Skip to main content

Thanks for Visiting!

Register for free to get the full story.

Sign Up
Already have a Placer.ai account? Log In
Article

Expansion Into New Categories Signals Shift for Gap Inc. 

Gap Inc. enters beauty and accessories to boost growth, capture aspirational shoppers, and strengthen brand identity.

By 
Elizabeth Lafontaine
September 30, 2025
Expansion Into New Categories Signals Shift for Gap Inc. 
SHARE
Explore our free tools to get timely insights into key industries
Check out the latest trends for
Key Takeaways
  • Gap Inc. is launching beauty and accessories lines to differentiate itself in a crowded, homogenized apparel market where consumer loyalty is fragile and shoppers chase value.
  • Despite recent headwinds, beauty remains a high-potential category, and location intelligence data suggests that Gap Inc. has a built-in customer base that may be receptive to in-house beauty products.
  • Handbags could position Gap and Old Navy to compete in the value fashion space and capitalize both on the off-price channel’s popularity and on shifts away from logo-heavy luxury accessories.
  • As luxury apparel and accessories see slower traffic growth in 2025, aspirational shoppers may turn to brands like Gap Inc. for affordable, trend-forward alternatives – particularly in handbags and accessories.

Apparel's Identity Crisis

At a time when much of the retail industry looks and feels the same, many retailers are working to cement their brand identity and individuality with consumers, which can help set them apart from their competitors. Finding a competitive advantage can be hard to come by in 2025, as consumers hunt for value wherever they can find it and loyalty to any individual chain is low. This challenge is especially true in the apparel category, where assortments across retail banners have become more similar over time and retailers rely on the same trend forecasting, leading to a lack of newness in the market for shoppers. 

Broadening the Gap Inc. Experience

One option to freshen up merchandising and offer something unique to potential visitors is through category expansion. Creating more opportunities for consumers to engage with different types of products in a single location could improve visit frequency and overall customer satisfaction, and allow the brand's ethos to expand beyond its traditional borders. Gap Inc. recently announced a new initiative in line with this theory; Both Gap & Old Navy will launch beauty lines in 2026 and 2025 respectively. Old Navy is also slated to launch a true collection of handbags

Accessories and beauty are natural product expansion categories for retailers that specialize in fashion; for other apparel brands such as J.Crew, Madewell and French label Sézane, accessories have helped to bolster their business and deepen their relationships with shoppers. Luxury apparel and accessory brands have long intertwined their labels with beauty as well, which has helped to spark the prestige beauty industry. In examining the potential opportunity for both retailers and the expanded categories through the lens of retail visits, it’s clear that the mainstream apparel brands can benefit from creating more opportunities for consumers to engage with different products. 

Beautifying Gap Inc. 

Gap Inc.’s planned launch of beauty lines at both Old Navy and Gap tap into the excitement generated by the beauty industry since the pandemic. Recently, the beauty space has faced more headwinds, with increased market saturation and changing consumer behavior softening demand for the category. 

But beauty still has a lot of potential momentum ahead, with consumers' continued focus on health, wellness and appearance as well as the rising demand for more affordable indulgences and luxuries in the face of a challenging consumer environment. And while traffic to beauty and self care retail has remained relatively flat in 2025 so far compared to 2024, the industry is still lapping exceptionally strong gains from the past few years.

Strong Demand for Beauty Among Gap & Old Navy Shoppers

Gap Inc. has a strong opportunity to bring a fresh perspective to the beauty category. A significant share of Gap and Old Navy shoppers also frequent Ulta, with Old Navy showing the higher overlap (42.2% of Old Navy visitors also visited Ulta between January and August 2025, compared to 38.1% of Gap visitors) – likely one reason the beauty line will debut there first. The audience crossover between Gap Inc.'s leading banners and Ulta highlights clear demand for beauty among Gap Inc.'s customer base and opens the door for the company's apparel brands to capture a portion of that spend over time. 

Importantly, both Ulta and Sephora have leaned into expanding their private-label offerings, reflecting consumers’ growing comfort with trying beauty products outside of traditional beauty brands. That shift suggests shoppers may also be willing to embrace beauty lines from retailers like Gap and Old Navy, giving Gap Inc. a more favorable entry point into the category.

