Up there with the World Cup, Paris Fashion Week, and pop star stadium tours, weddings have become a spectator sport, watched all year round by a growing fan base of brides-in-waiting and those to-be. In this arena, GRWM videos detailing pre-vow glam abound TikTok, while polished cinematic reels posted on Instagram take viewers from the first fitting to the various afterparty looks. Western weddings increasingly span several days, while bachelorette parties have become fashion editorials in their own right, with tight dress codes, merch, and tablescaping. The term may have been coined decades ago, but the “wedding industrial complex” is only gaining steam in today’s algorithm — and it continues to be a major opportunity for brands that get it right.
According to Kristina Karassoulis, TikTok UK’s head of luxury, posts across the globe containing the #WeddingDress hashtag were up 50% year-on-year in April, while those containing #WeddingDressShopping increased 41%.
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In 2026, data analysis company Research and Markets reported the bridalwear market was worth an estimated $65.5 billion in 2024, forecasting that by 2030, it would reach $83.5 billion — a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.1%. For scale, a study published by The Knot that same year revealed that roughly two million US couples married in 2025, generating over $100 billion in wedding-related spend.

Weddings may be bigger business than ever, but interestingly, the US marriage rate has slowed slightly since 2022, per Euromonitor, with forecasts from 2026 to 2030 steady at six married people per 1,000. In Western Europe, Eastern Europe, and Japan, the declines are steeper.
So, what gives? Well, despite a continued decline in wedding rates, newlyweds are skewing older as people hit milestones later in life amid today’s challenging macroeconomic environment. In fact, the Gen Z contingent is more likely to prioritize self-development and independence, ensuring financial security before settling down. Fflur Roberts, Euromonitor’s head of luxury, points to a global climb in the average age of women at their first marriage, which is projected to continue well into 2030. With this comes a shift in consumer demands. “Older couples typically tend to prioritize quality, craftsmanship, personalization, and non‑traditional aesthetics over volume‑driven, lower‑cost options,” she explains. “As a result, value growth is shifting away from mass‑market wedding retail and toward premium, luxury, bespoke, and boutique segments.”

So the bridal economy in 2026 will be a tale of two halves. As noted in a study from wedding planning platform The Knot, 2025 saw a K-shaped split in US wedding spend, whereby higher earners double down on discretionary spending, and lower earners pull back on luxuries — a pattern expected to continue this year.
Luxury or otherwise, most weddings are now multi-day events (almost 71% span two to three days, The Knot found), each carefully divided into rehearsal dinners, welcome drinks, an afterparty, and the day-after brunch, among a host of growing segments. Additionally, the market for destination weddings is, per Research and Markets, forecast to climb from $47.85 billion in 2026 to $82.92 billion in 2030, a 14.7% CAGR, which can be put down to reasons including growing demand for experiential and exclusive celebrations. These are all dressing opportunities high-net-worth (HNWIs) and ultra-high-net-worth individuals (UHNWIs) — many of whom partake in a circuit of jet-set weddings all year round — will be planning for.
In this playing field, market differentiation is key. “At Harrods, bridal is approached as a lifestyle category, not a single purchase,” says head of buying Poppy Lomax. “Our role is to curate a complete bridal ecosystem — one that reflects how modern weddings are actually lived.” She cites the engagement moments, bachelorettes, civil ceremonies, destination weddings, the night before, the day after, pre-wedding dinners, and the honeymoon as potential dressing occasions, describing what she calls the “bridal era” — a sustained celebration period, which drives significant commercial opportunity.
Lomax reports that Clio Peppiatt consistently leads for bachelorette occasions, while Roksanda holds sway for the pre-wedding dinner. She also calls out a very 2026 moment in the wedding schedule, “getting-ready” moments, which have become a TikTok and Instagram genre in their own right. Here, Olivia von Halle has resonated strongly. There’s also the resort favorites — Missoni, PatBo, and Zimmermann — that serve as transitional essentials, as well as a number of swimwear bridal capsules from the likes of Away That Day and Oséree, ideal for destination weddings and honeymoons.
To successfully engage in this wedding reboot, executives, designers, marketers, and client departments need to adapt. With sizable market overlaps between mainstream brands and a proportionally smaller but richer consumer on their hands, the players that can articulate a coherent picture of their target bride and provide granular attention to detail across product innovation and experience will thrive.
An informed and confident customer
Kate Halfpenny, the founder of bridal brand Halfpenny London, started her label over 20 years ago. Despite successful growth across the globe, she has remained committed to her ‘Made in London’ USP, upholding a strong but “selective” wholesale business while honing the brand’s core, domestic market. As such, Halfpenny London saw 15% year-on-year growth in the financial year ended March 31, 2026, a figure the founder attributes to her direct-to-consumer (DTC) business in London.
From this arm of the business, she has come to know her audience intimately, able to spot changes in consumer behavior in real time. She notes, for example, that the brides walking into her Bloomsbury flagship boutique are more and more confident. “What they’re looking for from the appointment is a relationship and a conversation, not a transaction,” Halfpenny explains. “The flip side is that they expect more of us, in every dimension, and rightly so. A fundamental part of our story is ensuring women of all sizes can fit into our samples.” Last year, the brand’s bespoke commissions started at £25,000, and the designer would take no more than 12 a year on to ensure a premium service. “They want to understand how the piece is made, who makes it, and why it costs what it costs,” she says.

