Columnists

2025 Was a ‘Price Up, Units Down’ Year, Here’s What That Signals for 2026

ColumnistsJan 13, 2026

2025 Was a ‘Price Up, Units Down’ Year, Here’s What That Signals for 2026

In a market defined by more selective consumers, Sherry Smith shares why execution will be independent jewelers’ key to growth this year.

National Jeweler columnist Sherry Smith, vice president of coaching strategy and development at the Edge Retail Academy
Sherry Smith is vice president of coaching strategy and development at the Edge Retail Academy, the leading jewelry business consulting and data aggregation firm. She can be reached at sherry@edgeretailacademy.com.
At first glance, 2025 appeared to be a solid year for independent jewelers.

According to aggregated Edge Retail Academy (ERA) data, gross sales increased 4.7 percent year over year, and gross profit also rose, signs of continued resilience in a challenging retail environment.

But when we move beyond the headline figures and examine how those results were achieved, a more nuanced and instructive story emerges, one that matters greatly as jewelers plan for 2026.

The truth beneath the headlines: Growth in 2025 was price driven, not demand driven.

Over the full year, ERA data shows the following.
Gross sales: +4.7 percent
Units sold: −5.6 percent
Average retail sale (ARS): +10.9 percent
Gross profit: +5.5 percent
Gross margin: Modestly higher year over year

This combination of sales dollars rising while units fall is a classic indicator of growth driven by pricing and product mix, not by increased transaction volume or store traffic.

Consumers did not disappear in 2025, but they did become more selective. Retailers often had to work harder for each sale.

Importantly, unit declines were not isolated to one or two weak periods throughout the year. Units trended lower across much of 2025, including the fourth quarter, traditionally the strongest period for transaction volume.

That consistency reinforces that this was not a temporary disruption, but a structural shift in buying behavior.

Traffic pressure adds context to declining units.
Independent jewelers were not operating in isolation. Broader retail indicators point to ongoing pressure on physical store traffic.

Sensormatic Solutions projected U.S. in-store holiday traffic to finish flat to down roughly 3 percent and noted that traffic was already trending modestly lower for much of the year.

When fewer shoppers are walking through the door, performance depends less on volume and more on conversion, average ticket, and repeat visits. The unit trends in ERA’s data align closely with that reality.

Category performance reinforces the same theme.
Across major jewelry categories, a consistent pattern emerged in 2025. Unit volume declined broadly while average ticket increased, reinforcing the theme of price-driven growth rather than demand-led expansion.

Here’s a category-by-category breakdown of what ERA data shows for the year.

Diamonds overall finished the year essentially flat in dollar sales (down less than 1 percent) even as units declined more than 6 percent and average ticket increased nearly 5 percent.

Bridal diamond categories experienced greater softness, with sales down nearly 3 percent. This performance appears consistent with price compression across both natural and lab-grown diamonds throughout the year, which weighed on dollar results even where unit declines were more moderate.

Non-bridal diamond categories managed modest growth (just over 1 percent) despite units declining nearly 8 percent, supported by a meaningful increase in average ticket.

Colored stone jewelry stood out, with sales up just over 4 percent and average ticket rising nearly 12 percent even as units declined close to 8 percent. This suggests that when consumers did purchase, they gravitated toward more expressive, higher-value pieces rather than entry-level items.

Precious metal jewelry without stones delivered one of the clearest examples of price-driven growth. Sales increased nearly 5 percent while units declined close to 17 percent, and average ticket jumped more than 20 percent, reflecting higher metal prices and mix shift.

Watches were among the few categories where unit volume held relatively steady. Sales increased nearly 5 percent, though gross margins compressed year over year, underscoring that revenue growth does not automatically translate to profit growth.

Repairs and services remained a bright spot, with sales up more than 14 percent, reinforcing the stabilizing role service revenue plays when discretionary purchasing softens.

Here’s a closer look at the diamond market.

Natural diamond categories declined approximately 2 percent in gross sales and 10 percent in units, despite a nearly 9 percent increase in average retail sale.

Lab-grown diamond categories posted strong top-line growth, with sales up roughly 13 percent and units up 19 percent, even as average retail declined by about 5 percent.

Completed bridal rings showed clear divergence by diamond type. Natural diamond engagement rings were down roughly 4 percent in sales and 2 percent in units, with average retail also declining. 

Meanwhile, lab-grown engagement rings significantly outperformed, with gross sales up approximately 31 percent, units up 30 percent, and average retail modestly higher (just under 1 percent).

There were macro forces behind higher tickets; here’s why they matter for 2026.
Many jewelers attribute 2025’s higher average tickets to rising costs and pricing realities, particularly around gold. That interpretation aligns with the broader macro narrative.

The World Gold Council’s outlook for 2026 highlights ongoing economic and geopolitical uncertainty as factors likely to keep gold elevated and volatile rather than reverting quickly to historical norms.

