While luxury fashion is still associated with exclusivity, prestige, and five-figure price tags, the global sector is entering a period of structural transformation as consumer demand weakens and economic uncertainty reshapes spending behavior.
Major luxury retailers and fashion houses have begun reducing costs, reevaluating their store networks, and shifting investment toward more flexible operating models as shoppers become more selective in their discretionary spending.
In 2025, Kering closed 133 stores across its portfolio of brands, and disclosed plans to shutter another 100 locations. Ferragamo said it expects to shutter roughly 70 stores between 2025 and 2026, while Saks Global filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in 2026 and has continued closing retail locations nationwide.
Industry analysts do not expect a rapid recovery.
According to the McKinsey & Company State of Fashion 2026 Report, the global fashion industry is projected to grow only in the low single digits in 2026 as macroeconomic volatility, tariff pressures, and weaker consumer sentiment continue to weigh on demand, particularly in the U.S.
Now, another historic luxury brand is reducing its retail footprint while accelerating a broader turnaround effort.
Burberry closes stores worldwide amid restructuring
Burberry, the 170-year-old British luxury fashion house, closed 21 stores while opening nine new locations during fiscal 2026, ending the year with 410 stores globally as of March 28, 2026, according to the company’s latest earnings report.
The retailer said it expects overall store count to remain “broadly stable” in fiscal 2027 as it focuses on improving in-store experiences, increasing productivity, and strengthening cross-category merchandising.
“We are exiting stores, which are either in locations that are no longer appropriate or have profitability challenges,” said Burberry CEO Joshua Schulman in the company’s 2026 earnings call. “When it’s a center location where we just want to exit, we’ll exit. But in other cases, we will find a more profitable alternative to showcase the product.”
The restructuring effort is already contributing to improved profitability.
Burberry reported adjusted operating profit of £160 million (approximately $213.26 million) for fiscal 2026. The company said its cost-cutting initiatives generated £80 million (about $106.63 million) in savings during the year and remain on track to deliver £100 million (roughly $133.28 million) of annualized savings by 2027.
Executives also warned that geopolitical tensions and ongoing macroeconomic instability could continue to pressure consumer confidence across key luxury markets.