Halfpenny London saw 15% year-on-year growth in the financial year ended March 31, 2026, a figure the founder attributes to her direct-to-consumer (DTC) business in London.
Photo: Courtesy of Halfpenny London
In this vein, younger, 2019-founded label The Own Studio — launched by designers Jess Kaye and Rosie Williams — reports a growing interest in craftsmanship and provenance among its clientele in recent years. Also made in London, the label takes an estimated 20% of its revenues from bespoke commissions (starting at £10,000) and 80% from made-to-order pieces. The typical customer spend is £3,000 to £7,000. Like Halfpenny London, the bespoke service is limited to a number of commissions to ensure each bride gets the time and consultation they expect. However, even among the made-to-order designs, about half include small customization elements.
The UK is The Own Studio’s primary market, followed by the US, Canada, and Australia. For this reason, trunk shows — which sell out — held in New York and LA, digital channels, and a virtual service for international brides prove essential to the business. “Trunk show clients tend to be highly engaged and intentional. They’ve often done their research and are already fans of the brand,” says Williams. “Our US brides love our ’90s-infused contemporary design language; they really appreciate our London heritage, the quality of our fabrics, and the workmanship. We also find a lot of our international brides are looking for a piece that is more exclusive and less saturated than some of the go-to labels in their states.”

The Own Studio takes an estimated 20% of its revenues from bespoke commissions (starting at £10,000) and 80% from made-to-order pieces.
Photo: Courtesy of The Own Studio
In Harrods, even off-the-rack pieces rely on a similar demand for rarity. “Exclusivity remains fundamental to our buying strategy,” says Lomax, noting that exclusive products consistently achieve the fastest sell-through. As for private clients requesting bespoke pieces, Harrods works closely with leading couture houses. “Our role is to provide access, expertise, and discretion, ensuring every requirement, however complex, is met seamlessly.”
In a market as crowded as bridal, cementing the uniqueness of a product and its storytelling is essential. In fact, Williams herself concedes that this is one of the core challenges facing today’s bridal sector, especially amid the reams of multi-day content produced around weddings and bachelorettes online. “We hear from many brides firsthand that this flood of information and choice causes pressure and overwhelm, which can impact decision-making,” she says.
Differentiation in this category comes down to the details that justify a brand or retailer’s value proposition. In luxury bridal, scaling has to be deliberate and considered. The brides today are overstimulated by the so-called wedding industrial complex — the multibillion-dollar network of businesses that profit from the societal pressure to host extravagant weddings — and want hyper-personalized moments that cut through rather than add to the noise.
Social-first weddings
As bridal literacy has grown among clients, largely due to social media, so too has the caliber of references they draw from. Halfpenny cites the rise of social media as a key factor in broadening the idea of what a dress can be. “Millennial brides tend to come to us looking for something timeless with a twist. They often want a modern silhouette with an understated edge,” she says. As for Gen Zs, they’re more playful. “They’ll ask for color, for a mini dress, for bows or ribbons, for a sheer moment, for separates they can restyle. They’re more comfortable with the idea that bridal can be fashion, full stop.”
This has been increasingly clear for brands, such as Mirror Palais, a fashion-forward label founded in 2019 in New York by Marcelo Gaia. “Brides today are way more participatory in the overall look and feel of their weddings compared to generations before. They’re building out Pinterest boards for years, maybe even over a decade,” says Gaia. Because of this, brides act almost like creative directors, finely tuning an aesthetic concept for their special days. “It’s not just for the bride; it’s also for the attendees. They’re receiving mood boards.” For Mirror Palais, which spans custom pieces (from $15,000 to $30,000) through to a substantial offering of made-to-order dresses, occasion separates, guest-of designs, and bachelorette and brunch-apt looks, this makes for a healthy market, helping to carry his average unit retail (AUR) from $695 in 2025 to $895 a year later.
As weddings become an opportunity to express oneself, ideas are dispersed online, before filtering down into an individual bride’s purchasing choices. “Wedding dress inspiration is increasingly being sourced on TikTok,” says Karassoulis. She shares the top 30 most-searched terms in the US containing “wedding dress” between February and April, including “pink wedding dress” (up 615% compared to the three months prior), “clean girl wedding dress”, “Mugler wedding dress” (the most popular), “Chloe wedding dress”, and “les wedding dress” for lesbian couples (up 667%). At a glance, it’s clear that fashion-forward options and a broader remit of “bridal” is building traction online.