Gap Inc.’s most recent release about the project mentioned adding beauty consultants to the Old Navy stores during this fall’s rollout of the category. Dedicated product knowledge and expertise is incredibly important in the beauty space, and visitors tend to stay longer to browse and learn. If Old Navy could capture even a few extra minutes of shoppers’ attention, conversion and dwell times could rise during the remainder of 2025.

Handbags Might Hold the Key to Gap Inc.’s Long Term Growth

Similar to the brands’ expansion into beauty, a new push into the accessories category might just be what Gap Inc. needs to further cement itself as a steward of American fashion. Accessories, including handbags, have had a challenging few years in the post-pandemic period. The category has become more fragmented, and consumers have shown an inclination for fewer logos and branded products. And, the Gap brand has already tested the strategy earlier this year with its collaboration with travel brand Beis. 

Old Navy is the first brand to release a robust handbag offering, under the creative direction of Zac Posen – and there is evidence to suggest that handbags might be a great new expansion for the brand. Looking at Old Navy and Gap's visitor habits shows that there are high levels of cross-visitation with off-price retailers, including T.J.Maxx, Marshall’s and Ross Dress For Less. 

The off-price channel has had the benefit of being able to curate an assortment of designer and branded handbags at value-driven price points, which has made it more difficult for other retailers to compete. Old Navy focusing on creating products that are value-driven but also fashion forward might prove them to be a worthy adversary in the value apparel space. 

But the data also highlights that Gap may hold an even stronger opportunity in accessories.. The chain hasn’t launched its renewed accessories program, but the company recently announced hires hailing from leading accessories giants that certainly can help the brand shape its handbag identity. For consumers who are focused on trend-right styles at a more accessible price point, Gap may be able to find its footing, especially against the backdrop of economic headwinds for many American consumers. 

Opportunity from Luxury Shoppers

Shoppers may also be looking for alternatives to luxury accessory brands over the next few years – especially those consumers who are considered more aspirational, or only purchase luxury goods occasionally due to their levels of discretionary spending. Foot traffic to luxury apparel and accessories brands shows a slowdown in luxury apparel's offline growth throughout 2025, and insights show that the visits are becoming more consolidated around wealthier shoppers. 

Strategic Pivot From Apparel to Lifestyle? 

Gap Inc.’s expansion into beauty and accessories can help the company drive differentiation in a retail environment where sameness dominates. By entering categories that naturally complement fashion, Gap Inc. has an opportunity to extend its brand identity beyond apparel, deepen customer engagement, and capture wallet share from both loyal shoppers and those trading down from luxury.

Success will hinge on execution: delivering value-driven yet fashion-forward products, ensuring knowledgeable in-store experiences, and crafting compelling brand storytelling. If Gap Inc. can leverage these new categories effectively, its beauty and accessories strategy could not only boost near-term traffic and sales but also lay the foundation for sustainable long-term growth in a highly competitive market.

Shifts away from designer handbags, both in the luxury and mid-tier segments, may create the perfect opportunity for Gap to stake its claim. The industry is still lacking affordable, fashion driven accessories that can appeal to a wide array of consumers. If the merchandising and brand storytelling can create a compelling reason to buy for shoppers, the brand might be able to extend the reinvention that has been working for the retailer throughout 2025. 

Placer.ai leverages a panel of tens of millions of devices and utilizes machine learning to make estimations for visits to locations across the US. The data is trusted by thousands of industry leaders who leverage Placer.ai for insights into foot traffic, demographic breakdowns, retail sale predictions, migration trends, site selection, and more.

Learn how downtown regions across US cities are measuring up with our free tools.
Check out the latest trends for

