On one side stands the Silver Generation: affluent, loyal, and still the foundation of global luxury sales. On the other hand, we have Millennials and Gen Z, digital natives with high standards and rapidly changing preferences. Agility Research & Strategy’s latest AFFLUENTIAL™ TrendLens and WealthLens research, conducted with 6,043 affluent and HNW consumers across the US, Europe, and Asia, confirms this transition. Among them, 2,412 were Next Gen (22 to 40) and 3,631 Silver Gen (40-plus), all with incomes over $150,000 and half holding more than $1 million in liquid assets. These insights were pivotal to a keynote speech given by Amrita Banta, Managing Director of Agility Research & Strategy, at this year’s Walpole British Luxury Summit, about the evolution of the UHNW customer.
Same luxury, different language
Next Gen wants trendy, bold, and shareable. Silver Gen seeks craftsmanship, privacy, and legacy. Both have money, but they spend it with radically different intentions. In India and China, over 60% of Next Gen consumers gravitate toward cutting-edge styles and cultural currency. Meanwhile, Italy’s Silver Gen clings to timeless design, and Japan’s elders quietly invest in durability and discretion.
Where the Next Gen seeks emotional resonance and values-based branding (think inclusivity, sustainability, and storytelling), the Silver Gen remains loyal to legacy brands and impeccable service. One group is swayed by influencers and digital buzz; the other by reputation, history, and trusted recommendations.
The spending power shift
In key markets like India, Italy, and the UK, Next Gen is already outspending their elders on luxury goods by as much as 74%. The torch is not being passed, it’s being seized. China stands as an exception, where both generations are neck-and-neck in their appetite for high-end consumption. But here’s the kicker: both generations are going digital.
With 70% of luxury purchases influenced by digital touchpoints, seamless omni-channel experiences and AI personalisation are becoming the norm, not innovation. While Next Gen leads, Silver Gen is not far behind – they’re shopping online, engaging with brand content, and expecting digital convenience with traditional care.
Rethinking wealth and growth
This shift is not only about how people consume, but how they manage their financial futures. Both generations are making strategic moves to protect and grow their wealth by diversifying overseas, de-risking portfolios, and in Southeast Asia, even liquidating assets to capitalize on local opportunities. This isn’t just about consumption, it’s about control.
What does this mean for brands?
It means walking a tightrope with elegance. To stay relevant, luxury brands need a dual approach: crafting stories of heritage and exclusivity for the Silver Gen, while co-creating, disrupting, and emotionally connecting with the Next Gen. This isn’t either/or – it’s and. The future of luxury is hybrid, emotional, and fiercely generational. Ignore one group, and you lose half the market. Get it right, and you unlock the full power of both.
The great luxury shift has already begun. Now the question is: are you ready to speak both languages of wealth?
Our latest research was recently featured in a partner editorial by Walpole, exploring how both Silver and the Next Gen are reshaping the future of luxury—each with their own values, motivations, and spending power.
As brands navigate evolving definitions of status, loyalty, and value, understanding the dual language of wealth has never been more critical.
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Partner Editorial | Silver v. next gen: who’s really shaping the future of luxury?