Algorithms are supposed to predict what’s next, but scroll any platform right now, and chances are you’ll find the past dominating the cultural conversation.
“Laguna Beach” is returning for a reunion, twenty years after the hit reality show aired. Jay-Z just sold out multi-night runs at Yankee Stadium for albums he released in 1996 and 2001. Hilary Duff is having a TikTok-fueled resurgence with her comeback shows selling out almost instantly. And even fashion cycles are bringing back Juicy Couture and early 2000s aesthetics. (Hi, low-rise jeans and baby tees.)
We’re having a “millennial summer,” and it’s not just about nostalgia; it’s a shift in power back to one of the last generations to experience monoculture in real time, now with the money to revive it.
It’s easy to see why culture is shifting its focus to millennials. The generation accounts for roughly 28% of all US retail spending — more than boomers — totaling about $1.1 trillion. (Caveat: Gen X issss outspending millennials, but there are fewer people born in that generation, making them a less appealing target for marketers.) Brands are rediscovering the audience that’s now running households, leading teams, and making the bulk of buying decisions.
Charlene Polite Corley, vice president of Inclusive Insights at Nielsen, told Business Insider the shift is less about revival and more about power. “Millennials are maturing into the leadership position of the culture; what we deem cool or nostalgic is now surfacing back to the top,” she said.
And brands are following the money. Gen Z may drive culture online, but millennials are converting. They’re buying concert tickets, booking the travel, and showing up for experiences. Data shows that millennials helped create the experience economy, especially as traditional milestones like homeownership feel less attainable.
“Take Gap’s recent campaign using Kelis ‘Milkshake’ song,” Corley said, referencing the hit 2003 song. Using a song from the early aughts had an impact that went beyond engagement, with the brand reporting a 5% year-over-year increase in sales.
Millennials’ influence extends beyond what they buy; it’s also how they engage. “Millennials can straddle the analog and digital age,” Corley said, noting that the generation can “drive conversation and build community online and in more traditional spaces.” That ability is rooted in a structural advantage: millennials came of age during one of the last eras of shared media consumption, when entire audiences watched, listened, and reacted together.
The question now becomes how long brands can rely on nostalgia before it starts feeling like the Marvel Universe — played out.
People love to complain about baby boomers, including that they have a lot of stuff. They’re hoarding all the houses, they’re keeping all the money, they’re materialists who have accumulated an exorbitant amount of possessions. There are a couple of problems with these gripes: For one, no generation is a monolith, and everybody amasses things over the course of their lives, so back off. But more importantly, youths and slightly-beyond-youths, the stuff pileup is actually to your benefit.
The golden age of boomer estate sales is upon us, and while you probably don’t want all the wedding china that’s about to flood the market, there’s a lot of other neat stuff you can pick up. Think knickknacks for Gen Z maximalists, midcentury modern decor, and so much silver that one estate seller says the weighing it all makes her team “feel like drug dealers.” Over the next couple of decades, baby boomers’ stuff has to go somewhere, and that rehoming process is increasingly taking place at estate sales.
“I call it the tsunami of stuff,” says Julie Hall, the director of the American Society of Estate Liquidators. “It’s cresting.”
There are … a lot of baby boomers. America’s over-65 population reached 55.8 million in 2020, and an additional 42.4 million are in the 55-64 age group (which, yes, catches some Gen Xers). This adds up to nearly 100 million people who have amassed a large amount of possessions — stuff they bought, stuff they got from their own parents, stuff their kids stuck them with.
“They kept everything,” says Sarah Hersh, one of the owners of Ben Hersh Estate Sales in New Jersey. Boomers were the first American generation to come up in an era of mass production and blatant consumerism, and many of the things they bought were built to last. “When we go into these houses of the boomer generation, they’re packed to the rafters with stuff from the mid-century to current.”
You can’t take it with you, and there are plenty of people willing to scoop up the stuff you’ve left behind.
Many elders would prefer to keep all of this stuff in the family, but their kids, grandkids, nieces, and nephews don’t want to inherit much, or simply don’t have the space. Enter the estate sale — pop-up limited-time museums of a person’s life, where everything on the premises is for sale.
“Boomers were an era of collectors. They believed in entertaining, and they believed their possessions had value, so they were proud to amass large collections of things to display to the world,” Hersh says. “We don’t really live like that anymore, but those things make for excellent inventory for resellers and the new younger generation of consumers who are into that vibe.”
