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The Business of Fashion Podcast

Why Gen Z Isn’t Buying Luxury’s Story

The Business of Fashion Podcast

The Business of Fashion

Business, Fashion & Beauty, Arts

4.5813 Ratings

🗓️ 24 September 2025

⏱️ 24 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Luxury is struggling to connect with Gen Z, a cohort raised on TikTok and YouTube who research before they buy, shop vintage and resale as a first stop, and question whether soaring prices match product quality. While Millennials fuelled the last luxury boom via streetwear crossovers and scarcity-led drops, today’s younger shoppers are more value-driven and sceptical of polished brand theatre. In-store, rigid service models feel alien to a generation used to conversational creators.


This episode of The Debrief explores what “worth it” means to Gen Z and how brands can earn it. Greater transparency on materials and craftsmanship, content that feels real rather than aspirational, and participation in the second-hand ecosystem will be critical to rebuilding trust and lifetime value with younger consumers. 


Key Insights: 


  • Gen Z are not tuning out of fashion, they’re interrogating it. As Takanashi puts it, “[Gen Z] are so savvy. They can just look up what the Louis Vuitton bag is made of and see it’s actually canvas… Should I really spend a thousand dollars on that? Is there an alternative?” The backlash is philosophical as well as financial. Kwon says there’s a pervasive idea that luxury conglomerates are just trying to squeeze as much profit as possible. “There is real ire and resentment among Gen Z around price hikes. I think we’re a generation that cares a lot about value for dollar,” she says. When the price, materials and narrative do not align, younger shoppers default to vintage, resale or opting out.


  • Price justification starts with transparency and proof. “Whether it's a thousand-dollar handbag or a $100 candle, you have to explain why luxury costs what it costs, that there’s this craftsmanship and heritage,” says Takanashi. But storytelling alone will not close the sale. “Even then, it’s just so hard to convince that customer that craftsmanship is worth the money. You also have to play into their cultural interests and what they’re passionate about.” That means moving beyond heritage talking points to show living communities, real processes and credible creatives who make the brand feel current.


  • Digitally native Gen Z want real content, not polished marketing campaigns. “Our generation grew up on YouTube, ‘how to build an outfit 101’ – that’s how we got our style advice, not from magazines,” says Kwon, which is why they still “look to influencers and social media for trend analysis.” The tone matters as much as the channel. Takanashi argues that content should “feel real, like an unboxing, not a glossy marketing campaign. … Something that just feels like anyone could make it.” The formats that win are lo-fi, conversational and useful, with creators who will praise and critique in the same breath.


  • Many first encounters with luxury now happen through second-hand, so brands need to embrace that ecosystem and give clear on-ramps back to full price. The product and the pitch must both feel meaningful. Kwon says Gen Z still wants “a very beautiful story” and to “feel like they’re a part of a movement.”


Additional Resources:



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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

0:11.9

into our most popular BOF professional stories with the correspondence who created them.

0:17.0

I'm executive editor Brian Baskin.

0:19.1

And I'm senior correspondent correspondent Sheena Butler Young.

0:22.2

Nolan Daniel White is 24, deep into watches, and grew up owning Demna Era Balenciaga and Rick

0:28.2

Owens' dunk sneakers. If he were 10 years older, he'd be on a first name basis with luxury

0:32.9

sales assistants. But instead, he can recall only one full price in-store purchase, Gucci socks he

0:38.8

bought for $80. The rest is resale, vintage, or on markdown. According to him and a lot of his

0:45.4

Gen Z cohort, full-price luxury just isn't really worth owning right now. Prices feel out of whack,

0:51.3

boutiques feel stiff, and the marketing feels more like a billboard than a conversation.

0:56.1

Gen Z is this new type of luxury customer. I mean, they're discovering trends on YouTube and TikTok.

1:03.5

They shop with the swipe. They are definitely not impressed by a $2,000, quote-unquote, iconic canvas bag.

1:10.6

And it's a real problem for luxury brands that

1:13.8

i don't think they fully figured out today we're joined by lay takanashi who reported a story on

1:19.5

this exact topic and jessica kwan our very own gen z editorial apprentice lay jessica welcome to

1:26.7

the debrief podcast.

1:28.0

Thanks for having me.

1:29.2

Thank you so much, Brian.

1:30.0

It's always a pleasure to come on.

1:31.6

So, Jessica, I'll start with you.

1:33.6

We couldn't bring Nolan Daniel White on to talk about his Gucci socks.

1:37.9

So I will just ask you, how many pairs of Gucci socks do you own?

...

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