Pricing & Positioning

Lululemon’s Pricing Strategy: How an $11B Brand Commands 40–60% Premiums Over Gymshark, Vuori & Nike

We mapped Lululemon’s full product catalog against Gymshark, Alo Yoga, Nike, Vuori, and Fabletics — category breakdowns, discount patterns, and the “We Made Too Much” markdown playbook.

Updated March 2026 6 competitors mapped $11.1B FY25 revenue
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$98-148
Core legging range
$11.1B
FY25 Revenue
56.6%
Gross margin
811
Retail locations

First: Why Should You Care About Pricing Intelligence?

Pricing is the single highest-leverage decision in DTC — and Lululemon wrote the playbook

Because pricing is the most powerful and least understood lever in DTC. A 1% price improvement yields an average 11% profit increase, according to McKinsey. Lululemon is arguably the most disciplined premium pricer in all of athleisure — they built an $11.1 billion business by refusing to compete on price and instead competing on perceived value, proprietary fabrics, and community. Here’s what that discipline looks like in practice:

$11.1B

Lululemon generated $11.1 billion in FY2025 revenue — a 5% year-over-year increase driven by 22% international growth and 44 net new stores, bringing the total to 811 locations worldwide.

56.6%

Lululemon maintained a 56.6% gross margin in FY2025 — down 260 basis points year-over-year due to inventory markdowns, but still significantly above the athleisure industry average. By comparison, Gymshark reported 63% gross margins but at a fraction of Lululemon’s scale.

40-60%

Lululemon charges 40–60% more than Gymshark across every product category. Core leggings at $98–$148 vs $40–$70. Sports bras at $38–$98 vs $26–$44. That premium is the brand — proprietary fabrics, 811 retail stores, and 25+ years of earned perception.

Source: Competitive pricing analysis — product prices collected from lululemon.com, gymshark.com, aloyoga.com, nike.com, vuori.com, March 2026

Lululemon

$98–$148
Core leggings. Premium technical athleisure. 811 stores + DTC.

Alo Yoga

$98–$128
Closest premium peer. Fashion-forward, celebrity-driven positioning.

Vuori

$88–$118
California casual. 10–30% cheaper than Lululemon on comparable items.

Gymshark

$40–$70
Accessible premium. Lululemon charges roughly 2x for comparable items.
Where Lululemon Sits — Legging Price by Brand
Fabletics
$25–$50
Gymshark
$40–$70
Vuori
$88–$118
Alo Yoga
$98–$128
Lululemon
$98–$148

Price Range Analysis

How Lululemon anchors its catalog between $38 and $198

Lululemon’s core price band runs $98–$148 for flagship products. Entry-level items like bralettes and basic tanks start around $38, while premium outerwear and technical jackets push toward $198. The median product price sits around $98 — roughly double what Gymshark charges for comparable products.

$38
Lowest Price (Bralette)
$98
Core Legging Entry
$198
Premium Outerwear
56%
Gross Margin (FY25)

Compare that to Gymshark, where the entire catalog fits between $26–$68. Or Fabletics, where VIP members pay $25–$50 for leggings. Lululemon’s price floor is higher than most competitors’ ceilings — and that’s by design. Their tech stack and infrastructure support a premium experience at every touchpoint.

Product Price Distribution — Lululemon Catalog
Under $50
12%
$50–$80
22%
$80–$120
52%
$120–$160
35%
$160+
10%

We estimate based on lululemon.com catalog analysis, March 2026. Percentages represent approximate share of total SKUs in each price band.

Key Insight

The $80–$120 band is Lululemon’s center of gravity. This is where their signature Align, Wunder Train, and Instill leggings live. By clustering their hero products in this range, they anchor the brand perception at “premium but not luxury” — expensive enough to signal quality, affordable enough for repeat purchases.

This is exactly the kind of pricing intelligence LeadMaxxing generates automatically. Our AI scrapes competitor catalogs, maps price bands, and flags when competitors adjust strategy — see how it works →

Category Breakdown

Leggings, sports bras, shorts, tops, and outerwear mapped by price

Leggings are the hero product — and Lululemon’s pricing moat. At $98–$148, they’re the highest-priced core category and the products that built the brand’s reputation. Proprietary fabrics like Nulu (Align), Everlux (Wunder Train), and Luxtreme drive the premium perception.

