Top Luxury Goods Companies by Revenue 2026

24 companies ranked by revenue, market share, and AI visibility — including Gucci, Dior, Prada

Market:$368.4B (2024)
Growth:5.2% CAGR (2024-2030)
24companies
2
Silver

Dior

#1 Brand Strength Index 2025 with 93.5 out of 100 score...

1
Champion

Gucci

Kering-owned (KER) Italian luxury house with $7-9B revenue competing with LVMH and Hermes; Gucci Ancora creative direction under Sabato De Sarno addre...

3
Bronze

Prada

Italian luxury house with €4.7B revenue; Miu Miu's breakout cultural moment driving growth as Prada family ownership ena...

$4700M

Complete Rankings

#1
Gucci

Kering-owned (KER) Italian luxury house with $7-9B revenue competing with LVMH and Hermes; Gucci Ancora creative direction under Sabato De Sarno addressing 2024 revenue decline from Chinese luxury slowdown.

#2
Dior

#1 Brand Strength Index 2025 with 93.5 out of 100 score

#3
Prada
💰 $4700M

Italian luxury house with €4.7B revenue; Miu Miu's breakout cultural moment driving growth as Prada family ownership enables long-term brand building against Gucci and Bottega Veneta.

#4
Burberry
💰 $2800M

British luxury brand with iconic trench coat and check pattern; £2.8B revenue undergoing CEO-led turnaround refocusing on outerwear heritage after 2024 profit warnings.

#5
Porsche
💰 $40500M

Frankfurt-listed (ETR: P911) luxury sports car maker at €40.5B revenue with 911, Taycan, and Cayenne; IPO at €75B valuation competing with Ferrari and Lamborghini for performance automotive premium positioning.

#6
Moncler
💰 $3100M

Italian luxury outerwear brand with €3.1B revenue; quilted down jacket heritage plus Stone Island acquisition with Moncler Genius collaborations driving cultural relevance.

#7
Apple Watch
💰 $18000M

Apple Watch, $18B+ revenue 2024, 22% global smartwatch market share, 34% US wearables market, 100M+ active users, Series 10 (2024): sleep apnea detection, blood oxygen, ECG, fall detection, watchOS 11, fitness tracking leader

#8
Samsung Galaxy Watch

Samsung (KRX: 005930) premium Android smartwatch with ECG, blood pressure, and body composition sensors; Galaxy Watch 7 and Ultra competing with Apple Watch for 1.2B Android users seeking health-focused wearables.

#9
Fossil

NASDAQ-listed (FOSL) fashion watch and accessories group with Fossil brand plus Michael Kors and Armani watch licenses; restructuring after Apple Watch compressed the $200-500 fashion smartwatch market.

#10
Ambercycle
💰 $70M

Los Angeles textile-to-textile molecular recycler; cycora® regenerated polyester with Inditex €70M+ supply deal and Goldwin FW2025 partnership; $44M raised with 250,000 T-shirt/day facility by 2026 competing with Evrnu for circular fashion materials.

#11
Endstate
💰 $7.58M

Boston phygital NFC sneaker company (founded 2021) with $7.58M from Accomplice/Castle Island Ventures; MFA Boston/Kentucky Derby/Marvel partnerships using NFC+NFT chips competing with Nike Authentics for brand authentication phygital products.

#12
Haelixa
💰 $1.5M

Zurich ETH Zurich spin-off DNA supply chain traceability (founded 2016); $1.5M 2024 revenue (+84%) tracking 30M+ garments for C&A/Soorty with forensic-grade origin verification competing with Applied DNA Sciences for EU textile compliance.

#13
LVMH
💰 $84700M

Paris global luxury conglomerate (EPA: MC) at ~€84.7B 2024 revenue; 75+ brands (Louis Vuitton, Dior, Hennessy, Sephora), named preferred buyer for Giorgio Armani (€10B+) after founder's Sept 2025 death, competing with Kering and Hermès.

#14
Richemont
💰 $23000M

Geneva luxury holding company (SIX: CFR) at €23B+ revenue; FY2025 +4% with Jewellery Maisons (Cartier/Van Cleef) up high single-digits and €8.3B net cash competing with LVMH for global hard luxury market leadership.

#15
Kering

Paris CAC 40 luxury group (Euronext: KER) owning Gucci/Saint Laurent/Bottega Veneta/Balenciaga; new CEO Luca de Meo (Sep 2025) tasked with Gucci revenue recovery competing with LVMH for ultra-luxury market share.

