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Aspirational buyers could save luxury brands from losing more ground
A woman walks in front a Burberry store on March 12, 2021, in New York City. - Emaz/VIEWpress/Corbis/Getty Images/File
A woman walks in front a Burberry store on March 12, 2021, in New York City. - Emaz/VIEWpress/Corbis/Getty Images/File

A sharp hike in the price of luxury goods in recent years has cost some brands a key group of customers.

About 50 million customers were sidelined from the luxury goods market by 2024 as prices climbed roughly 20% since 2021, according to Aaron Cheris, a partner and head of global e-commerce and marketplaces at Bain & Co.

The deficit has some luxury brands rethinking ways to lure back “aspirational” luxury consumers, who tend to buy at least one luxury item per year and spend between $3,000 and $10,000 annually on fashion, according to McKinsey & Co.

The exclusion of so many consumers wasn’t lost on British luxury group Burberry, which made adjustments ahead of the recent holiday shopping season.

“These past few years, we have been very focused at the top of the pyramid, especially in leather goods. Going forward, we will restore a ‘good, better, best price’ architecture in a luxury context across categories,” Burberry CEO Joshua Schulman said at a company strategy presentation in November 2024.

Schulman added that the shift to more accessible products was “restoring a price architecture” from previous revenue levels. And for the first time in two years, Burberry saw new customer growth globally during December. The company’s third-quarter store sales also grew 4% in the Americas — the United States, Brazil, Canada, Mexico and Panama — which helped narrow global losses.

Unlike wealthier fashion lovers, lower-income consumers lose spending confidence when faced with financial pressures like inflation and the risk of layoffs. Aspirational luxury customers typically spend almost $274 billion a year, making them an important part of the customer base, according to McKinsey.

Cheris said luxury brands overshot in getting more premium and exclusive with higher prices.

“You can’t do that at such an extreme that you cut out the base (of consumers),” he said.

Fragrances, shoes and small accessories

Luxury brands can see a boon off smaller products priced between $400 and $1,000 — price points where less affluent shoppers might be willing to splurge.

Leather goods and accessories, such as belts, eyewear and fragrances, are typically lower-priced products that interest aspirational luxury consumers, said Joëlle Grunberg, who leads McKinsey’s apparel, fashion and luxury sector in North America.

That includes products like a $420 Gucci belt or a $98 perfume from Yves Saint Laurent, two brands owned by French luxury group Kering. While Gucci brought in about $8 billion in 2024 — a 21% decline from 2023, Kering Eyewear generated $1.67 billion, up 6% from 2023.