Category Price Range Core Price Top Seller Example
Leggings $98 – $148 $98–$128 Align High-Rise Pant 25″
Sports Bras $38 – $98 $48–$78 Energy Bra High Support
Shorts $58 – $98 $64–$78 Hotty Hot High-Rise Short 4″
Tops & Tanks $38 – $108 $48–$68 Swiftly Tech Racerback Tank
Hoodies & Scuba $118 – $148 $128–$138 Scuba Oversized Full-Zip Hoodie
Jackets & Outerwear $128 – $198 $148–$168 Define Jacket Luon

The Scuba hoodie line is the sleeper hit. At $118–$148, it’s one of the highest-margin categories and consistently sells out in limited colorways. The Scuba franchise demonstrates Lululemon’s ability to charge hoodie prices that exceed most competitors’ outerwear.

Notice how Lululemon’s entry-level sports bras ($38) overlap with Gymshark’s mid-range. Their lowest price point is still a premium product. This protects brand perception — there’s no “cheap Lululemon” product dragging the average down. Their email and CRM flows reinforce full-price selling by promoting new drops rather than discounts.

Why This Matters

A full Lululemon outfit (leggings + sports bra + top) costs $184–$324. That’s the price of 2–3 complete Gymshark outfits. Yet Lululemon’s customers don’t flinch — because the brand has earned its premium through fabric innovation, community, and 25+ years of consistent positioning.

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Competitor Price Mapping

Lululemon vs Gymshark, Alo Yoga, Nike, Vuori, and Fabletics across every category

Lululemon sits at or near the top of every product category. They’re the price leader in leggings and outerwear, closely matched by Alo Yoga, and significantly above Gymshark and Fabletics. Only Nike’s premium performance lines approach Lululemon’s pricing on select items.

Category Lululemon Alo Yoga Vuori Nike Gymshark
Leggings $98–$148 $98–$128 $88–$118 $50–$120 $40–$70
Sports Bras $38–$98 $40–$88 ~$58 $30–$55 $26–$44
Shorts $58–$98 $64–$101 $64–$78 $35–$65 $30–$48
Outerwear $118–$198 $52–$498 $70–$188 $55–$120 $42–$50
Full Outfit* $184–$324 $206–$354 $150–$260 $115–$240 $90–$130

*Full outfit = leggings + sports bra + top. Source: Product page scrapes of lululemon.com, aloyoga.com, vuori.com, nike.com, gymshark.com. March 2026.

Alo Yoga is the closest pricing peer. Their leggings overlap at $98–$128, and their outerwear actually stretches higher than Lululemon’s (up to $498 for puffer jackets). But Lululemon’s advantage is consistency — their prices are predictable, their quality is proven, and their brand carries 25+ years of earned trust.

The Gymshark gap is enormous. A Gymshark Adapt legging at $60 vs a Lululemon Align at $98 — that’s a 63% premium. Yet Lululemon still outsells Gymshark by a factor of nearly 18x on revenue. The premium positioning works because it’s backed by genuine fabric differentiation and a social media presence that reinforces aspiration over accessibility.

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Market Positioning

Where Lululemon sits on the premium-to-value spectrum and why the premium holds

Lululemon owns the “technical premium” tier in athleisure. They don’t compete on price, they don’t compete on trend, and they don’t compete on celebrity endorsement. They compete on fabric technology, community, and the perception that Lululemon is what serious athletes and wellness-focused professionals wear.

Price Comparison by Category — Toggle to Compare
Fabletics
$25–$50
Gymshark
$40–$70
Vuori
$88–$118
Alo Yoga
$98–$128
Lululemon
$98–$148
Fabletics
$20–$40
Gymshark
$26–$44
Vuori
~$58
Alo Yoga
$40–$88
Lululemon
$38–$98
Fabletics
$25–$45
Gymshark
$30–$48
Vuori
$64–$78
Lululemon
$58–$98
Alo Yoga
$64–$101
Gymshark
$42–$50
Vuori
$70–$188
Lululemon
$118–$198
Alo Yoga
$52–$498
Fabletics
$70–$135
Gymshark
$90–$130
Vuori
$150–$260
Lululemon
$184–$324
Alo Yoga
$206–$354

Source: Product page scrapes of lululemon.com, aloyoga.com, vuori.com, gymshark.com, fabletics.com. March 2026. Full outfit = leggings + sports bra + top.

