financial performance shows how effectively this model is scaling. Recent figures show strong growth across merchandise volume, revenue, and cash generation, even as management continues investing heavily in expansion.
Table: Financial performance and core trading metrics
|
Category |
Performance indicator |
Baseline |
|
Gross Merchandise Value (GMV) |
€10.8 bn |
47% year-on-year growth |
|
Group Revenue |
€1.1 bn |
38% year-on-year growth |
|
Net Profit |
€62 mn |
Reduced by 19% due to reinvestment |
|
Free Cash Flow |
€137 mn |
Increased 36% year-on-year |
|
Average Transaction Value |
€13.81 |
Supported by 83% repeat-customer engagement |
These figures illustrate a business achieving scale while maintaining healthy liquidity. The combination of strong free cash flow and high customer retention indicates that Vinted’s growth is being driven not only by new users but also by increasing engagement among existing members. Chief Executive Officer Thomas Plantenga has repeatedly emphasized that the company’s objective is to make secondhand the default choice for consumers. The strategy hinges on reducing operational costs while increasing convenience, thereby reinforcing network effects that become stronger as participation grows.
Exporting the model
Having established France as its strongest market, Vinted is now attempting to replicate its success internationally. France alone has evolved into a multibillion-euro GMV engine, providing a blueprint for expansion into other European territories. The company has already strengthened its presence in Germany, broadened its category offerings beyond apparel into electronics and collectibles, and entered additional European markets including Latvia, Estonia, and Slovenia.
The most significant move, however, has been its entry into the US. The American market presents a vastly different operating environment. Europe’s dense geography allows efficient use of collection points and consolidated shipping networks. In contrast, the US faces higher logistics costs, greater geographic dispersion, and intense competition from established resale players such as Poshmark, ThredUp, and eBay. Whether Vinted can successfully adapt its low-cost European logistics model to North America may determine the company’s next phase of growth and future valuation.
The trust challenge
Despite its momentum, secondhand commerce still faces limitations. Unlike traditional retail, peer-to-peer marketplaces must overcome concerns around product quality, sizing accuracy, authenticity, and counterfeiting. These trust barriers remain one of the strongest defences available to premium fashion brands and established retailers. Many consumers continue to place a value on guaranteed quality, standardized returns, and the certainty associated with purchasing new products.
Recognizing this challenge, resale platforms are investing in authentication services, artificial intelligence-driven recommendations, and enhanced customer support. The goal is to narrow the trust gap between new and secondhand purchases. If platforms such as Vinted succeed in creating a resale experience that matches the reliability of traditional retail, the implications for the apparel industry could be profound. What began as an alternative channel for budget-conscious shoppers may evolve into a dominant distribution model capable of reshaping the economics of fashion retail across global markets.
For now, Vinted’s rise to the top of France’s fashion rankings offers a clear signal: the future growth battle in apparel may no longer be fought primarily through manufacturing scale or store networks, but through the ability to build efficient, trusted marketplaces that keep products circulating long after their first sale.
France declares war on ultra-fast fashion with new green law, will reshape global supply chains

France has become the first major economy to legislate specifically against the ultra-fast fashion business model, a watershed moment for the global apparel industry. By approving landmark legislation aimed at curbing the environmental impact of high-volume, low-cost fashion imports, the French Parliament has created a regulatory template that could reshape apparel sourcing, pricing and retail strategies across Europe.
More than an environmental measure, the legislation is a structural intervention into one of the world's fastest-growing retail models. Companies that built their success on thousands of daily product launches, ultra-low prices and cross-border direct shipping now face financial penalties, advertising restrictions and tighter operational scrutiny. If replicated elsewhere in Europe, the French model could alter the economics of ultra-fast fashion.
Targeting the volume model
Unlike conventional sustainability regulations that apply broadly across the apparel sector, France's legislation introduces a distinct category for ‘ultra-fast fashion’. Companies will be assessed primarily on two characteristics: the sheer volume of new products introduced daily and the pricing structure that encourages rapid consumption over repair.
The framework is widely seen as targeting Asian digital marketplaces including Shein, Temu and AliExpress, whose business models depend on constant product refreshes and direct-to-consumer cross-border shipments. Traditional European retailers such as Zara and Kiabi are largely insulated under the current framework, reflecting the government's intention to curb the most aggressive volume-driven retail models rather than the broader fashion industry. The move also signals an effort to protect domestic retailers from low-cost imports while aligning with France's wider environmental objectives.
Cost of compliance
The legislation introduces a phased environmental surcharge on qualifying garments that will increase significantly over the next four years.
