KEY POINTS
  • Mainland China's share of the global luxury market rose in 2021 as consumers spent more at home, keeping the country on track to become the world's largest luxury goods market by 2025, according to consultancy Bain & Company.
  • However, luxury goods sales were not immune to a slump in Chinese consumer spending in the second half of last year, and Chinese consumer spending on luxury goods worldwide last year remained below pre-pandemic levels, the report said.
  • The Bain analysts expect the growth of mainland China's luxury market to moderate in 2022.
Consumers linger outside a Haikou duty free shop at Riyue Square, Haikou City, Hainan Province, China, on September 2, 2021.

BEIJING — Chinese consumers are spending more on luxury goods at home, even if they can't easily travel abroad due to pandemic-related restrictions, consultancy Bain & Company said in its annual report on the luxury sector.

Sales of personal luxury goods in mainland China rose by 36% to 471 billion yuan ($73.59 billion) in 2021 from the prior year, according to Bain estimates released Thursday. That's more than double the 234 billion yuan in luxury goods spending on the mainland in 2019, before the pandemic.