logo
#

Latest news with #EuropeanRecommerceMarket

Europe Recommerce Market Intelligence Report 2025: Competitive Landscape in Europe Is Organizing Around Verticals, Compliance Readiness, and Platform Integration
Europe Recommerce Market Intelligence Report 2025: Competitive Landscape in Europe Is Organizing Around Verticals, Compliance Readiness, and Platform Integration

Yahoo

time10 hours ago

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Europe Recommerce Market Intelligence Report 2025: Competitive Landscape in Europe Is Organizing Around Verticals, Compliance Readiness, and Platform Integration

Europe's recommerce market is forecast to grow at a 12.6% annual rate, reaching $43 billion by 2025. Expected to expand further to $64.4 billion by 2029, it offers substantial investment opportunities. This comprehensive analysis highlights trends in peer-to-peer, business-led resale, electronics, and apparel sectors. European Recommerce Market Dublin, June 25, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Europe Recommerce Market Intelligence Databook - 60+ KPIs, Market Size, Share & Forecast by Channel, Category & Consumer Segment - Q2 2025 Update" report has been added to recommerce market in Europe is expected to grow by 12.6% on annual basis to reach US$43.0 billion in 2025. The recommerce market in the region experienced robust growth during 2020-2024, achieving a CAGR of 15.6%. This upward trajectory is expected to continue, with the market forecast to grow at a CAGR of 10.6% during 2025-2029. By the end of 2029, the recommerce market is projected to expand from its 2024 value of USD 38.2 billion to approximately USD 64.4 billion. This regional report provides a detailed data-centric analysis of the recommerce market Europe, covering market opportunities and risks across consumer segments (peer-to-peer and business-led resale); product categories; sales channels; and resale formats. With over 60+ KPIs at the regional and country level, this report provides a comprehensive understanding of recommerce market dynamics. Europe's recommerce landscape is advancing through a combination of policy enforcement, digital platform integration, and consumer alignment with sustainability. While maturity levels differ across Western, Northern, and Eastern Europe, several region-wide trends are influencing the next wave of recommerce early-stage or informal resale markets, Europe's recommerce ecosystem is being shaped by coordinated action between government, enterprise, and platforms. Over the next 2-4 years, resale will shift from a secondary channel to a compliance-anchored, consumer-facing business model embedded in the product lifecycle. Europe's recommerce market is becoming structurally competitive across verticals such as electronics, fashion, and furniture. While the regulatory environment is harmonized at the EU level, execution varies by country, resulting in local champions and regional consolidators. The competitive edge in Europe will belong to players that combine resale infrastructure, compliance capability, and cross-country scale. With sustainability mandates hardening and consumer trust in structured resale rising, recommerce will shift from experimentation to institutionalization by 2027. Key Insights Competitive Landscape in Europe Is Organizing Around Verticals, Compliance Readiness, and Platform Integration Players able to align with Digital Product Passport requirements and integrate with circular taxonomies will have regulatory and investor advantage. Consolidation will intensify across platforms and branded resale, particularly in fashion and electronics. Offline-to-online recommerce formats will scale, including physical resale counters and digital trade-in interfaces inside major retailers. Electronics Recommerce Is Formalizing Through OEM, Retail, and Policy-Driven Trade-In Models European electronics recommerce is scaling through OEM trade-in programs and refurbishment platforms, supported by legal requirements for repair and reuse. Brands such as Apple, Samsung, and Fairphone operate certified trade-in and refurbishment services across the EU, while retailers like MediaMarkt (Germany) and Fnac Darty (France) offer in-store buy-back programs. The EU's "Right to Repair" initiative and broader Circular Economy Action Plan are mandating lifecycle extension of consumer electronics. OEMs and retailers are responding by investing in refurb infrastructure, diagnostics, and reverse logistics. Compliance with EU directives will become mandatory for resale channels. Expect stronger collaboration between OEMs and certified refurbishment partners in countries like Germany, Netherlands, and France. Apparel Recommerce Is Being Integrated Into Brand and Retail Operations Major apparel brands and retailers across Europe are launching internal recommerce platforms or partnering with resale specialists. Zalando (Germany), COS (Sweden), Decathlon (France), and H&M are running brand-owned resale platforms in response to EU sustainability directives. Rising pressure from ESG benchmarks and eco-conscious consumers is pushing fashion brands to shift from fast fashion to circular models. The EU Strategy for Sustainable and Circular Textiles is incentivizing this shift. Brand-owned recommerce will become standard in mid- to high-tier fashion. New business models such as take-back for credit, refurbishment, and resale-as-a-service will expand into department stores and multi-brand retailers. Platform-Centric Models Are Scaling With Verification and Cross-Border Logistics Europe's recommerce infrastructure is