The global secondhand luxury market was valued at approximately USD...
Read MoreThe global luxury jewellery market was valued at approximately USD 55 billion in 2025, benefiting from a uniquely dual commercial proposition: it serves as a tangible expression of personal celebration and milestone commemoration while simultaneously functioning as an investment-grade store of value — a combination sustaining demand through economic cycles where purely discretionary categories retrench.
LVMH’s Bvlgari achieved a record year in 2025, anchored by the Polychroma high jewellery collection generating record sales of multi-million-dollar pieces. India’s luxury jewellery market is among the world’s fastest-growing: the Gem and Jewellery Export Promotion Council reported India’s overall gold demand rose 5% to 802.8 tonnes in 2024, with jewellery demand growing 22% in value to approximately USD 4.1 billion — confirming India as the most commercially significant emerging frontier for luxury jewellery. Prada Group’s May 2025 acquisition of a boutique jewellery brand to accelerate high-jewellery entry documents sector-wide recognition that jewellery’s 7.6% projected CAGR — the highest among luxury sub-categories — warrants strategic capital reallocation.
What is the current market size and growth trajectory for the global luxury jewellery market?
The luxury jewellery market was valued at USD 55 billion in 2025. The jewellery segment within the broader luxury goods market is projected to grow at approximately 7.6% CAGR through 2035 — the highest growth rate among luxury product sub-categories.
What did Bvlgari’s record 2025 results confirm about high jewellery demand?
LVMH reported on January 27, 2026 that Bvlgari achieved a record year — anchored by the Polychroma high jewellery collection generating record sales of multi-million-dollar pieces. Bvlgari’s record performance in a year of overall luxury market normalization documents the exceptional resilience of high jewellery demand among ultra-HNWI consumers who are least affected by macroeconomic conditions — the most commercially significant single luxury jewellery brand result of 2025.
How does India jewellery demand data confirm India as a priority emerging luxury jewellery market?
The Gem and Jewellery Export Promotion Council reported India’s total gold demand rose 5% to 802.8 tonnes in 2024, with jewellery demand growing 22% in value to approximately USD 4.1 billion — driven by resilient consumer interest despite price fluctuations. India’s gold jewellery market is among the world’s largest by volume, underpinned by cultural traditions of gold jewellery in wedding and religious ceremony gifting. The luxury segment is growing fastest as India’s expanding affluent class upgrades from traditional gold to branded luxury jewellery.
How do investment-grade jewellery pieces sustain demand through economic uncertainty?
Van Cleef and Arpels’ Alhambra, Cartier’s Love bracelet, and Bvlgari’s Serpenti achieve secondary market premiums above retail — creating investment-return motivation that sustains demand among HNWI buyers treating acquisitions as portfolio diversification. This investment perception is most pronounced in high jewellery above USD 100,000, where gemstone quality, rarity, and provenance create genuine investment-grade asset characteristics.
How does Prada’s jewellery acquisition reflect luxury conglomerate capital allocation priorities?
Prada Group’s May 2025 acquisition of a boutique jewellery brand to accelerate its high-jewellery segment entry reflects the documented superior growth and margin characteristics of fine jewellery. The acquisition documents conglomerate recognition that jewellery’s 7.6% projected CAGR — the highest in luxury goods — merits strategic capital reallocation from lower-growth categories including leather goods and apparel.
Notable key players include Cartier (Richemont), Van Cleef and Arpels (Richemont), Tiffany and Co. (LVMH), Bvlgari (LVMH), Chaumet (LVMH), Hermès Fine Jewellery, Chanel Fine Jewellery, Harry Winston (Swatch Group), Graff Diamonds, De Beers, Boucheron (Kering), Pomellato (Kering), Piaget (Richemont), Chopard, Mikimoto, and Prada (High Jewellery).
Recent Developments
The luxury jewellery market’s 2025 outperformance — Bain-Altagamma’s primary-source identification as the strongest category, Bvlgari’s record Polychroma results, and the 7.6% projected CAGR — constitutes the most compelling evidence-based case for luxury category outperformance through 2035. Prada’s strategic jewellery acquisition confirms that leading conglomerates are directing capital toward jewellery’s superior growth characteristics. For clients evaluating luxury market exposure, jewellery is the category with the strongest available evidence for sustained outperformance across the full forecast horizon.
Constancy Researchers is a global market intelligence and strategic advisory firm helping organizations navigate complex markets and make high-impact decisions with confidence. In an environment defined by rapid technological change, shifting demand patterns, and evolving competitive dynamics, we provide clarity where it matters most—at the point of decision-making. By combining deep industry understanding, rigorous analytics, and structured thinking, we enable leadership teams to identify opportunities, mitigate risks, and build strategies that drive sustainable growth.
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