Gen Z likes the appeal of sustainability, plus they’re into “cottagecore” and “grandmacore” aesthetics. Millennials and Gen X want midcentury modern and utilitarian pieces.
I recognize estate sales can sound a bit morbid at first, but not all offloadings come after a funeral. There are actually four Ds to estate sales: downsizing, divorce, decorating, and, yes, death. That latter one may give you the heebie jeebies, but as the saying goes, you can’t take it with you, and there are plenty of people willing to scoop up the stuff you’ve left behind.
Janelle Stone, a high-end estate liquidator, operates out of what she calls the “mecca of estate sales” — Dallas — and sees her line of work as a goldmine. After decades of minimalism in fashion and design, maximalism is back. She’s started buying plate hangers to put dishes on display again and marvels at 20-something shoppers grabbing various tchotchkes. Furs have gone “insane,” she says, and the same goes for vintage fashion. Customers will wait in line for two hours for a Herend porcelain starfish they’ve scoped out online prior to the sale. “You’re never going to completely clear a house, but it’s pretty amazing,” she says. “People know what they want, and they come and buy.”
It’s a huge moment for sterling, given the increase in the price of silver, which hit an all-time high of over $120 per ounce at the start of the year. (It’s since come back down but is still in the $85 range.) Stone tells me it’s affected how they price it — they can’t be as aggressive, because nobody can afford to pay $16,000 for an eight-piece silverware set, and the smelters are so inundated they might not even take it. Hence the drug dealer analogy: “We have to weigh it out. I mean, we look like drug dealers with our gram scales and baggies everywhere,” she says.
Hersh, in New Jersey, concurs on the popularity of sterling silver and vintage clothes, and adds that vintage collectibles, jewelry, toys, and electronics are also a big draw.
Not everything is flying off the estate sale shelves. Hersh says midcentury modern furniture still sells, but “it’s not as strong as it was.” Few buyers are into china, etched crystal, and glass. The big brown furniture that’s long sat in baby boomers’ and the silent generation’s homes often goes unwanted.
“A general rule of thumb is the bigger and heavier and darker a piece is, the more likely it’s going to remain there and not be sold,” Hall says. Younger generations tend to prefer smaller, portable pieces. Hersh tells me clear glass isn’t a popular seller “no matter what you do.”
A lot of baby boomers have china. Sadly, no one wants it. Emily Stewart/Business Insider
The same goes for glassware. There’s just not a lot of demand. Emily Stewart/Business Insider
I recently witnessed this for myself at an estate sale in Long Island, New York. It was a lazy Sunday, so I showed up during the last hour of a five-hour sale. The first thing I noticed when I walked into the kitchen was two sets of china, one of which looked very similar to the set my mother has. Around the corner was a big brown hutch filled with stacks of crystal and clear glassware, and there was more in the basement. My main thought was we should shut down Ikea immediately and never buy new dishes or glasses again.
The internet has changed and accelerated the scale of the estate industry, just as it has every other part of the economy. Everyone can look up what everything costs, so sellers have to do their research and can’t simply guesstimate a fair price anymore. Sellers often post what’s available online ahead of time, so buyers can pinpoint exactly what they want before they show up in person.
And then there are the resellers — technology has given birth to a plethora of resale platforms, from eBay to Depop to Whatnot, and droves of people eager to turn flipping used stuff into a side hustle or even a full-time gig. Most of the estate sellers and aficionados I spoke to for this story had tales about this development. Hersh tells me resellers are “vicious,” and on certain sales, flipped me up the first 50 people in line. “They are like elbowing each other out of spaces to get to stuff,” she says.
Hall points out that the resellers are generally a positive for estate sales — after all, the goal is to get rid of everything in the house, and who cares if someone plans to put it on eBay for triple the price. But they can be pushy, asking for deals. “Resellers sometimes want more of a bargain, and a lot of times we cannot give it to them on the first day,” she says. “It’s not for the faint of heart.”
My recent estate sale experience included this very cool basement bar, and a lot of unwanted items.
Emily Stewart/Business insider
Maddy Brannon, an estate sale influencer based in Washington, DC, says she prefers to hit up estate sales later in the day so she doesn’t have to duke it out with the pros. She stumbled into the market when she and her husband were looking to furnish their home, and now she uses her experience to pass along useful tips to the noobs.