Table: Rising financial toll of ultra-fast surcharges
|
Year of implementation |
Environmental penalty per garment |
Maximum penalty (% of pre-tax price) |
|
2026 |
€0.25 to €6.00 |
50% |
|
2028 |
€10.00 |
50% |
|
2030 |
€20.00 |
50% |
For retailers operating on razor-thin margins, the implications are substantial. A €5 garment could immediately incur a surcharge equal to half its pre-tax value under the penalty cap. By 2030, a €20 item could attract an additional €10 levy, severely eroding the price advantage that has fuelled ultra-fast fashion's growth. Beyond product levies, the legislation also prohibits advertising by designated ultra-fast fashion companies across traditional media and influencer marketing channels. E-commerce platforms will also be required to display messages encouraging garment repair, reuse and reduced consumption, reinforcing behavioural change alongside financial disincentives.
Supply chains under pressure
The law is expected to reverberate well beyond France's borders. Ultra-fast fashion retailers have relied on direct air shipments of millions of small parcels from manufacturing centres in China to European consumers. The new framework, combined with additional packaging taxes on lightweight imports, threatens to increase logistics costs while undermining the efficiency of cross-border fulfilment networks. As a result, companies may increase efforts to regionalize distribution, diversify sourcing and establish European warehousing operations.
For apparel-producing economies such as Bangladesh, the implications are equally significant. Manufacturers heavily dependent on high-volume, low-cost production could face order consolidation unless they move toward higher-quality, longer-lasting products that better align with Europe's evolving sustainability requirements.
Conversely, European value retailers, local apparel brands and circular fashion platforms such as second-hand marketplaces stand to benefit as consumers shift spending away from ultra-low-cost imports.
Industry divided
Despite broad political support, the legislation has exposed sharp divisions within the retail industry. French apparel organizations welcomed the bill as a necessary step toward addressing environmental costs that have long gone unpriced. However, several major trade bodies, including Alliance du Commerce, Fevad and the Federation of Commerce and Distribution have questioned whether the law will achieve its intended objective.
Industry groups argue that large global platforms possess the technological sophistication to restructure logistics networks, split shipments or adapt product listings to remain below regulatory thresholds, while smaller domestic retailers could face disproportionate compliance burdens.
Environmental organizations have expressed different concerns. Campaign groups argue that exempting established international retailers weakens the legislation's environmental credibility, pointing out that global brands including Zara, H&M, Primark and Uniqlo also depend on high-volume production models.
European legal test
Before the legislation reaches full implementation, it must also face European regulatory scrutiny. The European Commission has previously questioned whether certain provisions including advertising restrictions and targeted import penalties are compatible with EU rules governing digital commerce and the single market.
French authorities maintain that the measures are comparable to existing public-health restrictions applied to products such as tobacco and alcohol. However, the legislation's practical impact will ultimately depend on implementing decrees that define precisely how companies will be classified and how environmental performance will be measured. Much will hinge on France's environmental labelling methodology, which incorporates both production volumes and product durability into sustainability assessments.
Strategic pivot for global retailers
The timing is particularly significant for Shein, which has been actively expanding its European footprint. The company has invested in regional logistics hubs, local sourcing partnerships and temporary physical stores across France as it attempts to reduce dependence on cross-border fulfilment. Those investments may help cushion some operational disruptions, but they are unlikely to eliminate the financial impact of escalating environmental surcharges. Whether localized operations can preserve the company's ultra-low-price proposition will become clearer as implementation rules take shape.
Europe's green retail agenda
France's initiative also aligns with broader European reforms reshaping the textile industry. From July 2026, the EU's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation prohibits large companies from destroying unsold clothing, footwear and accessories. At the same time, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes will require apparel companies to finance textile collection, recycling and waste management based on product durability and recyclability.
Together, these measures create a powerful regulatory framework that transforms textile waste from an environmental concern into a direct commercial cost. For the global apparel industry, France's legislation marks more than a national policy experiment. It signals that governments are willing to regulate fashion not only through sustainability targets but also by directly challenging the commercial logic of ultra-fast consumption. As other European markets weigh similar measures, the industry may be entering a new era where speed and low prices are no longer sufficient competitive advantages.
France declares war on ultra-fast fashion with new green law, will reshape global supply chains

France has become the first major economy to legislate specifically against the ultra-fast fashion business model, a watershed moment for the global apparel industry. By approving landmark legislation aimed at curbing the environmental impact of high-volume, low-cost fashion imports, the French Parliament has created a regulatory template that could reshape apparel sourcing, pricing and retail strategies across Europe.
More than an environmental measure, the legislation is a structural intervention into one of the world's fastest-growing retail models. Companies that built their success on thousands of daily product launches, ultra-low prices and cross-border direct shipping now face financial penalties, advertising restrictions and tighter operational scrutiny. If replicated elsewhere in Europe, the French model could alter the economics of ultra-fast fashion.
Targeting the volume model
Unlike conventional sustainability regulations that apply broadly across the apparel sector, France's legislation introduces a distinct category for ‘ultra-fast fashion’. Companies will be assessed primarily on two characteristics: the sheer volume of new products introduced daily and the pricing structure that encourages rapid consumption over repair.