The Positioning Playbook

Target Audience

25–44
Primary demographic: women aged 25–44 with $100K+ household income. Wellness-focused professionals. Men’s segment growing rapidly.

Revenue (FY25)

$11.1B
Net revenue with +5% YoY growth. International revenue grew 22%. $1.58B net income. NASDAQ: LULU.

Store Count

811
Global retail footprint with 44 net new stores in FY25. Omnichannel model drives both in-store trial and online repeat purchase.

Market Share

21.2%
Of the US athleisure market. Second only to Nike (31.6%). Alo Yoga and Vuori are growing but remain under 5% each.

Lululemon’s brand positioning rests on four pillars:

  • Proprietary Fabrics: Nulu, Luon, Everlux, Luxtreme — patented materials that competitors can’t replicate. The fabric IS the product differentiation.
  • Community & Ambassadors: Local ambassador program in every market, free in-store yoga classes, and grassroots events that build tribal loyalty.
  • Full-Price Culture: No coupons, no promo codes, no blanket discounts. Overstock goes to WMTM, not a 40%-off sitewide event.
  • Omnichannel Experience: 811 stores that function as showrooms + community hubs. Try on in-store, reorder online. Free hemming for members creates switching costs.
Strategic Takeaway

Lululemon doesn’t compete on price — they compete on being irreplaceable. Their fabrics can’t be copied. Their community can’t be bought. Their 25-year brand equity can’t be shortcut. The price premium is the output of those moats, not the strategy itself. That’s why competitors like Gymshark and Vuori haven’t closed the gap despite years of trying.

Discount Strategy

The “We Made Too Much” markdown playbook and why Lululemon never runs “sales”

Lululemon doesn’t do traditional sales. No blanket promo codes. No “20% off everything” emails. No rotating coupon codes. Instead, they funnel all markdowns through a single channel: the “We Made Too Much” (WMTM) section. It’s a masterclass in protecting brand equity while still moving overstock.

Black Friday

Up to 60%
Their biggest event. In 2025, ran Nov 17 (app-exclusive early access) through Dec 1. Expanded WMTM section, not a sitewide code.

WMTM (Weekly)

20–40%
New items every Thursday at 5 AM PT. Select items reach 60–70% off. Final sale for non-members. The permanent markdown outlet.

Membership Perks

Free
3-tier loyalty: Collective (free), Plus ($500/yr spend), Pinnacle ($1K+). Members get exchange/credit on sale items + early access.

No Promo Codes

$0 off
Lululemon almost never issues blanket discount codes. Military, first responder, and educator programs offer 15% — that’s it.

Annual Discount Calendar

Jan
Post-holiday WMTM expansion
Extended markdowns
Feb
Full price. Spring drops.
Mar
Full price. New colorways.
Apr
Full price. WMTM refresh.
May
Full price. Summer launches.
Jun
Summer WMTM expansion
Seasonal clearance
Jul
Summer clearance continues
Up to 50% off
Aug
Full price. Fall previews.
Sep
Full price. New collections.
Oct
Full price. BF buildup.
Nov
BLACK FRIDAY (starts Nov 17)
Up to 60% off
Dec
Cyber Monday / Holiday sale
Up to 50% off
The WMTM Play

Lululemon’s “We Made Too Much” section is discount strategy disguised as inventory management. By framing markdowns as “we overproduced” rather than “we’re having a sale,” they maintain the perception that full-price is the default. New WMTM items drop every Thursday, creating a weekly scarcity event that drives repeat visits. It’s the same urgency as Gymshark’s limited drops, just wrapped in a different narrative. Their paid advertising almost never promotes WMTM — it’s organic traffic only.