“You don’t need to be the first person at the estate sale unless you saw something on the listing you absolutely have to have,” she says. She’s not sure if it’s the “Disney World effect” or what, but people worry about long lines and feel like they must be first in at all costs. Plus, later in the day, you’re more likely to get a discount.
Brannon’s other pieces of advice included going during the week to avoid crowds and making sure you understand the rules of getting in — for some sales, waiting in line isn’t enough. Instead, the executor will call you in by name or number. And don’t shop off the “hold” table, where shoppers place items they want to buy. “People get really upset about that,” she says.
There’s genuinely something quite nice to all of this, albeit awkward. We spend our lives accumulating things and, over time, getting attached to them. Getting rid of them can be emotionally fraught, especially if we’d hoped our loved ones would want them or believed they’d hold more value than they do. For many people, it’s a hard pill to swallow that their kids don’t want their prized tea set, but acknowledging that is also permission to let it go.
There’s a peculiar sense of intimacy to estate sales — you walk through someone’s home, touch their things, look through their drawers, and get to make up stories about them based on their possessions. The golden age of estate sales isn’t just about the “goldmine” of inventory or the “vicious” hustle of the resale market, it’s about the way we experience life through tangible items — and how those things can live multiple lives, even ones we’re not involved in.
So next time you see an estate sale nearby because your boomer neighbors are finally selling their family home and moving to a condo in Florida, instead of begrudging that it took so long, pop over to see if you can pick up a vintage Le Creuset.
Emily Stewart is a senior correspondent at Business Insider, writing about business and the economy.
Business Insider’s Discourse stories provide perspectives on the day’s most pressing issues, informed by analysis, reporting, and expertise.
Saturday morning was cold, rainy, and gray in northern New Jersey. The only place I wanted to be was curled up and cozy with my cat.
Instead, I dragged myself out of bed, drove to Target, and got in line at 7:30 a.m. to shop the retailer’s latest designer collaboration.
Target recently partnered with Roller Rabbit, a lifestyle brand known for its $128 pajamas. If you’re unfamiliar, ask your teen relatives. Gen Z and Gen Alpha are obsessed with its vibrant aesthetic and limited-edition prints.
As a 30-year-old millennial, I only learned about the brand in December when I saw young people flaunting their Roller Rabbit pajamas in holiday gift hauls.
In the name of journalism, though, I embraced the trend and joined fans to shop its Target pieces, which retail between $2 and $250 each, in-store.
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The experience was a little chaotic, but also enlightening. I think I finally understand the Roller Rabbit fascination.
Shoppers wait outside a Target store in New Jersey to shop the Roller Rabbit collaboration line.
Amanda Krause/Business Insider
The calm before the storm
Despite the cold drizzle, 12 people were waiting in line when I arrived at Target around 7:30 a.m. Within 20 minutes, nearly 30 shoppers (myself included) had gathered.
The crowd mostly included moms shopping for their tweens, a few couples, and a handful of children.
As they talked, it became clear that pajamas would be the hot-ticket item from the collection, which also included swimwear, suitcases, sweatshirts, and more.
“I’m here because I have the real ones, and these are $100 less,” I heard one shopper say.
A Target employee came outside a few minutes before the store opened at 8 a.m. and handed out paper tickets. Each could be used to redeem a free Roller Rabbit shopping bag. I didn’t know there were any freebies available, so this was a nice surprise.
My ticket to redeem a free Roller Rabbit shopping bag.
Amanda Krause/Business Insider
Slight chaos erupted as Target’s doors opened
When the store opened, some people went straight to the employee handing out free shopping bags, while others rushed to grab the merchandise on their wish lists.
As I approached the small Roller Rabbit section, I heard one mom whisper to her tween: “Run. Go get the pajamas you want.”
There were definitely fewer items available in-store than online. I saw a few racks of clothing, tables covered with accessories, and one cart with extra merchandise.
I was able to snap a single photo before the section was swarmed.
The Roller Rabbit x Target collection.
Amanda Krause/Business Insider
As expected, pajamas flew off the shelves almost instantly. I saw many people grabbing handfuls and then choosing their sizes.
Their approach seemed to work better than mine. I eyed the rack for a medium and watched sets get snatched up in front of me. In the end, I was only able to grab one pair.
After the pajamas were picked through, customers turned to the line’s other offerings. I saw people grabbing sweatsets, beach towels, and water bottles.
In many cases, I heard people say they were stocking up for friends and family just in case they wanted anything. People seemed to have a “buy now, decide later” mindset.
