More than half of UK consumers have at least one designer item in their wardrobe, “showing a real cultural shift towards high-end fashion”, a new survey of almost 2,300 people from Gen Z insights company Prograd has claimed.
It said 55% of Britons own a designer item while the figure is 57% for Gen Z, the highest of any generation. Those younger consumers easily beat Millennials (50%) and Gen X (43%).
And 12% of men say they have “many designer clothes”, compared with just 6% of women.
Meanwhile, in a world obsessed with resale, 25% of consumers view their designer clothing as “real financial assets”.
“With certain designer handbags and accessories outperforming traditional investments like the S&P 500, Britons are adopting a strategic approach to luxury fashion,” Prograd said.
It’s well known that in-demand bag labels like Prada, Miu Miu, Chanel, Louis Vuitton, Gucci, Hermes and more can fetch high prices on the designer resale market.
And while 17% say their designer items have been bought to celebrate milestone birthdays, the investment potential of such pieces is also highlighted by the fact that 10% of Britons have inherited their designer fashion.
Prograd added that even in the cost-of-living crisis, the rise of secondhand buying has played a key role in democratising designer fashion and “64.5% of Gen Z, more than any other generation, are embracing the market for secondhand clothing”.
Some 70% of women and 47% of men are turning to secondhand purchases, “challenging the fast fashion cycle and showing a shift towards quality and environmental responsibility”.
The survey also showed 72% of consumers saying they care more about quality than anything else when it comes to their clothes, it’s no surprise that almost a quarter of consumers, (24%), cite the high quality of designer items as their primary reason for purchase.
But there’s an unpleasant downside to all this with 31% of Britons saying they own fake designer items, 47% saying it’s impossible to tell the difference, and 7% saying they want people to think they can afford a certain lifestyle.
This sentiment is twice as strong in men as in women, “with 10% of men wanting to flex their lifestyle compared with just 5% of women”.
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