Resort Wear Market in India 2026: Statistics, Demand Drivers, and Buyer Trends

Resort wear sits at the intersection of three of India's fastest-growing consumer markets: the US$ 116 billion domestic apparel sector, the booming destination tourism economy, and the structurally exploding destination-wedding category. This report compiles the available 2026 data on each, mapping how they converge into demand for kaftans, tunics, co-ord sets, dresses, and occasion-led leisure wear — and what that means for the buyer, the brand, and the channel.

Key findings

  • India's apparel market is projected to reach US$ 146.3 billion by 2032, expanding at 4.0% CAGR from US$ 106.9 billion in 2023.[2]
  • Goa hit a record 10.8 million tourist arrivals in 2025, Kerala 25.9 million — both all-time highs, both anchoring beach and backwater resort wear demand.[4]
  • India's destination wedding market is forecast at 25.5% CAGR through 2032, reaching US$ 8.29 billion — the single largest multi-look apparel demand engine in the country.[7]
  • Online fashion retail in India is growing at 21–24% CAGR, far outpacing the broader 4% apparel growth and reshaping how resort wear is discovered and purchased.[10]
  • The international online ethnic apparel market is estimated at US$ 2 billion and growing 25–30% annually, anchored by India's 35.4 million-strong global diaspora.[14]
  • Domestic tourists generated ₹15.5 trillion (US$ 185.6 billion) in visitor spending in 2024 — the demand pool resort wear directly serves.[12]

1. Market overview and definition

Resort wear in the Indian context refers to apparel built for two adjacent use cases: leisure travel to coastal, hill, and heritage destinations, and multi-day celebration events — the destination wedding, the wellness retreat, the festival weekend, the family pilgrimage to Goa or Kerala or the Andamans. The category is silhouette-led rather than fabric-led: kaftans, tunics, dresses, co-ord sets, jumpsuits, palazzos, and skirts dominate, with fabrics ranging from cotton and linen for daywear to silk, georgette, and embellished crepes for occasions.

Most Indian apparel market reports do not break out resort wear as a discrete sub-segment. The category is instead distributed across "Indo-Western," "Western women's wear," "occasion wear," and "ethnic fusion" classifications — fragmenting visibility but not demand. To size the market, analysts triangulate from three measurable adjacencies: (1) the broader apparel market, (2) domestic tourism volumes and spend, and (3) the destination-wedding category, which is the most direct demand multiplier.

US$ 116.6BIndia apparel market size, 2025[3]
US$ 146.3BIndia apparel market projection, 2032[2]
4.0%CAGR, India apparel 2023–2032[2]
21–24%CAGR, India online fashion retail[10]

2. India's broader apparel market context

India's apparel market reached US$ 116.6 billion in 2025[3] and is projected to grow to US$ 146.3 billion by 2032 at a 4.0% CAGR.[2] The fashion industry as a whole is on track toward US$ 190 billion by 2026 when accessories, footwear, and adjacent categories are added.[1] Within this broader frame, women's wear represents the larger half of the market, and the Indo-Western and Western segments — where most resort wear lives — are growing materially faster than traditional ethnic.

India apparel market: US$ 106.9 billion (2023) projected to US$ 146.3 billion (2032), 4.0% CAGR.[2]

India apparel market size, US$ billion
Year Market size (US$B)
2023 106.9
2025 116.6
2028 128.5
2032 146.3

Three structural shifts inside this market matter directly for resort wear:

  • Online channel acceleration. Online fashion retail is projected to compound at 21–24% through 2030.[10][11] Resort wear over-indexes here — most resort wear purchases are research-led and look-driven, both online-native behaviours.
  • Tier-2 and tier-3 demand expansion. Disposable income gains in tier-2 cities are translating into discretionary apparel spend, with destination tourism (Goa, Kerala, Rajasthan) often the trigger purchase.
  • Premium and luxury segments outgrowing mass. The destination-wedding-driven luxury fashion segment is one of the fastest-growing categories within Indian apparel.