Reuters has reinforced this view, reporting that Morgan Stanley forecast that gold price could reach $4,800 per ounce by late 2026, underscoring how mainstream the “higher-for-longer gold” thesis has become.

Tariff-related uncertainty also remains part of the business-planning environment. 

Jewelers of America has cautioned that broad tariffs can materially affect jewelry supply chains, pricing structures, and competitiveness. 

Even without definitive outcomes, uncertainty itself creates operational pressure, particularly around inventory commitments, sourcing strategies, and margin protection.

“Consumers may still spend, but they are likely to do so more selectively.” — Sherry Smith 

The final and perhaps most important driver is consumer psychology. 

Deloitte’s U.S. outlook expects real consumer spending growth to slow to approximately 1.6 percent in 2026, restrained by inflation, a weakening labor market, and slower asset price growth. 

In practical terms, consumers may still spend, but they are likely to do so more selectively. 

Retailers will feel that selectivity show up in store traffic, closing rates, and item count per transaction.

 Related stories will be right here … 

2026 will be a “sorting year” that rewards execution.
The most realistic base case for 2026 is not a collapse, but it is also not a return to easy growth.

With consumer spending expected to moderate (per Deloitte) and traffic pressure still part of the retail landscape (per Sensormatic), 2026 is shaping up to be a “sorting year.”

The winners will be the retailers who treat fundamentals as non-negotiable.

1. Conversion rate becomes the growth engine.
When units are down, conversion is the fastest and most controllable lever. Improving conversion rates by even a few points can materially offset traffic declines without increasing marketing expenses.

2. Clienteling shifts from “nice-to-have” to a business model.
If customers are visiting less frequently, proactive outreach, appointment-setting, and reactivation strategies are essential to protect sales frequency and lifetime value.

3. Inventory discipline matters more in a higher-cost world.
In a high-gold, cost-volatile environment, aged inventory becomes an expensive risk. Clean assortments, faster turns, and tighter open-to-buy strategies protect both cash flow and margin.

4. Services and repairs are strategic, not secondary.
Repair performance in the data reinforces an important truth—service revenue can stabilize results when discretionary units soften and can also seed future sales through trust, repeat visits, and deeper relationships.

Execution, not optimism, will define 2026.
If 2025 proved anything, it’s that independent jewelers can grow in a constrained environment, but the formula is changing. 

With traffic under pressure and consumer growth expected to moderate, the retailers who outperform in 2026 will be the ones who move from hope-based retail to precision retail—better conversion, stronger follow-up, disciplined buying, and service culture that drives repeat visits.

The opportunity is real. When customers are selective, they gravitate toward trust, expertise, and meaning, and independents own that space. 

The takeaway for 2026 is simple. Planning should emphasize the controllables: conversion, clienteling, and inventory discipline. 

In a selective-demand environment, execution isn’t a tactic. It’s the strategy.

The Latest

Watches on a table next to a coffee cup
WatchesApr 10, 2026
These Watches Have Increased in Value the Most Since 2018, Says Chrono24

The top-performing watch models may be surprising, with Rolex and several popular pandemic-era picks notably absent from the top 20.

Ophelia Eve Scroll Toggle Pendant
CollectionsApr 10, 2026
Ophelia Eve’s Toggle Pendant Holds Your Secrets

The “Scroll” toggle pendant, our Piece of the Week, opens to reveal a hidden message, mantra, or love letter written on washi paper.

Tiffany & Co. Nathalie Verdeille
MajorsApr 09, 2026
Tiffany & Co. Promotes Nathalie Verdeille to SVP, Chief Artistic Officer

In her newly expanded role, she will continue to oversee the jewelry category, as well as watches, home, and accessories.

GIA iD100®
Brought to you by
Protect Your Customers and Your Business

You deserve to know what you are selling–to protect your customers as well as your business and your reputation.

Jacob & Co. The Godfather II Musical Watch
WatchesApr 09, 2026
Jacob & Co. Rolls Out Its Sequel to ‘The Godfather’ Musical Watch

“The Godfather II” watch plays two melodies from the mob film’s score, “The Godfather’s Waltz” and “The Godfather Love Theme.”

Weekly QuizApr 09, 2026
This Week’s Quiz
Test your jewelry news knowledge by answering these questions.
Take the Quiz
Jesse Itzler
Events & AwardsApr 09, 2026
JCK Announces Jesse Itzler as 2026 Keynote Speaker

Organizers have also introduced the new JCK Talks Signature Series, as well as an offering of watch-focused workshops and lectures.

Alan Hodgkinson
SourcingApr 09, 2026
AGA To Honor ‘Quiet Leadership’ With New Award

The Alan Hodgkinson Medal recognizes gemologists who are consistently generous with their time and expertise.

TopImageCrop.jpg
Brought to you by
Is This You? Every Jeweler Has This Problem; We Have the Solution.

Every jeweler faces the same challenge: helping customers protect what they love. Here’s the solution designed for today’s jewelry business.