being scaled by platforms like Back Market (France), Refurbed (Austria), and Vinted (Lithuania), which offer certified resale with integrated logistics, repair, and verification. Consumer preference for convenience and warranty-backed resale is reinforcing platform models. EU-wide logistics networks and payment systems allow seamless resale across borders, with Back Market now active in 17+ European markets. Market share will concentrate among large platforms that can meet EU compliance standards, integrate repair partnerships, and provide localized operations across Western and Central Europe. Regulatory Alignment Is Structuring the Economics of Reuse Europe's regulatory framework - anchored by the Circular Economy Action Plan, Ecodesign Directive, and Extended Producer Responsibility schemes - is setting rules for resale eligibility, data disclosure, and performance benchmarks. The European Commission's new Digital Product Passport, expected to roll out by 2026, will standardize information around product origin, use, repairability, and environmental impact directly enabling resale flows. Regulations will move from optional compliance to enforceable obligations. Platforms and brands unable to meet traceability and repair criteria may be excluded from the resale ecosystem. Sustainability Goals Are Converging Across Retail, Government, and Finance Sectors Retailers are aligning sustainability targets with resale activation, supported by financial incentives from EU green funds and national-level carbon reduction schemes. Examples include IKEA (Sweden) Buy Back & Resell, and UK-based John Lewis' fashion resale partnership with Reskinned. Carbon footprint disclosures, green finance obligations, and ESG-linked brand value are making recommerce a strategic lever. Sustainability-linked loans and reporting metrics are being tied to circular initiatives. Recommerce will become a reporting dimension in ESG and CSRD frameworks. Retailers will scale recommerce not only for revenue, but to qualify for tax and financing benefits linked to circular compliance. Electronics Recommerce Is Driven by Brand-Led Programs and Platform Ecosystems Back Market (France) operates as one of the region's largest certified electronics platforms, partnering with over 1,500 refurbishers and offering standardized product grading and warranties. It raised over €450M in funding and is now active across major EU markets. Refurbed (Austria) has expanded into 7+ European markets with a focus on green electronics. Its certification protocol is aligned with EU eco-design requirements, giving it compliance advantages. Fnac Darty (France) and MediaMarktSaturn (Germany) are integrating trade-in and refurbishment desks inside retail stores, with pilots also tied to EU digital repairability scores. Fairphone (Netherlands) incorporates modular design and resale as part of its core offering, with trade-in support and spare part resale contributing to extended lifecycle strategies. Fashion Recommerce Is Consolidating Through Branded Channels and Regional Marketplaces Zalando (Germany) launched its Pre-Owned resale platform in 2020 and has expanded it to 13 countries. It integrates resale into the same logistics and account infrastructure as new sales. Vinted (Lithuania), with over 80 million users, is the largest P2P fashion resale platform in Europe. It acquired secondhand app United Wardrobe and launched Vinted Go to control last-mile logistics. COS Resell (H&M Group, Sweden) and Decathlon 2nd Life (France) operate branded recommerce platforms focusing on curated resale with in-house quality control and product prep. Reskinned (UK) partners with fashion brands such as Finisterre and Joules to process and resell customer returns and used apparel. Furniture and Lifestyle Recommerce Is Expanding via Retail Pilots and Reverse Logistics IKEA (Sweden) runs the Buy Back & Resell initiative in over 30 European locations. It offers vouchers for returned furniture, which is then refurbished or resold. In the UK and Germany, Emma - The Sleep Company has introduced mattress resale trials, collecting used products for cleaning and recommerce. Tylko (Poland) and Vogogo (Germany) are examples of startups using online configuration and resale options to support custom furniture lifecycle models. Strategic Moves: Acquisitions, Logistics Control, and Compliance-Driven Expansion Vinted's acquisition of United Wardrobe and launch of Vinted Go highlight vertical integration across fashion resale and logistics. Back Market's partnerships with repair networks across France and Germany allow it to meet EU obligations and ensure consistent product grading. Retailers like Decathlon and Fnac are entering resale through pilot programs structured around EPR compliance and product traceability Key Attributes: Report Attribute Details No. of Pages 1245 Forecast Period 2025 - 2029 Estimated Market Value (USD) in 2025 $43 Billion Forecasted Market Value (USD) by 2029 $64.4 Billion Compound Annual Growth Rate 10.6% Regions Covered Europe For more information about this report visit About is the world's leading source for international market research reports and market data. We provide you with the latest data on international and regional markets, key industries, the top companies, new products and the latest trends. Attachment European Recommerce Market CONTACT: CONTACT: Laura Wood,Senior Press Manager press@ For E.S.T Office Hours Call 1-917-300-0470 For U.S./ CAN Toll Free Call 1-800-526-8630 For GMT Office Hours Call +353-1-416-8900

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store