The framework is widely seen as targeting Asian digital marketplaces including Shein, Temu and AliExpress, whose business models depend on constant product refreshes and direct-to-consumer cross-border shipments. Traditional European retailers such as Zara and Kiabi are largely insulated under the current framework, reflecting the government's intention to curb the most aggressive volume-driven retail models rather than the broader fashion industry. The move also signals an effort to protect domestic retailers from low-cost imports while aligning with France's wider environmental objectives.
Cost of compliance
The legislation introduces a phased environmental surcharge on qualifying garments that will increase significantly over the next four years.
Table: Rising financial toll of ultra-fast surcharges
|
Year of implementation |
Environmental penalty per garment |
Maximum penalty (% of pre-tax price) |
|
2026 |
€0.25 to €6.00 |
50% |
|
2028 |
€10.00 |
50% |
|
2030 |
€20.00 |
50% |
For retailers operating on razor-thin margins, the implications are substantial. A €5 garment could immediately incur a surcharge equal to half its pre-tax value under the penalty cap. By 2030, a €20 item could attract an additional €10 levy, severely eroding the price advantage that has fuelled ultra-fast fashion's growth. Beyond product levies, the legislation also prohibits advertising by designated ultra-fast fashion companies across traditional media and influencer marketing channels. E-commerce platforms will also be required to display messages encouraging garment repair, reuse and reduced consumption, reinforcing behavioural change alongside financial disincentives.
Supply chains under pressure
The law is expected to reverberate well beyond France's borders. Ultra-fast fashion retailers have relied on direct air shipments of millions of small parcels from manufacturing centres in China to European consumers. The new framework, combined with additional packaging taxes on lightweight imports, threatens to increase logistics costs while undermining the efficiency of cross-border fulfilment networks. As a result, companies may increase efforts to regionalize distribution, diversify sourcing and establish European warehousing operations.
For apparel-producing economies such as Bangladesh, the implications are equally significant. Manufacturers heavily dependent on high-volume, low-cost production could face order consolidation unless they move toward higher-quality, longer-lasting products that better align with Europe's evolving sustainability requirements.
Conversely, European value retailers, local apparel brands and circular fashion platforms such as second-hand marketplaces stand to benefit as consumers shift spending away from ultra-low-cost imports.
Industry divided
Despite broad political support, the legislation has exposed sharp divisions within the retail industry. French apparel organizations welcomed the bill as a necessary step toward addressing environmental costs that have long gone unpriced. However, several major trade bodies, including Alliance du Commerce, Fevad and the Federation of Commerce and Distribution have questioned whether the law will achieve its intended objective.
Industry groups argue that large global platforms possess the technological sophistication to restructure logistics networks, split shipments or adapt product listings to remain below regulatory thresholds, while smaller domestic retailers could face disproportionate compliance burdens.
Environmental organizations have expressed different concerns. Campaign groups argue that exempting established international retailers weakens the legislation's environmental credibility, pointing out that global brands including Zara, H&M, Primark and Uniqlo also depend on high-volume production models.
European legal test
Before the legislation reaches full implementation, it must also face European regulatory scrutiny. The European Commission has previously questioned whether certain provisions including advertising restrictions and targeted import penalties are compatible with EU rules governing digital commerce and the single market.
French authorities maintain that the measures are comparable to existing public-health restrictions applied to products such as tobacco and alcohol. However, the legislation's practical impact will ultimately depend on implementing decrees that define precisely how companies will be classified and how environmental performance will be measured. Much will hinge on France's environmental labelling methodology, which incorporates both production volumes and product durability into sustainability assessments.
Strategic pivot for global retailers
The timing is particularly significant for Shein, which has been actively expanding its European footprint. The company has invested in regional logistics hubs, local sourcing partnerships and temporary physical stores across France as it attempts to reduce dependence on cross-border fulfilment. Those investments may help cushion some operational disruptions, but they are unlikely to eliminate the financial impact of escalating environmental surcharges. Whether localized operations can preserve the company's ultra-low-price proposition will become clearer as implementation rules take shape.
Europe's green retail agenda
France's initiative also aligns with broader European reforms reshaping the textile industry. From July 2026, the EU's Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation prohibits large companies from destroying unsold clothing, footwear and accessories. At the same time, Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) schemes will require apparel companies to finance textile collection, recycling and waste management based on product durability and recyclability.
Together, these measures create a powerful regulatory framework that transforms textile waste from an environmental concern into a direct commercial cost. For the global apparel industry, France's legislation marks more than a national policy experiment. It signals that governments are willing to regulate fashion not only through sustainability targets but also by directly challenging the commercial logic of ultra-fast consumption. As other European markets weigh similar measures, the industry may be entering a new era where speed and low prices are no longer sufficient competitive advantages.








