{"id":417,"date":"2025-05-25T15:00:34","date_gmt":"2025-05-25T15:00:34","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/birthdayvoucher.com\/?p=417"},"modified":"2025-07-13T14:53:47","modified_gmt":"2025-07-13T14:53:47","slug":"savers-is-a-thrift-store-and-were-in-a-cost-of-living-crisis-so-why-is-the-us-chain-dividing-australian-shoppers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/birthdayvoucher.com\/index.php\/2025\/05\/25\/savers-is-a-thrift-store-and-were-in-a-cost-of-living-crisis-so-why-is-the-us-chain-dividing-australian-shoppers\/","title":{"rendered":"Savers is a thrift store \u2013 and we\u2019re in a cost-of-living crisis. So why is the US chain dividing Australian shoppers?"},"content":{"rendered":"
Thrifting was made for times like these.<\/p>\n
A prolonged period of high living costs and consumer pushback against the excesses of fast fashion has led to soaring interest in buying secondhand clothes and pre-owned homewares.<\/p>\n
Big business is tapping into the trend, drawing mixed reactions from thrifters accustomed to spending their money at charitable op shops.<\/p>\n
Late last year, the private equity-backed Savers, a firm listed in the US, opened a store on Oxford Street, one of Sydney\u2019s primary shopping precincts. Months earlier, it had unveiled a sprawling superstore in the city\u2019s west.<\/p>\n In the next few months, it plans to open stores in Sydney\u2019s inner west on the bustling Parramatta Road, and in the city\u2019s outskirts in Marsden Park.<\/p>\n The Sydney expansion builds on the outlet\u2019s long-term presence in Melbourne and Adelaide.<\/p>\n Savers, the biggest for-profit thrift retailer in North America, has found financial favour in Australia, with quarterly sales jumping to US$30.7m in the March quarter, up almost 12% from a year earlier.<\/p>\n Sign up for Guardian Australia\u2019s breaking news email<\/a><\/strong><\/p>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n Overall, the company generated US$1.54bn in sales in 2024 through its network of more than 350 stores, mainly located in the US and Canada.<\/p>\n Caitie Pridmore, <\/strong>a longtime op shopping enthusiast, says she is more inclined to shop at charity-run op shops than Savers, but any arguments against for-profit thrift stores should be nuanced.<\/p>\n \u201cIt comes down to \u2026 the intention as the consumer, and then the intention as the retailer of the op shop,\u201d she says.<\/p>\n \u201cWith Savers, it\u2019s an interesting one. I feel less compelled to shop there.\u201d<\/p>\n Pridmore says while there is a charitable element to the way Savers operates, she prefers to spend her money in op shops where she knows her contributions are going to have \u201cmore of an impact on the community\u201d.<\/p>\n For-profit thrift retailers tend to do well in markets where customers are conscious about their spending, but not under so much financial pressure that they stop buying altogether.<\/p>\n This is representative of conditions in Australia, where households are grappling with cost-of-living pressures, but most people have a job, with unemployment at a low level of 4.1%.<\/p>\n Michael Fisher, the managing director at Savers Australia, said in a statement that secondhand shopping served as a meaningful and sustainable way for consumers to stretch their dollars in the current economic climate.<\/p>\n \u201cWe are competitively positioned in the retail sector with a hyperlocal model, an average price per item of less than $10, and a fresh assortment that provides exceptional value to consumers,\u201d Fisher said.<\/p>\n The Savers model relies on donations of clothes and small household items to its charitable partners, including Red Nose, Wounds Australia and Diabetes Victoria, which are either collected by the not-for-profits or through donation centres attached to the stores.<\/p>\n Savers then pays the charities for those goods.<\/p>\n The Wounds Australia chief executive, Jeff Antcliff, said the organisation had been \u201cthrilled with the exposure\u201d the partnership had brought and that the relationship provided revenue to support the organisation\u2019s work in advocating for those living with chronic wounds.<\/p>\n Savers\u2019 charitable partners, including Wounds Australia, said the rates paid by Savers were confidential.<\/p>\n In the US, Savers has faced questions over the transparency of its relationships with nonprofit partners, and the rates it pays.<\/p>\n\n
For-profit model<\/h2>\n