The global fashion resale market has quietly become one of the strongest growth stories in retail, and the new BCG and Vestiaire Collective report maps exactly how big the opportunity now is—especially for brands that stop treating secondhand as a side project and start building real resale engines.
With buyers using resale to stretch budgets and experiment with style, and regulators pushing for more transparency, secondhand is shifting from “nice to have” to non‑negotiable in fashion’s future. The $360 Billion
Secondhand Upswing Today’s secondhand fashion and luxury market is estimated at $210 billion to $220 billion and is expected to grow to $320 billion to $360 billion by 2030 , expanding at about 10% a year —roughly three times faster than the firsthand market.
Nearly 28% of surveyed consumers’ wardrobes are already secondhand, climbing to 40% for handbags and 30% for clothing , proof that resale is no longer a fringe behavior.
Online multibrand platforms such as Vestiaire Collective , The RealReal , and Vinted now account for more than 55% of secondhand purchases , making digital marketplaces the primary gateway into resale.
Once shoppers start buying secondhand, they typically scale the habit across categories and price tiers, using resale as a recurring way to rotate wardrobes, trade up, and monetise past purchases…