3. Domestic tourism: the primary demand engine

Resort wear demand is mathematically tied to leisure travel volume. India recorded over 3.03 billion domestic tourist visits in the most recent reporting period[9], and domestic tourism contributes 88% of total tourism spending in the country.[6]

The two destinations most directly correlated with resort wear demand both broke records in 2025:

10.8MGoa tourist arrivals, 2025 — record high[4]
25.9MKerala tourist arrivals, 2025 — record high[5]
+12.5%Kerala domestic visitor growth YoY 2025[5]
₹15.5TDomestic visitor spending, India, 2024[12]

Tourist arrivals 2025 by destination state — Goa, Kerala records both broken in 2025.[4]

2025 tourist arrivals by Indian state, millions
State Domestic (M) Foreign (M)
Kerala 25.06 0.82
Goa 10.28 0.52

Goa's 2025 figure of 10.8 million tourist arrivals, including 10.3 million domestic, surpassed both 2024 and pre-Covid peaks for the domestic segment.[4] Kerala's 25.9 million includes 25.1 million domestic visitors — a 12.5% year-on-year increase and 36.3% above pre-pandemic 2019.[5] Foreign visitor arrivals at both destinations remain 30–40% below pre-Covid peaks, meaning the entire growth story in 2025 is domestic-driven.

"India is finally vacationing inside India. The wardrobe shift that comes with that — from purely ethnic to a more fluid resort vocabulary — is the most interesting consumer change of the decade for our category."— Ramola Bachchan, Founder, First Resort

4. Destination weddings: the multi-look multiplier

If domestic tourism is the volume driver, destination weddings are the value multiplier. India's destination wedding market is forecast to grow from US$ 2.66 billion in 2025 to US$ 8.29 billion by 2032 — a 25.5% CAGR, the highest growth rate of any major Indian apparel demand category.[7]

India destination wedding market: US$ 2.66B (2025) to US$ 8.29B (2032), 25.5% CAGR.[7]

Destination wedding market projection, US$ billion
Year Market size (US$B)
2025 2.66
2027 4.18
2030 6.62
2032 8.29

The structural mathematics: an average Indian destination wedding runs 2–4 days with 4–7 distinct events (sangeet, mehendi, haldi, beach/temple ceremony, reception). Each guest brings that many looks. With 3.5 million weddings concentrated in the November–January peak season[9] and total wedding spend during that window estimated at US$ 51.2 billion, even modest per-event apparel spend produces enormous category demand.

The destination wedding context is also where resort wear and occasion wear converge: the same kaftan or co-ord can serve a beach mehendi, a daytime sangeet, or a holiday family lunch. This category fluidity is one reason why the broader Indo-Western silhouette family has outgrown narrowly-defined "western dresses" or "ethnic kurta sets" alone.

For the full destination-wedding analysis — geographies, average spend per wedding, guest counts, vendor categories — see our companion report: Destination Weddings in India 2026.[18]

5. Category share — kaftans, tunics, co-ords, dresses

While market reports do not publish granular share data for sub-categories of Indian resort wear, the available signals from major retailer collections, e-commerce category management, and search trend data converge on a clear hierarchy:

  • Kaftans and tunics: the volume leaders. Versatile across leisure and occasion contexts, broad size compatibility, and the silhouette most associated with the modern Indian resort look. Listed as a top-priority category by every major Indian fusion-fashion retailer in 2026.
  • Co-ord sets: the fastest-growing online sub-category by sales velocity. Particularly strong with NRI buyers shopping for India trips — co-ords solve the "complete look" problem in a single purchase.
  • Pre-stitched dresses: taking material share from custom-tailored alternatives. Speed and consistency advantage for last-minute travel purchases — the dominant consumer pattern.
  • Maxi skirts and palazzo sets: entrenched in the category but plateaued in growth, often paired as a second piece rather than the lead garment.
  • Lehengas and saree gowns styled for resort contexts: a small but high-AOV sub-segment, particularly for beach weddings and pool-side cocktail events.