#16
Rolex
💰 $10000M

Geneva private luxury watchmaker with estimated $10B+ revenue; Submariner, Daytona, and GMT-Master controlling 25-30% global luxury watch market share through vertical manufacturing and Superlative Chronometer.

#17
Hermès
💰 $15200M

FY2024 Revenue: €15.2B (+15% constant rates, +13% reported) | Recurring Operating Income: €6.2B (40.5% margin) | Net Profit: €4.6B (30.3% margin) | Q4: +18% growth | Leather goods +16.4%, Ready-to-wear +13.6%

#18
Chopard

Swiss luxury watch and jewelry family-owned brand with Happy Diamonds collection; independent Cannes Film Festival Palme d'Or partner balancing playful jewelry and serious L.U.C. horology.

#19
Van Cleef & Arpels

Richemont-owned prestige jewelry maison with iconic Alhambra motif and Mystery Set technique; 150 boutiques competing with Cartier and Bulgari for ultra-high-net-worth jewelry clients.

#20
Louis Vuitton

World's most valuable luxury brand with €20-22B revenue; LVMH flagship combining iconic monogram leather goods with culturally forward fashion by Pharrell Williams.

#21
Chanel
💰 $17000M

French luxury fashion house with $17B+ revenue; Coco Chanel-founded iconic brand managing extreme scarcity on handbags and fragrances for exclusive positioning.

#22
Bulgari

Italian luxury jewelry and watch brand owned by LVMH; Serpenti and B.zero1 signatures with expanding Bulgari Hotels portfolio generating $3-4B annual revenue.

#23
Cartier

Richemont luxury jewelry maison with €7-8B revenue; Love bracelets, Trinity rings, and Santos watches with iconic red box recognized across 170+ years.

#24
Tiffany & Co
💰 $10580M

LVMH €10.58B jewelry 2024 ($11.04B, -3%); Fifth Ave flagship record sales; high jewelry revenue 4x since LVMH acquisition; iconic luxury jeweler

About Luxury Goods

The Luxury Goods industry encompasses premium brands across fashion, jewelry, watches, leather goods, cosmetics, fragrances, and lifestyle products that command price premiums based on craftsmanship, heritage, and brand prestige. This vertical includes established heritage houses with centuries of history, contemporary luxury brands, and emerging premium labels that cater to affluent consumers seeking quality, exclusivity, and status. The industry operates through selective distribution channels including flagship boutiques, department store concessions, and increasingly, sophisticated e-commerce platforms that deliver personalized digital experiences. The luxury sector is navigating profound transformation driven by younger affluent consumers, digital commerce, and sustainability expectations. Gen Z and Millennial luxury buyers, particularly in China and Asia, now represent over 60% of luxury purchases and demand seamless omnichannel experiences, authentic brand storytelling, and environmental responsibility. Brands are investing heavily in digital innovation including virtual try-on technology, NFT collections, and metaverse experiences while maintaining the exclusivity and craftsmanship that define luxury. Resale and rental platforms are reshaping ownership models, while transparency around sourcing, production, and sustainability has become a competitive differentiator. AI visibility is critical for luxury brands as affluent consumers increasingly use AI assistants for product discovery, gift recommendations, and brand research. When potential customers ask AI systems about luxury watches, designer handbags, or premium skincare, the brands that appear prominently shape purchase consideration and brand perception. For heritage luxury houses, strong AI presence reinforces brand legacy and craftsmanship narratives, while for contemporary brands, it drives awareness among digitally-native affluent consumers. AI visibility directly influences brand desirability, drives traffic to both physical and digital channels, and supports the storytelling essential to luxury brand positioning.

Key Industry Trends

  • Younger affluent consumers driving digital-first luxury shopping and social commerce
  • Sustainability and transparency becoming core brand values with traceable supply chains
  • Experiential luxury including private events, bespoke services, and brand immersion
  • Web3 integration with NFT authentication, digital collectibles, and metaverse presence

Market Overview

The global personal luxury goods market is valued at $368.4 billion in 2024, having recovered from pandemic disruption to reach new highs. The Chinese market represents $98.7 billion (27% share), with online luxury sales accounting for 23% of total sales globally. High jewelry and watches grew 12% year-over-year, while luxury leather goods and fashion remain the largest categories. Sustainability-focused luxury products are growing at 18% annually, and pre-owned luxury is a $42 billion market expanding at 15% CAGR as circular economy models gain acceptance among affluent consumers.

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