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Premium clothing is getting more expensive — but is it happening across the entire apparel industry?

  • Written by The Times
Price rises in the clothing industry

Walk into any shopping centre in Australia today and one thing is immediately clear: clothing is no longer the “affordable discretionary” category it once was. Brands such as Sportsgirl and Sportscraft have steadily lifted prices, with shoppers increasingly noticing that what used to be a $79 dress is now well over $120.

But is this simply a premium-brand phenomenon? Or are rising prices spreading across the entire apparel sector?

The evidence suggests something more complex — a structural shift affecting the whole industry, but playing out very differently across segments.

A clear trend: clothing prices are rising

The data leaves little room for doubt. Clothing and footwear prices in Australia have been climbing consistently.

  • Apparel inflation rose around 3–5% annually through 2025–2026

  • Overall clothing spending increased 6.1% year-on-year, despite cost-of-living pressures

  • The clothing CPI reached record highs in early 2026

In short, Australians are paying more — and still buying.

That combination is critical. It signals that price increases are not just cost-driven, but also demand-tolerated.

Why premium brands are leading the price surge

Brands like Sportsgirl and Sportscraft sit in a category that economists call “aspirational premium” — not luxury, but not budget either.

These brands have been among the most aggressive in raising prices. There are several reasons:

1. Pricing power and brand positioning

Premium brands rely on perceived quality, fit, and identity. Customers expect higher prices — and often accept increases more readily than in discount retail.

2. Cost structure pressures

Higher input costs are real:

  • Labour and logistics

  • Energy costs (a major inflation driver in Australia)

  • Imported fabric and supply chain volatility

Premium brands tend to pass these costs through, rather than absorb them.

3. Margin protection strategy

Rather than chase volume, premium retailers protect margins. That often means:

  • Fewer discounts

  • Higher base pricing

  • Smaller, more curated ranges

But the trend goes beyond premium fashion

The idea that only higher-end brands are increasing prices is misleading.

Mid-market: quietly rising

Department store brands and mid-tier labels have also lifted prices, though often less visibly. Instead of headline increases, they:

  • Reduce discounting cycles

  • Shrink product sizes or quality

  • Introduce “premium sub-lines”

Budget and fast fashion: a different game

At the lower end, something interesting is happening.

Retailers like global fast-fashion entrants are actually holding prices down or even cutting them — not because costs are lower, but because competition is brutal.

The rise of ultra-low-cost online players has reshaped the market:

  • New entrants are taking significant share

  • Price transparency is immediate

  • Consumers can compare globally in seconds

This has forced budget retailers into a race to the bottom, even while costs rise.

The squeeze on the middle of the market

The real pressure point in Australian fashion today is the middle.

Premium brands can raise prices.
Discount players compete on scale and cost.

But mid-tier retailers are caught between:

  • Rising costs

  • Price-sensitive consumers

  • Competition from both ends

This is one reason the industry has already seen consolidation and failures — and more are likely.

Consumers are changing how they buy clothing

The shift in pricing is also changing behaviour.

Australians are becoming more deliberate in their fashion spending:

  • Buying fewer items, but higher quality

  • Waiting for sales

  • Choosing “timeless” over trend-driven pieces

This aligns with broader economic sentiment, where households are cutting back on non-essential spending amid cost-of-living pressures .

Fashion is no longer impulse-driven at scale — it is increasingly considered spending.

Global forces are driving local prices

Australia does not operate in isolation. The apparel market is deeply globalised.

Key external drivers include:

Supply chain costs

Shipping, manufacturing, and sourcing disruptions since the pandemic have not fully normalised.

Currency movements

A weaker Australian dollar increases import costs — and most clothing is imported.

Global inflation

Fashion brands worldwide have been lifting prices, including in the US and Europe, particularly in premium segments .

The paradox: prices rising while competition intensifies

At first glance, rising prices and increasing competition seem contradictory.

But both can occur simultaneously:

  • Costs push prices up

  • Competition reshapes who can pass those costs on

The result is a bifurcated market:

  • Premium brands: higher prices, stable demand

  • Budget brands: low prices, high volume

  • Mid-market: under pressure

What happens next?

Looking ahead, several trends are likely:

1. Continued price increases — but uneven

Not all brands will raise prices equally. Expect:

  • Premium brands to keep pushing upward

  • Budget players to resist increases

  • Mid-tier brands to struggle

2. Greater segmentation

The apparel market will split more clearly into:

  • Value

  • Premium

  • Luxury

The middle will shrink.

3. Increased scrutiny from consumers

Shoppers are becoming more aware of:

  • “Shrinkflation” in quality

  • Perceived overpricing

  • Brand value versus cost

Brands that cannot justify price increases risk losing loyalty.

The bottom line

Yes — premium clothing brands like Sportsgirl and Sportscraft have become more expensive.

But the bigger story is this:

Price increases are happening across the entire apparel industry — just not in the same way everywhere.

  • Premium brands are lifting prices openly

  • Budget brands are fighting to hold them down

  • Mid-tier players are being squeezed

For consumers, the result is a new reality:

Clothing is no longer cheap, disposable, or predictable.

It is becoming — once again — a considered purchase.


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