Fabric-side, the resort wear category leans materially toward cotton, linen, georgette, crepe, and lightweight silks — driven by the climate of the destinations the category serves (Goa, Kerala, Rajasthan, Andamans).[14]

6. Online retail: the structural channel

India's online apparel market is on track for US$ 63 billion by 2030 at a 24% CAGR from 2023.[11] The broader apparel market grows at 4%; online apparel grows at six times that rate. Resort wear over-indexes within online fashion for several specific reasons:

24%CAGR, India online apparel 2023–2030[11]
US$ 63BIndia online apparel market projection, 2030[11]
25–30%YoY growth, international online ethnic apparel[14]
  • Research-led purchase. Resort wear buyers research destinations and shop wardrobes online weeks before travel — a behaviour that natively favours e-commerce over walk-in retail.
  • Look-driven discovery. Instagram, Pinterest, and editorial-style PDPs deliver "complete look" inspiration that brick-and-mortar struggles to replicate.
  • Speed and certainty. Same-week delivery and clear return policies de-risk last-minute travel buys, particularly during wedding season.
  • Scale of catalogue. A typical Indian fusion fashion online retailer carries 1,000–5,000 active SKUs; the average flagship store carries 200–500. The category breadth is unreplicable offline.

7. The NRI and international segment

India hosts the world's largest diaspora at 35.4 million people of Indian origin abroad, with the five largest concentrations in the United States (5.4 million), United Arab Emirates (3.6 million), Canada (2.87 million), Saudi Arabia, and the United Kingdom (1.86 million).[1] The international online ethnic apparel market is estimated at US$ 2 billion and growing at 25–30% annually[14] — anchored almost entirely by this diaspora demand.

For the Indian resort wear category specifically, NRI demand peaks around three predictable windows: festival season (Diwali, Eid), the November–January wedding cluster, and family India trips that bring the diaspora back into Indian destinations directly. The deeper diaspora analysis is the subject of our companion report: NRI Indian Fashion Shopping in 2026.

8. Buyer behaviour and discovery patterns

The modern Indian resort wear buyer follows a predictable research-and-purchase pattern:

  • Trip or event triggers the purchase. A booked Goa trip, an invited destination wedding, a planned wellness retreat — the wardrobe build follows the calendar event, typically 2–6 weeks ahead.
  • Discovery is social-first. Instagram is the dominant inspiration platform; saved posts and "look" boards drive conversion intent. Pinterest is heavier in pre-wedding and trousseau research.
  • Reviews and try-on videos influence conversion. User-generated content from real-body try-ons (especially Reels) carries more weight than studio editorial.
  • WhatsApp and chat consultations are common. For trousseau, destination wedding wardrobes, and high-AOV pieces, buyers frequently engage with brand consultants directly before checkout.
  • Multi-look, single-checkout pattern. The dominant cart pattern is 3–5 items in one transaction, often spanning a co-ord set, a kaftan, and a dress — assembling a multi-day capsule rather than buying one piece.

9. Size inclusivity and the modern resort wear buyer

Size inclusivity is increasingly a structural advantage rather than a marketing claim. Three reasons:

  • Destination weddings put every body type in the same multi-day, photo-rich event. Brands offering true XS to 6XL/8XL coverage capture demand that traditional designer labels (often capped at L or XL) cede to mass-market alternatives.
  • Plus-size resort wear is one of the fastest-growing online sub-segments. Search volume for "plus size kaftan," "plus size co-ord set," and "size XXL Indian dress" has grown materially over the past two years, with conversion rates that match or exceed standard-size SKUs.
  • Diaspora demand skews toward inclusive sizing. NRI buyers in the US, UK, and Canada often have size profiles outside the standard Indian retail bell curve, making true-to-fit XS-8XL ranges materially more important for cross-border conversion.

10. 2026–2030 outlook

The aggregate signal from 2025 data and 2026 forecasts points to four convergent expansions for Indian resort wear:

  1. Volume expansion via destination tourism. Goa and Kerala hit records in 2025; growth is projected to continue with the broader hospitality industry forecasting record RevPAR through 2026.[6]
  2. Value expansion via destination weddings. 25.5% CAGR through 2032 makes this the fastest-growing demand engine.[7]
  3. Channel expansion via online. 21–24% CAGR through 2030 will continue rebalancing the category away from offline.[11]
  4. Geographic expansion via the diaspora. 35.4 million NRIs and PIOs globally, with the international online ethnic apparel market growing 25–30% annually.[14]

The intersection of all four — a domestic Indian online resort wear catalogue accessible to NRIs, anchored on destination wedding and leisure travel use cases — is structurally the highest-growth sub-segment of Indian fashion in the rest of the decade.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the size of the resort wear market in India?

