Experience matters: A systematic review and research agenda on predictors to buy sustainable fashion

Publication date

2025-06-06

Authors

Toebast-Wensink, Annuska
van den Broek, K.L.ORCID 0000-0002-0933-1194ISNI 0000000460628027
Timmerman, Tijs
Hekkert, M. P.ORCID 0000-0003-0570-5117ISNI 0000000139241969

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Introduction: While consumers have become increasingly aware of the need for sustainability in fashion, many do not translate their intention to purchase sustainable fashion into actual behavior. Insights can be gained from those who have successfully transitioned from intention to behavior (i.e., experienced sustainable fashion consumers). Despite a substantial body of literature exploring predictors of sustainable fashion purchasing, a comprehensive view on how predictors of sustainable fashion purchasing vary between consumers with and without sustainable fashion experience is lacking. Methods: This paper reports a systematic literature review, analyzing 100 empirical articles on predictors of sustainable fashion purchasing among consumer samples with and without purchasing experience, identified from the Web of Science and Scopus databases. Results: The review revealed that (I) environmental cognition, such as environmental awareness, knowledge, and perceived consumer effectiveness, occurs most frequently as significant predictors for both groups; (II) subjective norms occur more frequently as significant predictors for general consumers than for experienced consumers; (III) habits occur more frequently as significant predictors for experienced consumers compared to general consumers; and (IV) experience can shift barriers into motivators. Discussion: This review highlights experience as a transformative factor for sustainable fashion purchasing, showing that as consumers gain experience, their attitudes evolve and influence decisions. It also emphasizes the potential of goal framing, suggesting that effective goal frames can encourage initial sustainable fashion purchases among general consumers. From a practical perspective, this review suggests that marketers and retailers should employ distinct tactics for first-time and experienced sustainable fashion consumers to effectively engage each group and enhance purchasing.

Keywords

Sconsumer behavior change, intention-behavior gap, prior experience, sustainable fashion consumption, systematic literature revi

Citation

Toebast - Wensink, A, van den Broek, K, Timmerman, T & Hekkert, M 2025, 'Experience matters: A systematic review and research agenda on predictors to buy sustainable fashion', Frontiers in Sustainability, vol. 6, 1556835, pp. 1-14. https://doi.org/10.3389/frsus.2025.1556835