TikTok is moving into luxury retail, part of an effort to expand its TikTok Shop marketplace into a high-end shopping destination for purses and watches that can fetch thousands of dollars.
TikTok Shop is increasingly becoming a destination for luxury fashion – Shutterstock
Once considered a virtual dollar store, TikTok Shop now showcases $11,000 handbags from Hermes and Chanel, or rare, limited-drop sneakers from collaborators like Louis Vuitton and Nike. TikTok Shop also now carries watches from Rolex and Cartier– timepieces the social media giant added just in time for Black Friday. Most of the items are used and listed by second hand resellers, many of whom are using artificial intelligence to verify the products’ authenticity in hopes of leveraging TikTok’s enormous global reach to find new buyers.
The emergence of high-end luxury goods on TikTok Shop is a sign of the company’s evolving e-commerce ambitions since it launched in the US two years ago to comparisons with Chinese fast-fashion heavyweights like PDD Holdings Inc.’s Temu, and Shein Group Ltd. TikTok Shop is still a destination for cheap finds, with some vendors offering steep discounts throughout the holiday season, but its push into luxury also shows that the once-prominent threat of a TikTok ban in the US has done little to dim the company’s online shopping aspirations.
If all goes well for TikTok, it’s possible that top luxury brands like Chanel, which already see the video platform as a valuable marketing engine, could eventually sell directly to consumers there, too.
“Given the previous perception that, ‘Hey, this is like a dollar store,’ it’s phenomenal,” said Vidyuth Srinivasan, chief executive officer and co-founder of Entrupy, which provides luxury resale vendors on TikTok Shop with AI technology that authenticates their handbags and sneakers. “You wouldn’t even know that that was a perception a year and a half ago.”
TikTok has made shopping a priority in recent years, spending aggressively to expand its Shop business to several international markets, including Brazil, Japan, Mexico, France, Italy, Spain, and more than half a dozen other locales. While the company earlier this year scaled back internal sales goals for TikTok Shop US, there is still optimism that it can become one of the most valuable pieces of the company’s American business. Under a proposed deal to keep TikTok US alive, its prized e-commerce arm would reportedly remain under the control of its Chinese owner, ByteDance Ltd.
For 17th Street, a pre-owned luxury boutique in New York that joined TikTok Shop just before the holidays last year, the platform has become one of its biggest drivers of both online sales and in-store foot traffic, said Olivia Sperduto, its head of social media. It’s sold close to 1,000 designer bags through TikTok, she said, including coveted Hermes Kelly and Birkin bags that cost tens of thousands of dollars at retail, as well as staples from Chanel Ltd., LVMHMoet Hennessy Louis Vuitton, and Kering SA’s Balenciaga.
An estimated one-third of the company’s profits are now driven by TikTok, and sales from the platform have come “very close” to what it’s moving in-store, Sperduto said. TikTok takes an 8% cut of every bag 17th Street sells through the app, she noted, a hit they’re willing to take given the volume of business it’s driving.
TikTok sellers have been known to sometimes peddle cheaper knockoff products- in beauty, for example- so the rise in high-end commerce has led to more business for companies that authenticate second hand goods. Entrupy is one of five TikTok-approved authenticators that sellers, including 17th Street, use to verify that their expensive, second hand handbags, luggage, accessories, and footwear are legit. Watches, meanwhile, require a certified watchmaker.
The platform also takes enforcement action aimed at cracking down on policy violations, including counterfeits. In the first half of this year, it rejected the applications of 1.4 million prospective sellers that failed to meet Shop standards and more than 70 million product listings before they went live, according to a TikTok Shop safety report released this month. It also removed more than 200,000 “restricted” or prohibited products after they were listed.
Entrupy, which has been working with TikTok since it launched Shop in 2023, sells a device with a microscopic lens that slips over the phone’s camera like an iPhone case. Sellers can then photograph their items’ logos, labels, hardware and other fine details. The New York-based company has trained its AI on reams of data and images of real high-end goods- and the best fakes it can find- that it’s collected for over a decade and continues to update.
After analysing that data, along with other information users input manually, the algorithm makes a judgment about the item’s authenticity. TikTok’s terms of service requires sellers to provide a certificate of authenticity from Entrupy or another approved company within 24 hours of receiving an order to prevent it from being automatically cancelled.
“It is about adding that layer of trust,” said Srinivasan. TikTok and Entrupy declined to share specific figures around sales of luxury goods on the e-commerce service, but claim that they are rising.