Resort wear is a sub-category within India's broader apparel market, which was valued at approximately US$ 116.6 billion in 2025 and projected to reach US$ 146.3 billion by 2032. While most market reports do not break out resort wear as a discrete segment, demand is anchored to two large adjacent markets: India's domestic tourism economy (₹15.5 trillion / US$ 185.6 billion in visitor spending in 2024) and India's destination wedding market (US$ 2.66 billion in 2025, projected to US$ 8.29 billion by 2032).

What's driving demand for resort wear in India?

Three converging trends. First, domestic leisure tourism: Goa hit a record 10.8 million visitors in 2025, Kerala 25.9 million — both record years. Second, destination weddings: 25.5% projected CAGR through 2032 — guests need 4–7 looks per multi-day event. Third, online fashion retail growth: India's online apparel market is on track for US$ 63 billion by 2030 at 24% CAGR, expanding category access far beyond metros.

Is resort wear the same as Indo-Western fashion?

Significant overlap, but not identical. Indo-Western fashion is the broader stylistic category (silhouettes that fuse Indian craft and Western tailoring). Resort wear is a use-case category — clothing built for leisure travel, beach/pool destinations, and multi-day celebration events. Most modern Indian resort wear sits within Indo-Western design vocabulary (kaftans, tunics, co-ords, dresses) but the category also includes pure Western (maxi dresses, jumpsuits) and occasion-specific Indian (lehengas styled for beach weddings).

What categories are growing fastest in Indian resort wear?

Kaftans and tunics lead the category by volume — versatile across leisure and occasion contexts, suitable for the full size spectrum. Co-ord sets are growing fastest YoY in online sales, particularly among NRI buyers shopping for India trips. Pre-stitched and ready-to-wear dresses are taking share from custom-tailored alternatives because of the speed and consistency advantage for last-minute travel purchases.

Which Indian destinations drive the most resort wear demand?

Goa (10.8M tourists in 2025) and Kerala (25.9M) are the volume leaders for beach/coastal resort wear. Rajasthan dominates wedding tourism — Udaipur, Jaipur, and Jodhpur are the top wedding destinations and drive demand for occasion-led resort wear. Himachal Pradesh and Uttarakhand pull a different profile (mountain resort wear — pashmina, layered looks). Andamans, Lakshadweep, and the Maldives (despite being international) round out the premium segment.

How big is the NRI market for Indian resort wear?

India has the world's largest diaspora at 35.4 million people. The five biggest NRI populations — USA (5.4M), UAE (3.6M), Canada (2.87M), UK (1.86M), and Saudi Arabia — generate a meaningful cross-border demand for resort and occasion wear, particularly during family India trips, festivals, and destination weddings. The international online ethnic apparel market is estimated at US$ 2 billion and growing 25–30% annually.

Is resort wear seasonal in India?

Less seasonal than most apparel categories. Peak demand windows are November–January (winter wedding season + holiday travel) and April–June (summer beach destinations and pre-monsoon getaways). However, year-round demand is supported by the destination wedding calendar (now spread across most months) and consistent domestic tourism flows.

What role does e-commerce play in resort wear distribution?

Decisive. India's online fashion retail market is projected at 21–24% CAGR through 2030, far outpacing the offline apparel category at ~4%. For resort wear specifically, e-commerce is structurally favoured: buyers research destinations and shop wardrobes online weeks before travel, often need express shipping for late-decision events, and prefer to compare full-look co-ords across brands — all online-native behaviours.

How does the Indian wedding-tourism overlap affect resort wear?

It's the single largest demand multiplier. India's destination wedding market alone is projected from US$ 2.66 billion (2025) to US$ 8.29 billion (2032). The average Indian destination wedding runs 2–4 days with 4–7 distinct events (sangeet, mehendi, haldi, beach ceremony, reception). Each guest needs that many looks. With 3.5 million weddings clustered in November–January, the category benefits from concentrated, predictable, multi-look demand.

Where do international tourists fit into Indian resort wear demand?