Related Topics

Gap, Old Navy
Stay Anchored: Subscribe to Insider & Unlock more  Insights
Subscribe
SHARE
Get 3 brand & industry
breakdowns every week
Subscribe to the newsletter
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
Recent Publications
INSIDER
Report
Retail Trends to Watch in 2026
Explore how value, luxury, and authenticity will define 2026 retail — and how brands are winning across digital, dining, and suburban markets.
Placer Research
November 14, 2025
Article
Will Upscale Dining Lead the Holiday Season Again?
Holiday dining patterns highlight upscale and fine-dining restaurants as the strongest seasonal performers, with coffee, casual dining, and eatertainment showing targeted lifts. Emerging YoY trends point to premium full-service concepts leading demand again this December.
Bracha Arnold & Lila Margalit
December 4, 2025
4 minutes
Article
Did Fewer Franchise Films Limit Thanksgiving’s Movie Theater Lift?
Thanksgiving brought a healthy rise in movie theater traffic while still trailing 2024’s exceptional highs. The gap points to a growing reality in the theatrical space: In 2025, audiences show up strongest when franchises – and preferably, multiple franchises at once – lead the way.
Shira Petrack
December 3, 2025
3 minutes
Recent Publications
INSIDER
Report
Retail Trends to Watch in 2026
Explore how value, luxury, and authenticity will define 2026 retail — and how brands are winning across digital, dining, and suburban markets.
Placer Research
November 14, 2025
Article
Will Upscale Dining Lead the Holiday Season Again?
Holiday dining patterns highlight upscale and fine-dining restaurants as the strongest seasonal performers, with coffee, casual dining, and eatertainment showing targeted lifts. Emerging YoY trends point to premium full-service concepts leading demand again this December.
Bracha Arnold & Lila Margalit
December 4, 2025
4 minutes
Article
Did Fewer Franchise Films Limit Thanksgiving’s Movie Theater Lift?
Thanksgiving brought a healthy rise in movie theater traffic while still trailing 2024’s exceptional highs. The gap points to a growing reality in the theatrical space: In 2025, audiences show up strongest when franchises – and preferably, multiple franchises at once – lead the way.
Shira Petrack
December 3, 2025
3 minutes
INSIDER
Stay Anchored: Subscribe to Insider & Unlock more Foot Traffic Insights
Gain insider insights with our in-depth analytics crafted by industry experts
— giving you the knowledge and edge to stay ahead.
Subscribe
Is lululemon Poised for a Holiday Rebound?
Placer.ai November 2025 Mall Index: Early Strength Offsets a Softer Black Friday
Four Black Friday Signals for the 2025 Holiday Season 
Will Upscale Dining Lead the Holiday Season Again?
Did Fewer Franchise Films Limit Thanksgiving’s Movie Theater Lift?
Darden Heads Into Holiday Season With Strong Visit Trends
How Did Grocery Stores Perform This Turkey Wednesday?
Short Visits Surge as Kroger Bets on Store-Based Fulfillment
How Do Holiday Shopping Patterns Differ for Off-Price and Traditional Apparel?
Dollar Tree and Dollar General Thrive Amid Inflation Fatigue
DICK's Sporting Goods Riding Positive Visit Trend into the Holidays
October 2025 Placer.ai Office Index: Continued Momentum
Red Cup Day 2025 Outperforms Last Year With Bigger Crowds Than Bearista
Gap and Urban Outfitters See Visit Increases in Q3
Back to the Future of Retail: Why Technology Is Bringing Us Full Circle
Department Stores Ahead of the Holidays 
Superstores and Warehouse Clubs Find Early Holiday Momentum
Lowe’s and The Home Depot See the Future of Home Improvement in the Next Generation
TJX, Burlington, and Ross Gear Up for a Blockbuster Holiday Season
Is Turkey Wednesday the Only Big Day for Grocers?
Placer.ai October 2025 Mall Index: Shoppers Return to Malls
How Starbucks Proved That Free Isn’t Everything
Denny’s Goes Private: What’s Next for America’s Diner
Three Retailers to Watch Ahead of the Holidays
Serving Those Who Served: How Restaurants Honor Veterans Day
High-Street Retail Poised for Another Holiday Rush
Offline Growth Drives Engagement for Warby Parker
Grocery Outlet Bargain Market & WinCo Still Thriving Amidst Inflation Fatigue
Does CAVA Still Have Growth Potential?
Catching Up With 2021’s Dining IPOs