TikTok launched the pre-owned luxury category in the UK last year in partnership with several popular British luxury resale businesses and says it opened the category in the US in 2023. Nicolas Waldmann, who leads global governance for TikTok Shop, told Bloomberg this month at the company’s New York office that part of the appeal of second hand luxury is its role in the “circular economy” – a model that emphasises reuse as consumers focus more on sustainability and climate change.
Gen Z is also the key driver of the luxury resale market, analysts say, making TikTok Shop fertile ground. Last year, an executive who ran pre-owned shopping for Douyin, TikTok’s sister app in China, relocated from Shanghai to Seattle to help develop the US business. He now oversees luxury resale and collectibles (like watches) and is expanding the team to focus on live selling, according to LinkedIn.
TikTok Live video streams- which are pushed to TikTokers in their main “For You” feeds- are becoming an increasingly powerful sales tool for luxury resellers looking to engage eager buyers. TikTok recently launched live auctions, enabling vendors to create bidding wars over luxury handbags and other designer goods. Some sellers are turning their auctions into high-energy spectacles, while others are trying to replicate the service one would find at a high-end boutique, with hosts and their prospective customers chatting through comments and direct messages.
On one recent TikTok Live, Los Angeles-based seller Law Divine Luxury showcased goods from Prada and Chanel as offers for other pre-owned handbags, like a $1,699 leather tote from Louis Vuitton, flashed on the bottom of the screen. 17th Street, meanwhile, has brought on a dedicated livestream host to broadcast bags to shoppers for five straight hours daily. The company sold an HAC Birkin through Live for $20,000, and recently started streaming bigger shows on Sundays, where it has occasionally brought in over $30,000 in one day, Sperduto said.
Vintage is trendy, and the growth of pre-owned luxury in social commerce is being partly driven by consumers’ insatiable appetite for older finds that are both hard to come by and better made, said Sperduto. Short of TikTok being banned nationwide, which is looking less likely by the day, she expects demand will only climb.
“It’s going to keep growing tremendously because all of the bags that are brand new right now are obviously going to be vintage one day,” she said, noting that the older Murakami handbags from Louis Vuitton are outselling the new ones. “Right now people are just loving the vintage bags.”
French cosmetics giant L’Oreal said on Wednesday it will set up a beauty tech hub in the south Indian city of Hyderabad with an initial investment of over 35 billion rupees ($383.4 million).
L’Oréal
The hub aims to be a global base for AI-driven beauty innovation, create 2,000 tech jobs through 2030, and speed up the rollout of advanced AI beauty solutions, the company said in a statement.
Nicolas Hieronimus, L’Oreal’s CEO, and the state government of Telangana formalized the partnership at the World Economic Forum, Davos.
Telangana has rapidly emerged as a key investment and technology hub in southern India.
Bilateral trade between India and France stood at $15 billion in 2024, and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and French President Emmanuel Macron have been forging warmer ties.
The two sides have also been working to recast their tax treaty since 2024 to modernize it by adapting global standards on tax transparency, Reuters reported in December.
Swarovski on Tuesday announced the appointment of Sindhu Culas to the role of president, general manager, North America at the Austrian jewelry maker.
Sindhu Culas – Courtesy
Based in the luxury firm’s New York City office, Culas will be responsible for “maximizing the Swarovski physical and digital presence and overall brand affinity in the U.S.,” according to a press release.
“We are thrilled to welcome Sindhu to Swarovski. Her vast leadership experience and passion for the brand make her an exceptional addition to our team,” said Kolja Kiofsky, chief commercial officer, Swarovski.
“With Sindhu guiding our next chapter in North America, we are looking ahead to an exciting future filled with creativity, operational excellence, and meaningful growth under our LuxIgnite strategy.”
A retail veteran with over 25 years of experience across omni‑channel retail and institutional investment management, Culas joins the crystal jewelry maker from G-Star, where she served as CEO of North America at the British denim and apparel brand.
She began her career as a buyer and planner at Macy’s, Talbots, and Lord & Taylor before being promoted to strategy and brand management at Macy’s. Later on, the executive served as senior vendor manager at Amazon and as senior vice president of e‑commerce and strategy for Calvin Klein.
“Watching Swarovski’s brand repositioning and momentum in recent years has been inspiring,” said Culas, in response to her new appointment.
“I’m excited to join this exceptional team, collaborate across the business, and help strengthen our position while accelerating growth throughout North America. It’s a remarkable moment for the brand, and I’m thrilled to contribute to the journey ahead.”
