New Rankings Reveal Intensifying Competition, Faster Brand Churn and Widening Generational Differences

BOSTON, MA (March 3, 2026) – Competition among top footwear, apparel and accessories brands has reached unprecedented levels, according to global strategy consultancy L.E.K. Consulting's 2026 US Footwear, Apparel, and Accessories Brand Heat Index. A challenged spending environment and accelerating trend cycles are creating both tighter races at the top and wider gaps between winners and the rest of the pack as consumers become increasingly selective about where they spend their money.

“The brands rising fastest and cutting through the noise are those speaking directly to core sets of consumers rather than trying to be everything to everyone,” said Laura Brookhiser, L.E.K. Managing Director and report lead author. “But success here isn’t just a marketing challenge – it’s about how brands configure their entire business, from product development to pricing, all to reinforce differentiation and resonance with their target consumer."

The fifth annual Brand Heat Index reveals which brands are gaining popularity across four major product categories in men’s and women’s footwear and apparel. For the first time, this year’s Index includes bags and luggage as well as outdoor equipment and sporting goods, providing a comprehensive view of brand momentum across related consumer categories.

Key findings from the 2026 Brand Heat Index include:

  • Competition at the top is closer than ever: Out of 16 apparel and footwear categories, seven categories have their top three brands within 10 points of one another – up from just four last year. This intensification signals heightened rivalry and faster shifts in consumer sentiment, with brands like HOKA and On challenging Nike’s dominance in athletic footwear.
  • Outdoor and athletic categories continue to dominate: Driven by brands that straddle performance and lifestyle occasions, such as Nike, UGG, Carhartt, The North Face and lululemon, these categories have the highest heat scores overall.
  • Social media is a major heat accelerator: Consumer feedback shows that a strong, authentic social media presence is a core driver of brand heat with social-native emerging brands like Halara, House of CB and Edikted making the top 10 list in several categories. This is especially the case for Gen Z.
  • Premium brands are rising across categories in the “Hourglass Economy:” Outside of the casual footwear and apparel categories, where accessibly priced brands and fast fashion top the list, premium brands, such as Canada Goose, Coach and Arc’teryx, are giving consumers a reason to spend.
  • Brand heat differs meaningfully by gender and generation: Women and younger consumers show greater openness to newcomer brands, while men’s rankings skew more toward heritage, workwear and technical players – underscoring the need for segmented brand strategies. “We’ve also seen an interesting shift happening with Gen Z men, where the traditional playbook of launching male-first and extending to women is being flipped,” said Brookhiser. “Female-focused brands, like Alo Yoga, are successfully scaling by winning with younger male consumers who are more open to brands that weren’t originally designed for them.”
  • New categories – bags and luggage and outdoor equipment and sporting goods – reveal further generational divergence: While BÉIS leads overall in bags and luggage, preferences vary sharply by generation – BAGGU dominates Gen Z, TUMI leads Millennials and Dagne Dover tops Gen X rankings. In outdoor equipment and sporting goods, Stanley and YETI emerge as the dominant brands, with younger consumers gravitating toward lifestyle hydration brands while older cohorts prefer sport-specific performance players.

“Brands that have been able to maintain momentum and leadership position year-over-year not only hold a differentiated position in the eyes of consumers, but they also leverage social media, limited-edition styles or collaborations and other activation points to continually drive engagement and excitement,” said Chris Randall, L.E.K. Managing Director and report co-author.

With emerging brands gaining ground, premium players climbing the ranks and competition tightening across categories, the findings demonstrate how quickly consumer sentiment can shift in today's fast-paced retail environment.

“Brand Heat has become a leading indicator of sustainable growth in a market where loyalty is harder to earn. Understanding brand heat at a granular level has never been more important," said Randall.

For more findings and the full sets of brand rankings by generation, gender and product category, please see the 2026 US Footwear, Apparel, and Accessories Brand Heat Index.

Brand Heat Index Methodology

L.E.K. surveyed approximately 6,000 U.S. consumers aged 14 to 55 who have purchased footwear, apparel, bags & luggage or outdoor equipment & sporting goods for themselves in the past 12 months. Within product categories and generational cohorts, each brand earns a heat score on a scale of 0-100 – the higher the score, the hotter the brand. About 650 brands were tested to understand their popularity and the key factors behind it. The survey gathered feedback on brands across four product categories in footwear and apparel: athletic, casual, outdoor/rugged and dress.

About L.E.K. Consulting

We're L.E.K. Consulting, a global strategy consultancy working with business leaders to seize competitive advantage and amplify growth. Our insights are catalysts that reshape the trajectory of our clients' businesses, uncovering opportunities and empowering them to master their moments of truth. Since 1983, our worldwide practice — spanning the Americas, Europe, Middle East and Asia-Pacific — has guided leaders across all industries, from global corporations to emerging entrepreneurial businesses and private equity investors. Looking for more? Visit www.lek.com.