Wendy’s Bets on Fewer, Bigger Deals in Q3 2025
Yum! & RBI: QSR in Q3 2025
Shake Shack & Wingstop: Navigating Q3 Waters
Sips Of Success: Coffee in Q3 2025
Texas Roadhouse and Chili’s: Strong Q3 Traffic and a Secret Sauce of High-Income Diners
October Promotions Aimed to Capture Demand From Value-Seeking Consumers In-Store and Online
Retail Outlook: A Tale of Two Consumers Heading into Holiday 2025
McDonald’s and Chipotle Face Headwinds in Q3 2025
Manufacturing Foot Traffic Signals Continued Caution
September 2025 Placer.ai Office Index: A Fall Resurgence
Placer.ai September 2025 Mall Index: Summer Slowdown Extends Into Fall
Summer Surge for Sturgis as Motorcycles Vroom En Masse
K-Beauty & Personalization Drive Beauty Traffic 
All the Things I Think I Think About Retail Over the Last Quarter: Amazon, Walmart & Why the Box May Soon Be on the Other Porch
The Geography of BevAlc Retail Growth
The Comeback Blueprint for Kirkland’s and Bed Bath & Beyond
Distinct Playbooks Driving Growth in Premium Home Retail
Do QSR Value Promotions Still Resonate With Consumers?
Who’s Losing Grocery Share to Dollar General – and What Consumer Habit Is Driving Its Growth?
Exploring Barnes & Noble’s Recent Acquisitions 
3 Factors Driving Dillard’s Department Store Success
Expansion Into New Categories Signals Shift for Gap Inc. 
Beauty and Fitness Foot Traffic: From Post-Pandemic Correction to New Normal
Hobby Lobby and Michaels Defy Discretionary Spending Headwinds
Black Rock Coffee's Post-IPO Growth Potential  
How Asian Grocers Are Redefining the Grocery Experience
Affluent Shoppers Sustain Luxury, But Growth Potential May Be Limited
Costco Early Openings Reshape Store Traffic Patterns
Q2 2025 Restaurant Recap: A Cautious Consumer Shapes Dining Trends 
Is Costco’s Momentum Built to Last?
The US Open: A Comparison of Visitors to Fan Week and the Main Draw
Republic Square’s Summer Programming Proves to be a Hit
Darden Restaurants’ Portfolio Powers Through Consumer Headwinds
Are Cracks in Consumer Resilience Beginning to Show? 
Placer.ai Manufacturing Index: Traffic Dips in August
Will Delayed Car Purchases Fuel a Surge in Aftermarket Maintenance?
August 2025 Placer.ai Office Index: An End-of-Summer Slump? 
What Are the Fast-Growing QSR Categories in 2025?
Placer.ai August 2025 Mall Index: Is Consumer Caution Weighing on Mall Performance? 
Subscriptions Drive Eatertainment Visits for Topgolf, Dave & Buster’s, and Chuck E. Cheese 
Has Starbucks' Pumpkin Spice Latte Retained Its Appeal in 2025? 
Thrift Store Visit Growth Outpaces Apparel as Tariffs Loom
America’s Parks Are Calling: Later, Longer, Busier
How Economic Realities Are Redefining Vegas Tourism
Nordstrom Anniversary Sale: An Event that Continues to Find Success Amid Reinvention
Manufacturing Visits Drop Post-Tariff Implementation
Semi-Annual Sale Drives Visit Surge For Bath & Body Works 
Ulta's Post-Target Future Looks Strong
Where Can Dollar General & Dollar Tree Still Expand? 
Five Below & Ollie's Traffic Signals Growth for Value Retail
Gap Inc. Q2 2025: Old Navy Leads Foot Traffic Gains as Middle-Income Shoppers Return
Best Buy H1 2025 Traffic Data Suggests a Recovery Is Underway
How Athletic Retailers are Weathering the Storm in Q2 2025. 
Expansions Drive Visit Gains for Wholesale Clubs
Discretionary Slowdown Impacts Kohl's & Macy's Mid-Market Brands
Value-Driven Shoppers Still Fueling Off-Price Growth at Burlington, Ross, & Citi Trends
Home Depot & Lowe's: Navigating Challenges & Finding Growth in 2025
Lollapalooza Supercharges Summer Tourism in Chicago
What Walmart and Target's Q2 2025 Traffic Reveals About Future Performance
TJX Q2 2025 Visit Data Points to Strong Performance
The Summer Slowdown: Why Consumers Are Pumping the Brakes on Travel
Placer.ai Office Index: July 2025
Placer.ai Mall Index: July 2025
Retail’s Balancing Act: What the First Half of 2025 Reveals About Evolving Consumer Priorities
Din Tai Fung: Sky High Average-Unit-Volume is a Recipe for Success
Bracing for Impact: July's Manufacturing Surge Reveals Tariff Anxiety
How EAT, TXRH & BLMN Are Navigating the Q2 2025 Dining Market
Life Time & Planet Fitness Q2 2025 Visit Recap
Growth vs. Optimization: A Q2 2025 Analysis of First Watch, Denny's, & Dine Brands
Scaling Fast-Casual: CAVA's Depth vs. Sweetgreen's Breadth in Q2 2025