There are stories you simply couldn’t invent. The tale of Bourrienne Paris X, a finalist for the DHL 2025 Award, is one of them. The French shirtmaker for men and women, co-founded in 2017—among others—by two women with entirely different backgrounds, is now entering a phase that balances dynamic expansion with a quest for longevity, projecting growth of over 50% in 2025 and an equally high target for 2026.
Cécile Faucheur is the label’s artistic director – Bourrienne Paris X
The designer behind the Bourrienne Paris X collections is Cécile Faucheur. A former fashion design teacher, pattern cutter and stylist, she is now head of design at the brand she co-founded. Her research at the Musée de la Chemiserie in Argenton-sur-Creuse captivated both her and Charles Beigbeder (who had just taken over the Hôtel de Bourrienne in Paris), prompting them to dedicate a men’s shirting brand to the building.
Historical details and diverse trajectories
For her part, Carine Beigbeder, co-founder and CEO of Bourrienne Paris X, draws on a background that spans finance and entrepreneurship. She previously managed a listed small-cap fund at Financière Arbevel. Her analysis of companies’ business plans and strategies spurred her to take on an operational role—one she now fulfils at Bourrienne Paris X. A luxury brand, or at least on the way to becoming one, the label currently employs around ten people and is attempting to compete with luxury giants such as Hermès in a niche that has, until now, been very narrow: the shirt.
Carine Beigbeder aims to bring longevity to Bourrienne Paris X – Bourrienne Paris X
“The idea was to build a brand inspired by historical details and the shirtmakers of yesteryear. We realised that the men’s wardrobe had lost much of the richness it once had.”
Today, the Bourrienne Paris X wardrobe is rooted in both French stylistic heritage and modern fashion, having opened up to womenswear as early as its second season. This now accounts for more than half of the house’s turnover.
In search of quality materials
“For women, the shirt was a vehicle of emancipation as womenswear became uncorseted and a little freer. It wasn’t necessarily at the same time, but that’s not the point,” explained Beigbeder.
Bourrienne Paris X now goes beyond the shirt and has launched men’s trousers on pre-order, cut from a very heavy Belgian linen, “as if coated with a fine layer of beeswax, which gives it a very new and very innovative look,” in the CEO’s words.
Details play an important role in Cécile Faucheur’s work – Bourrienne Paris X
At Bourrienne Paris X, the linen comes from Belgium, the poplin from Italy, the embroidered trims inspired by the Hôtel de Bourrienne are made by a century-old manufacturer in northern France, the pleating by a Breton artisan, and the mother-of-pearl is sourced from Australia. The shirts, meanwhile, are made in Portuguese and Romanian workshops, and the house is considering other production sites elsewhere in Eastern Europe.
Priority given to digital
Soon to mark its tenth anniversary, Bourrienne Paris X is now in its third year of profitability. Struck by the Covid-19 pandemic after a loss-making start, the brand managed to “keep its head above water,” thanks to digital, which provides sufficient data to respond to its customers’ tastes. The company has self-financed its digital investments and plans to double them in 2026 to accelerate growth, a priority given that its e-commerce site generates over 50% of its sales.
Bourrienne Paris X is largely inspired by the Hôtel de Bourrienne – Hôtel de Bourrienne
Bourrienne Paris X also invests in SEO, and in Google, Pinterest and Meta campaigns tailored to each of the countries where it is sold, namely the United States, England, Switzerland, Canada and Australia. Customs duties, included in the final price across the Atlantic, are no longer an issue for the brand, thanks to the purchasing power of its American customers.
International expansion
With 60% of its sales generated abroad, the label is stocked by a number of department stores, including Le Bon Marché’s men’s department in Paris, as well as Bongénie in Geneva and Zurich, Lane Crawford in Hong Kong, and Isetan, Tomorrowland, United Arrows and Wako in Japan. This is why it is presenting its project to the DHL Prize jury this year.
The brand is a finalist for the DHL 2025 Award – Bourrienne Paris X
The brand remains based at 58 Rue d’Hauteville, opposite the Hôtel of the same name, in the 10th arrondissement of Paris. It’s not unusual for curious customers to be invited to discover the place that inspires the brand with each new collection. The brand’s desire to prioritise digital shapes its approach to welcoming investors, whose most valuable contribution would be their expertise.
For the time being, beyond the brand’s growth, Beigbeder is focused on a mission that is no less important: ensuring that Bourrienne Paris X stands the test of time. A “real challenge” consisting of remaining faithful to the house’s convictions and avoiding, as far as possible, the pull of passing trends.