Oris CEO Rolf Studer and Oris CFO Claudine Gertiser
WatchesApr 09, 2026
Oris Names New CEO, CFO

The Swiss watchmaker is changing up its executive leadership team as part of a restructuring.

Hearts On Fire What’s Your Signature Campaign Imagery
CollectionsApr 08, 2026
Hearts On Fire Celebrates 30 Years By Asking a Question

The “What’s Your Signature?” campaign invites women to think about how they see themselves.

41.82-carat Type IIb blue diamond recovered from Cullinan in January 2026
SourcingApr 08, 2026
Sale of 42-Carat Blue Diamond Gives Petra a Boost in Q3

The big diamond’s sale added to the company’s revenue though the market remains “challenging” overall, particularly for smaller goods.

American Gem Society Confluence Logo
Events & AwardsApr 08, 2026
AGS Confluence Returns with AI, Sustainability Sessions

Rob Bates of The Jewelry Wire will also moderate a panel on the state of the jewelry industry during the virtual event.

Dennis Buzz Busby and Randy Welch
Events & AwardsApr 08, 2026
TJS to Honor 2 Longtime Former Stuller Employees

The Jewelry Symposium will honor two industry veterans with lifetime achievement awards at its upcoming May event.

Isabel Delgado A necklace
TrendsApr 08, 2026
Amanda’s Style File: April’s Brilliant Birthstone

With their durability, brilliance, and beauty, diamonds are the perfect stone for everyday birthstone jewelry.

QVC Group logo
MajorsApr 07, 2026
QVC Group’s Latest Filing Calls Its Future Into Question

The retailer failed to file its annual report on time and said it may issue a going concern warning.

Retiring GIA CFO David Tearle and new GIA CFO John Cowley
GradingApr 07, 2026
GIA CFO David Tearle to Retire in June

John Cowley, who has more than 30 years of experience, is succeeding Tearle as the lab’s chief financial officer.

Gemology Geek Ignite collection tourmaline ring
CollectionsApr 07, 2026
Nerd Out Over Gemology Geek’s First Jewelry Collection

Founder Erica Silverglide has designed 35 colorful pieces set with fluorescing gemstones for the brand's first finished jewelry offering.

Ukrainian Jewelry | Contemporary Jewelry and Art Jewelry from Ukraine
CollectionsApr 07, 2026
Ukrainian Jewelers Highlighted In New Book

“Ukrainian Jewelry | Contemporary Jewelry and Art Jewelry from Ukraine” features 33 contemporary Ukrainian designers and studios.

Fope Golden Now Campaign Imagery
CollectionsApr 06, 2026
Fope’s New Jewelry Debuts Are Golden

“The Golden Now” campaign celebrates the here and now with the brand’s signature styles and a selection of its new pieces.

Former Signet executive Kecia Caffie
MajorsApr 06, 2026
Kecia Caffie, Corinne Bentzen No Longer With Signet Jewelers

Signet confirmed that Caffie, president of Zales and Banter, and Bentzen, who headed Blue Nile, have left the company.

Author Tanzy Ward and her book Precious Black Jewels The Bijou Material Culture of Black Victorians & Edwardians
CollectionsApr 06, 2026
Historian Tanzy Ward Pens Book on Black Victorians’ Jewelry

The antique jewelry dealer talks about the importance of including Black Americans in jewelry history and preserving their stories.

Gemfields emeralds
SourcingApr 06, 2026
Gemfields Reports $51M Loss in 2025

Both its mines faced challenges last year, from operational issues to disruptions in the market.

Screenshot of Taylor Swift's "Elizabeth Taylor" music video
CollectionsApr 03, 2026
Taylor Swift’s ‘Elizabeth Taylor’ Video Puts Jewelry Front and Center

Iconic pieces, like the Mike Todd Diamond Tiara, appear in the superstar’s new music video for her song inspired by the actress.

Neiman Marcus store in Fort Worth, Texas
MajorsApr 03, 2026
Saks Global Says It Will Emerge From Bankruptcy This Summer

The luxury retailer, which went Chapter 11 in January, announced Thursday that it has secured $500 million in exit financing.

NouvelleBox logo
Events & AwardsApr 03, 2026
JCK Luxury, NouvelleBox Partner on New Designer Ballroom

The NouvelleBox ballroom will feature independent jewelry designers, including Lene Vibe, Wyld Box Jewelry, and Kiaia Limited.

Buddha Mama Moon Locket
CollectionsApr 03, 2026
Buddha Mama Brings Its ‘Moon’ Locket To Dallas

The one-of-a-kind locket, our Piece of the Week, opens to reveal three hidden images to keep close to your heart.

Pandora distribution facility Canada
MajorsApr 02, 2026
Pandora Opens New Canadian Distribution Center Amid Tariff Concerns

The new facility was also designed to better serve its growing customer base in Canada.

×

This site uses cookies to give you the best online experience. By continuing to use & browse this site, we assume you agree to our Privacy Policy