Currently a small but premium-skewing segment. International tourist arrivals are still 30–40% below pre-Covid peaks (Goa's foreign visitors hit 5.18 lakh in 2025 vs the 8.9 lakh pre-pandemic high). Where they do shop, foreign tourists tend to buy higher-AOV designer pieces with takeaway value — embellished kaftans, pashminas, statement co-ords. Domestic tourism contributes 88% of total tourism spending; resort wear demand follows the same skew.

What size range matters for the Indian resort wear buyer?

Size inclusivity is increasingly non-negotiable. The destination wedding context puts every size profile in the same multi-day photo-rich event, raising the stakes for fit and silhouette across the full range. Brands offering XS to 6XL/8XL capture demand that traditional designer labels (often capped at L or XL) cede. Plus-size resort wear is one of the fastest-growing sub-segments in online Indian fashion.

How do resort wear shoppers in India research and buy?

Online-first, social-discovery driven. Instagram and Pinterest are primary discovery channels — consumers shop "looks" rather than individual items. Reviews and try-on videos influence conversion. WhatsApp consultations are common for bridal trousseau and destination wedding wardrobes. Same-week delivery is a growing expectation, particularly during wedding season — brands with multi-warehouse fulfilment have a structural advantage.

For deeper data on destination weddings specifically (geographies, vendor mix, average spend per event), see our companion reports:

For shoppers building a wardrobe: explore our designer kaftans, co-ord sets, dresses, and tunics collections.

Methodology. This report compiles published 2024–2026 data from government tourism authorities (Goa Department of Tourism, Kerala Tourism), industry bodies (IBEF, India Brand Equity Foundation), market research firms (Markntel Advisors, Technavio, IMARC Group, Expert Market Research, Market Research Future), and trade publications (Business Today, Travel And Tour World, Phocuswright). Where market reports use overlapping definitions or different reporting periods, we have used the most recent available figure with explicit citation. Resort wear is treated as a distributed sub-category across "Indo-Western," "Western women's wear," and "occasion wear" classifications since most published reports do not break it out as a discrete segment. Domestic tourism and destination wedding data are used as the primary demand-side proxies. Sources are footnoted inline and listed in full at the end. No internal First Resort sales data is included in this report.
About First Resort by Ramola Bachchan. First Resort by Ramola Bachchan is a designer label specialising in resort and occasion wear for women — kaftans, tunics, dresses, co-ord sets, and silhouettes built for Indian destination travel and celebration. Sizes XS to 8XL, ships globally from India. Visit firstresort.in.

Related research: Destination Weddings in India 2026 · NRI Indian Fashion Shopping in 2026

Sources

  1. IBEF. India Brand Equity Foundation — India's Apparel Market Growth: Key Trends 2025. View source
  2. Market Research Future. India Apparel Market Size, Share Forecast 2035. View source
  3. Expert Market Research. India Clothing Market Size, Share & Growth Report 2035. View source
  4. Goa Department of Tourism. Goa breaks travel records with 1 crore domestic visitors in 2025. View source
  5. Kerala Tourism. Kerala makes massive surge in tourist visits in 2025. View source
  6. Travel And Tour World. Indian Hospitality Industry Set for Growth in 2026: Domestic Leisure, MICE, Weddings. View source
  7. Markntel Advisors. India Destination Wedding Market Report by 2032. View source
  8. Phocuswright. Domestic tourism driving surge in India travel market. View source
  9. Statista. Domestic tourism in India — statistics & facts. View source
  10. Technavio. India Online Fashion Retail Market Growth Analysis 2026-2030. View source
  11. Unicommerce. Apparel Industry in India: Trends & Challenges 2026. View source
  12. IBEF. Tourism & Hospitality Industry in India. View source
  13. IMARC Group. India Luxury Travel Market Size, Growth, Outlook 2026-2034. View source
  14. Business Today. E-tailers find profitable niche in ethnic wear. View source
  15. Statista. India: tourist arrivals in Goa by type. View source
  16. Indiastat. Tourism Statistics and Growth Figures Year-wise of Kerala. View source
  17. First Resort by Ramola Bachchan. Indian Wedding Fashion Statistics 2026 — Industry Data Report. View source
  18. First Resort by Ramola Bachchan. Destination Weddings in India 2026 — Industry Data Report. View source

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