Tariff-Driven Price Increases

In early 2026, Lululemon announced modest price increases on select styles. Tariff impacts are expected to cost $320 million in FY2026, with a 220 basis point gross margin hit already absorbed in FY2025. CEO Calvin McDonald signaled “selective” price increases starting in Q2–Q3 FY2026 — the first significant price hikes in several years, reflecting broader supply chain pressures across the athleisure industry.

Key Findings

  • → Lululemon generated $11.1 billion in FY2025 revenue with 56.6% gross margins — commanding the highest average price point of any athleisure brand while holding 21.2% US market share (verified fact: Lululemon earnings press release)
  • → Lululemon charges 40–60% more than Gymshark across every category: leggings $98–$148 vs $40–$70, sports bras $38–$98 vs $26–$44, outerwear $118–$198 vs $42–$50 (our calculation: product page comparison, March 2026)
  • → The “We Made Too Much” markdown section functions as a weekly scarcity event, with new items dropping every Thursday at 5 AM PT and discounts of 20–40% (up to 70% on select items) — no blanket coupon codes ever issued
  • Tariff-driven price increases are coming in Q2–Q3 FY2026, with an expected $320 million impact as Lululemon tries to maintain margins without triggering customer pushback (verified fact: Retail Dive reporting)
  • → The tiered Collective loyalty program drives retention with 3 spend-based tiers (free / $500 / $1,000+ annual spend), offering early access, free hemming, and exclusive product drops that increase switching costs

What This Data Means for You

Turning Lululemon’s pricing playbook into your competitive advantage

If you’re a DTC brand, Lululemon’s pricing strategy proves that premium pricing works when it’s backed by genuine differentiation. Their refusal to discount, their proprietary fabric moat, and their community-first approach aren’t just brand marketing — they’re the structural advantages that justify charging 2x what Gymshark does. The data above shows exactly where Lululemon sits relative to competitors across every category. Whether you’re studying their tracking and analytics infrastructure, their SEO strategy, or their site performance, the pattern is the same: invest in quality, protect the premium, and let the margins follow.

LeadMaxxing Automates Competitor Price Monitoring

The pricing intelligence in this report took weeks to compile manually. LeadMaxxing scrapes competitor product pages, maps price bands, flags price changes, and benchmarks your positioning — updated weekly for your brand. Plans start at $29/month.

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5 Things You Can Implement Today

Actionable lessons from Lululemon’s pricing playbook

Build a no-discount culture from day one

Lululemon never issues blanket promo codes. Their markdown strategy (WMTM) is inventory management, not brand erosion. LeadMaxxing tracks competitor discount events so you can time your own markdown windows strategically.

Create fabric or product moats that justify premium

Lululemon’s proprietary Nulu, Everlux, and Luxtreme fabrics are the foundation of their pricing power. If your premium isn’t backed by genuine differentiation, it won’t hold. LeadMaxxing monitors competitor product launches so you can identify gaps to differentiate.

Use tiered loyalty to increase switching costs

Lululemon’s 3-tier Collective program gives members early access, free hemming, and exclusive drops. The higher you spend, the harder it is to leave. LeadMaxxing tracks competitor loyalty programs and membership perks.

Turn markdowns into weekly scarcity events

WMTM drops every Thursday create urgency without devaluing the brand. Instead of permanent clearance, create time-limited markdown windows that train customers to check back regularly. LeadMaxxing alerts you when competitors adjust markdown strategies.