This hyper-online ecosystem does come with issues, though. “The digital space is extremely saturated, making share of voice more expensive to acquire. We are doubling down on our heritage as a value-add rather than a cost burden, capturing the conscious consumer who prioritizes authenticity and quality over fast bridal trends,” says James Kumar, Halfpenny London’s managing director. To his point, bridal brands are deploying boosted posts, substantial social media spends, and seeding strategies that can be hard to match. As well as this, there’s website SEO, user-generated content and a battle to show up in AI. (Per The Knot, by the end of 2025, around 36% of US couples were using AI to plan weddings, compared to under 10% in 2023.) In this landscape, point of view matters, especially given the rise of advanced online trawling systems, such as semantic search, which homes in on content that matches how people talk and think, not just keywords.
Indeed, this expanded, digitally trackable wedding landscape has been a hotbed for supplementing the bottom lines of independent fashion brands outside the traditional bridal circuit. London-based designer Conner Ives has consistently closed his shows with a bride, and dressed a new school of society women for their nuptials. Meanwhile, fellow British brands, such as Sinéad O’Dwyer, Harris Reed, Erdem ,and Feben have all benefited from more alternative bridal tastes. Even if it’s an ‘unplugged’ (phone-free) ceremony, the chance for brands to appear in a basic pre-wedding Instagram dump of a high-profile guest is worthy.
Ashish Gupta, founder of the eponymous London brand, officially launched Ashish’s bridal offering in 2025. “I initially assumed brides would lean toward more traditional pieces for their wedding days, but that’s really no longer the case — things have shifted quite considerably. Even a white dress doesn’t have to take itself so seriously anymore,” says Gupta, who at the time of writing, is working on three “completely unconventional” looks for private clients.

