How Dior and Chanel Are Winning Back Aspirational Shoppers
The Business of Fashion Podcast
The Business of Fashion
4.5 • 813 Ratings
🗓️ 18 February 2026
⏱️ 20 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
After raising prices aggressively during the post-pandemic boom, luxury brands are now confronting slower growth and a shrinking aspirational customer base. According to Bernstein, average luxury price hikes reached 36 percent between 2020 and 2023, with Dior and Chanel raising prices by 51 percent and 59 percent, respectively. Now, as Bain estimates that more than 50 million aspirational shoppers have left the category, both houses are adjusting their pricing architecture and product mix in an attempt to rebuild volume without sacrificing exclusivity.
BoF reporter Joan Kennedy joins The Debrief to unpack how Dior and Chanel are recalibrating pricing and product strategy to win back aspirational shoppers.
Key Insights:
- Dior and Chanel are among the brands that leaned hardest into post-pandemic price increases, prioritising margin expansion and high-net-worth clients. That strategy helped fuel growth at the time, but it has also intensified the industry’s current reckoning. “Pricing has really emerged as this key concern,” Kennedy says. “At Dior and Chanel, prices rose 51 per cent and 59 per cent, respectively.” Products that once served as entry points are increasingly out of reach for aspirational shoppers: “The Chanel medium flap has nearly doubled in price since 2019,” she says.
- To pull aspirational shoppers back into stores, Dior and Chanel are rebuilding the lower end of their offer – from small leather goods and accessories to playful add-ons. As Kennedy puts it, “brands have been introducing these fun little whimsical items at the bottom, which have a good psychological effect on all shoppers.” And even when the ticket doesn’t shift, brands are trying to make the value proposition feel stronger through newness and storytelling: “maybe the price isn't changing, but it’s trying to hammer home that there's a little bit more value … and really ride the momentum brought by these new creative directors.”
- Even if excitement around creative directors Jonathan Anderson and Matthieu Blazy reignites interest, the economic backdrop may limit how far that enthusiasm translates into sales. “It’s definitely a big open-ended question – how much of this is a problem with desire versus ability to purchase?” Kennedy says. “Maybe a lot of these shoppers do want these products and are really excited by them, but just don’t have the ability.” In that sense, the reset is only partially in luxury’s control. Products can restore aspiration, but macro conditions ultimately determine movement.
Additional Resources:
- How Dior and Chanel Are Tackling Fashion’s Pricing Problem | BoF
- The Great Fashion Reset | Can Designer Revamps Save Fashion? | BoF
- Ready for Relaunch? Jonathan Anderson’s Dior Challenge | BoF
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Hello and welcome to the debrief from the business of fashion, where each week we delve into our most popular B-O-F professional stories with the correspondents who created them. |
| 0:16.6 | I'm senior correspondent Sheena Butler Young. |
| 0:19.2 | And I'm executive editor Brian Baskin. |
| 0:22.1 | The luxury industry is in the middle of a reset. |
| 0:25.1 | After years of aggressive price increases that drove post-pandemic growth, |
| 0:29.5 | brands are now grappling with slower sales and worse, |
| 0:32.7 | a real question about whether they can stay relevant when so few people can afford to buy their products. |
| 0:39.0 | This week, B-O-F retail correspondent Joan Kennedy reports on how Dior and Chanel are |
| 0:43.7 | reworking their assortments and pricing architecture to re-engage aspirational shoppers. |
| 0:49.1 | Joan, welcome to the debrief. Hi, thanks for having me. So, Joan, I want to start first with why you chose to zero in on |
| 0:56.4 | Dior and Chanel. I imagine it's because they're probably the worst offenders of price hikes. Is that right? |
| 1:02.5 | Yes, that is part of the reason. As Brian was saying, luxury has been in the midst of this |
| 1:08.1 | multi-year slump following the post-pandemic boom and pricing |
| 1:13.2 | has really emerged as this key concern. Many luxury brands raised prices significantly in that |
| 1:20.1 | period. According to analysis by Bernstein, the average price hikes between 2020 and |
| 1:26.8 | 23 across the luxury industry was 36%. At Dior and |
| 1:32.3 | Chanel prices rose 51% and 59% respectively. And one of like the key things is the Chanel |
| 1:40.2 | medium flap has nearly doubled in price since 2019. And so, yes, two of the places that |
| 1:47.2 | fashion's pricing problems are most pronounced. Both brands have also recently installed new |
| 1:53.8 | creative directors that have really reignited excitement around them. Jonathan Anderson at |
| 1:59.6 | Dior and Matiublaz at Chanel. And, you know, |
| 2:03.3 | their debuts have been very closely watched from the spring 2026 runways late last year to |
... |
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