

The great fashion reset: Myntra, Nykaa, Tata Cliq and others go luxe
Subscribe to enjoy similar stories.Open an online fashion app today, and you’ll find a ₹490,000 Gucci dress or a waitlisted ₹415,000 Prada leather shirt sitting alongside discounted streetwear and mass-market labels.This paradox isn’t accidental. India’s online fashion and beauty market is projected to reach $210 billion by 2028.
Yet even as it scales, the discount-led model that powered this growth is under strain. In response, platforms such as TataCliq, Myntra, Ajio, Amazon’s fashion and beauty division, and Nykaa are trying to shed their deals-driven identity—albeit gradually.TataCliq, for instance, has partnered with online luxury retailer Darveys to create a more deliberate, curated approach to luxury rather than a broad rollout.
Myntra has recently added S&N by Shantanu & Nikhil and is also working with Darveys.Offering ‘masstige’, bridge-to-luxury, and super-luxury products is a clear push to move consumers up the value chain—from frequent low-ticket buys to fewer, higher-value purchases—even as discount-led volumes continue to anchor the core business.The commercial logic is straightforward. Higher-priced products offer better margins.
But the challenge lies in driving that behavioural shift. “Online fashion has been built on discounting for years, and that has conditioned consumers to expect deals on everything.
The market has effectively been deflated, and it becomes very difficult to sell anything at full price. Premiumization cannot sit on top of that model," Harminder Sahni, managing director at consulting firm Wazir Advisors, told Mint.Sahni added that it will require a structural reset in how platforms price, present and sell products, not just incremental changes.Even as fashion and beauty platforms try
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