In 2025, Ashish Gupta officially launched Ashish’s bridal collection.
Photo: Courtesy of Ashish
His entrance into the sector happened almost by accident. Previously, he’d designed a gold sequin column dress for Caroline Burstein’s big day, as well as a navy sequin shift dress for her mother, the late Joan Burstein — although he didn’t consider bridal as part of the business then. “A few years ago, I made a custom veil for a friend, covered in confetti-style sequin embroidery. Shortly after, a bride wore one of my giant ruffle dresses for her wedding. Both looks went a bit viral and ended up across lots of bridal Pinterest mood boards, which really sparked interest,” Gupta adds.
Before, bridal inspiration was limited to what you saw at boutiques, in society publications or at friends’ weddings. Now, that framework has opened up to better suit the digital natives of today.
Something old, something new
While social media and the need for hyper-personalized experiences have facilitated a healthy marketing funnel for both bespoke and ready-to-wear separates, they’re also leading value-driven consumers toward alternatives — especially pre-loved designs with historical or cult status. This forms part of a broader trend, pertinent among Gen Z, towards archival designs, often created before the wearers were even born. Lauren Lepire, owner of Beverly Hills esteemed vintage boutique Timeless Vixen, has witnessed this appetite for “one-of-a-kind” archival bridal pieces mature among her clients.
For more than 20 years, Lepire has built a substantial collection of pieces, dating all the way back to the 1920s. “I begin by understanding the bride’s personal style, setting, and tone of the wedding,” she says of her clienteling process. Lepire then enters her illustrious archive — home to canonical designs spanning Tom Ford for Gucci through to mid-century Lanvin — to pull some looks. In terms of preferences, it’s the “documented runway [Galliano-era Dior is a speciality] or atelier pieces, bias-cut silhouettes, couture-level construction, and those that can transition beyond the ceremony”, holding fort at the moment.
In tandem with a bridal appetite for vintage, there’s also an aesthetic turn toward older styles. For Pinterest, searches for “1980 wedding dress” are up 1,090% year-on-year. TikTok also reports a look back. “The defining silhouette of the year is the basque waist, now a globally dominant trend that reflects a broader cultural fascination with ‘the old world’,” says Karassoulis, noting that searches for the cut on were up 449% in the UK and 160% in the US between February and April.
Even in the bespoke market, brides are channeling vintage cues. “Now, brides are exposed to hundreds of references, from archival couture to a girl in a vintage slip with a veil tied around her head, and they’re arriving with a much clearer sense of themselves,” says Halfpenny. This is especially the case with Gen Z couples, who have grown up immersed in the ultimate vintage feedback loop. “They’re very visually literate, influenced by archival references and by the way fashion moves on TikTok and Instagram, and they’re far less attached to the idea of the single white gown.”
Gaia confirms this old world obsession among his clientele. “Because fashion, in general, has swung in the direction of vintage one-of-a-kind pieces, everyone wants archive,” he says. “The issue is that you’re really rolling the dice in finding a piece, falling in love with it — only for it to not be your size.” It’s here that his brand — often designed using vintage fabrics — has successfully capitalized on that aesthetic appetite and the ability to nail the fit in a way that resale can’t.
Interestingly, the rapid growth of the resale market — spurred on by a Gen Z majority — has been a surprise problem for The Own Studio. “It’s something we fundamentally support and we always encourage brides to rewear or repurpose their dresses,” says Williams. “But it does mean that in some ways bridal brands are also competing with their own pieces circulating on the secondary market.”
This vintage shift tracks. Per a 2023 report from insight platform GWI, 54% of Gen Zs are into vintage style. Across Asia-Pacific, Japan, Europe, the UK and the US, the average age of a bride in 2026 is forecast to land in either the Gen Z or zillennial bracket, meaning now is the time to capitalize.

But it goes further. Consumers aren’t just looking to get more wear out of what’s already available, but also what’s being made. “Brides are more informed than ever, and they approach dressing with intention,” says Francesca Miranda, founder of her eponymous Colombian bridal label. “What I find particularly interesting is the idea of longevity — pieces that can be worn again, beyond the wedding itself.” Her gowns are priced between $7,000 and $15,000, so it makes sense that consumers want bang for their buck.

Francesca Miranda’s gowns are priced between $7,000 and $15,000.
Photo: Courtesy of Francesca Miranda
Williams has noticed a similar desire among The Own Studio’s brides. “Versatility and longevity have become much more important, versus when we started the brand in 2019,” she says. As such, brides are looking for pieces that are multi-dimensional — fitted with detachable elements or layers that can be added or taken away. A more surprising finding was the desire to dye or repurpose the dress after the wedding day. “This is a huge priority for a large percentage of the brides that we meet — so much so that they are only buying into fabrics that can be dyed following their wedding.” Last year, The Own Studio launched its dyeing and alteration service, which has been “incredibly popular” since.
Gupta reports similarly of his clients. “I’ve worked with artists, people in finance, lawyers. What they tend to share is a desire for personality and fun on their wedding day, alongside the idea of investing in something they can wear again, rather than a piece that sits in storage afterwards.”
To this point, Halfpenny London’s best-performing pieces — separates, detachable sleeves, short styles, capes and coats, and tailoring — reflect the shift from a singular bridal look to an entire wardrobe. “Brides want pieces that can be unpicked and relayered, worn differently across the ceremony, dinner and dancing, and in some cases worn again afterward — something we hugely encourage,” confirms Halfpenny.
A forever wedding requires a forever outfit, and it needs to count. Bridal is a complex market, and demand is brewing, but cultural climes have shifted dramatically. In a phone-eats-first age, weddings are becoming prime opportunities for Gen Z couples to make content, less a stale institution bound in rules.
For the utmost return on investment, bridal should be approached as a rich but highly edited experience, whereby even the registry office ceremony or the elopement-style nuptials are recognized as growth opportunities. In the coming years, a staggering majority of brides will be Gen Z, and the brands that were first to the post will be reaping the rewards.