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Frequently Asked Questions

How much do Lululemon leggings cost?
Lululemon leggings range from $98 to $148, with the most popular price points at $98, $118, and $128. The Align legging — their bestselling style — starts at $98 for the 25-inch length. By comparison, Gymshark leggings cost $40–$70, and Alo Yoga leggings range from $98–$128. A full Lululemon outfit (leggings + sports bra + top) runs $184–$324.
Is Lululemon more expensive than Alo Yoga?
Lululemon and Alo Yoga are closely priced on core products. Lululemon leggings range from $98–$148 vs Alo Yoga’s $98–$128. However, Lululemon’s outerwear ($128–$198) tends to run higher than Alo Yoga’s comparable items. Both brands target a premium positioning, but Lululemon commands higher prices on average due to proprietary fabrics and a 25+ year brand heritage.
Does Lululemon ever have sales?
Lululemon does not run traditional site-wide sales or coupon codes. Instead, they operate a permanent “We Made Too Much” (WMTM) markdown section with new items added every Thursday. Discounts range from 20–40% off, with select items reaching 60–70% off. Their biggest sale event is Black Friday, which in 2025 ran November 17 through December 1 with discounts up to 50–60% off select items.
What is Lululemon’s pricing strategy?
Lululemon uses a premium pricing strategy built on proprietary fabrics (Nulu, Luon, Everlux), a full-price sell-through culture, and limited markdowns. They protect brand equity by avoiding blanket discount codes and instead funnel overstock through the “We Made Too Much” section. With $11.1 billion in FY2025 revenue and 56.6% gross margins, they price 40–60% above Gymshark and 10–20% above Vuori on comparable products.
How does Lululemon compare to Vuori on price?
Lululemon prices 10–30% above Vuori across most categories. Lululemon leggings: $98–$148 vs Vuori: $88–$118. Sports bras: $38–$98 vs Vuori: ~$58. Shorts: $58–$98 vs Vuori: $64–$78. Both target affluent consumers, but Vuori positions as slightly more accessible with a California-casual aesthetic while Lululemon leans into technical athletic performance.
Has Lululemon raised prices recently?
Yes. In early 2026, Lululemon announced modest price increases on select styles starting in the second half of Q2 FY2026, driven by tariff impacts expected to cost $320 million in FY2026. Gross margins already fell 260 basis points in FY2025 to 56.6%. The company is balancing price increases against inventory challenges that forced uncharacteristic markdowns through 2025.
What is Lululemon’s membership program?
Lululemon runs a free, tiered loyalty program called the Collective. Level 1 (free signup) includes early access to drops, free hemming, and partner perks with brands like Peloton and Oura. Level 2 (Collective Plus, $500/year spend) adds exclusive product access and personal shopper service. Level 3 (Collective Pinnacle, $1,000+/year spend) adds first access to restocks and complimentary customization.
Why is Lululemon so expensive compared to Gymshark?
Lululemon charges 40–60% more than Gymshark across every category. Core leggings: $98–$148 vs $40–$70. Sports bras: $38–$98 vs $26–$44. The premium reflects proprietary fabric technology (Nulu, Everlux, Luxtreme), 811 retail stores providing tactile brand experience, 25+ years of brand equity, and a target demographic with $100K+ household income. Gymshark targets the 18–30 fitness market with an accessible premium positioning.

Sources & References

Lululemon FY2025 Earnings Press Release — Full-year and Q4 financial results including $11.1B revenue, 56.6% gross margin, 811 stores, and FY2026 guidance.
corporate.lululemon.com
Retail Dive — Lululemon to Raise Prices — Reporting on tariff-driven price increases, $320M FY2026 impact, and CEO Calvin McDonald’s strategy commentary.
retaildive.com
SimplyCodes — WMTM Calendar 2025 — Detailed breakdown of Lululemon’s “We Made Too Much” markdown schedule, Thursday drop timing, and discount percentages.
simplycodes.com
The Points Guy — Lululemon Black Friday Sale — Detailed coverage of the 2025 Black Friday event, Nov 17–Dec 1 timeline, app-exclusive early access, and discount levels.
thepointsguy.com
Lululemon Membership Page — Official details on the 3-tier Collective loyalty program, spend thresholds, and member perks including free hemming and early access.
shop.lululemon.com
Competitor Product Pages — Product page pricing data collected from aloyoga.com, vuori.com, gymshark.com, nike.com, and fabletics.com for cross-brand price mapping. March 2026.
apartstyle.com (brand comparison)
Retail TouchPoints — Athleisure Market Share — Competitive landscape with market share data: Lululemon 21.2%, Nike 31.6%, Vuori 2.9%, Fabletics 4.4%.
retailtouchpoints.com
Compiled by LeadMaxxing — we track how brands build, test, and optimize their marketing so you can learn from the best.