The global secondhand apparel market is expected to
nearly double by 2027 as businesses adapt more circular business models and
consumers become more environmentally conscious, a new report by ThredUp has
found.
A 2023
Resale Report published by online resale platform ThredUp shows that
sustainability is a top five motivator for Generation Z with nearly half now
refusing to buy from non-sustainable apparel brands and retailers.
The report found that
consumers plan to spend more of their apparel budget on secondhand in 2023, with
the top five brands for resale currently: Torrid, Lululemon Athletica,
Madewell, Zara, Free People.
“We have made significant
progress stimulating circularity in fashion: Resale is starting to blossom
globally, with many of the largest retailers in the world adopting more
circular business models,” said James Reinhart, ThredUp CEO. “While value
continues to be a key driver that motivates consumers to think secondhand
first, global climate issues have increased awareness of resale’s potential to
reduce fashion’s impact on the environment.
“We are still in the earliest
days of inventing how resale can reduce the ongoing production excess in the
apparel industry, and I don’t see a world where we’re going back to the way it
used to be. Now in its 11th year, the Resale Report has some of the most
inspiring findings since its inception in 2013. It’s clear we’re on a promising
trajectory, and by working together through collective action, we have the
power to alter fashion’s future for the better.
Report highlights:
The report outlines how buying
secondhand reduces the environmental impact of fashion buying and that wearing
secondhand clothing instead of new reduces carbon emissions by an average of
25%.
Resale also has the potential
to cut new clothing production. Figures from the report show fashion has an
overproduction problem with more than 100 billion garments produced globally
each year for a global population of 8 billion.
·
US consumers
bought 1.4bn secondhand apparel items in 2022 that they normally would have
bought new, up 40% from 2021.
·
More than
one-third of retailers say if resale proved to be successful, they’d cut
production of new products.
·
86% of retail
execs say their customers are already participating in resale, up 8 pts from
2021.
By Just Style