The Roller Rabbit section was busy and packed with shoppers.
Amanda Krause/Business Insider
Eventually, I left the crowd and went to Target’s dressing room to try on a few pieces of clothing.
My first impression of the line was positive. I really liked the shape and feel of the $25 terry-cloth pullover, which I could see myself wearing year-round. The $15 boxer shorts were also fun, comfortable, and multi-functional in terms of wear.
I was less impressed by the $45 drop waist midi dress, which I tried on in pink. Numerous stitches were coming apart, the fabric felt cheap, and the sizing was inconsistent. The medium was far too big, and the small didn’t fit either.
Target didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on the quality.
I liked the brand’s pullover top and boxer shorts, but I wasn’t a fan of its midi dresses.
Amanda Krause/Business Insider
Then it was time to finally try Roller Rabbit’s famous pajamas.
Personally, I love a matching pajama set, but I’ve never felt the need to spend more than $30 on them. It’s safe to say I wouldn’t likely splurge on regular Roller Rabbit designs, made from 100% pima cotton.
Target’s version of the brand’s PJs cost $25 and are made from 95% cotton and 5% spandex. They fit me perfectly, and I found them to be soft, cozy, and, of course, cute. I loved the little cartoon animals printed across the blue-and-white design.
I purchased these pajamas and plan on keeping them.
Amanda Krause/Business Insider
Sure enough, I left with three out of the four pieces I tried on — everything except the dress. Admittedly, it was mostly FOMO (the fear of missing out) that led to my purchase.
I knew that if I didn’t buy the items I’d found in my size right then and there, my only option would be to buy them on the resale market for double the price. (Many sets are now listed on eBay for prices of $80 or more.) What if I didn’t buy them and regretted it?
Now that a few days have passed, I know that I’ll likely return the long-sleeve top. It was an impulse purchase that I like, but don’t love.
I will, however, keep the shorts and pajamas. They add fun pops of color to my wardrobe and are pretty high-quality considering the low prices.
So, have I been converted into a Roller Rabbit fan? Sort of.
I can’t say I’d buy any $128 pairs from Roller Rabbit’s website. No matter how soft they are, or how exclusive a print is, I can’t justify the price.
A Target collaboration, though, just makes sense. It’s a more accessible version of the Roller Rabbit brand that appeals to both young shoppers and curious minds like mine.
Nostalgically, the line also brought me back to a millennial version of this fad: Bobby Jack and Paul Frank pajamas at slumber parties.
In our modern world of Sephora tweens and kid influencers, it was refreshing to see young people excited about something as simple as pajamas decorated with cartoon monkeys. We’ve all been there.
Coach’s former CEO said Gen Z reminds him of his generation.
Speaking to Bloomberg in an interview released on Sunday, ex-CEO Lew Frankfort said he started at the New York City-based luxury company 45 years ago.
“So I’ve seen generations change, and Gen Z is the generation that’s most similar to my generation, the sixties,” he said.
“They’re very value-driven,” Frankfort added. “They’re concerned with climate, they’re concerned with authenticity, truth, being who they are, and relationships.”
Frankfort joined Coach in 1979 and served as the company’s CEO and chairman from 1985 through 2014. He sought to position Coach as an “accessible luxury” brand.
Coach’s current CEO, Todd Kahn, started in the role in 2020 and led the company into its current Gen Z-focused era.
Kahn said in the Bloomberg interview that Gen Z customers are “very, very thoughtful about their purchases” and like to shop in physical stores, making shopping an experience.
Coach has resonated with budget-conscious Gen Z consumers because it sells products priced lower than those of other luxury brands.
Gen Z is big business for Coach. A 2023 consumer spending report by market research firm Earnest Analytics found that consumers under 25 increased their spending at Coach by 10% from January through June that year.
To attract more of this consumer base, Coach has doubled down on its charm range in recent years, catering to Gen Z’s love for bag charms, trinkets, and collectables. The cherry-shaped charm was a Gen Z favorite, said Joanne Crevoiserat, the CEO of parent company Tapestry, during a May earnings call.
The company is also bringing in Gen Z celebrities into campaigns and as brand ambassadors, such as rapper Lil Nas X and K-pop artist Lee Youngji. Celebrities like Bella Hadid have been spotted carrying Coach bags.
Coach reported sales of $2.14 billion in the latest quarter, a 25% increase from the same period the year before. It had 330 stores in North America and 619 stores internationally, as of December.
Tapestry’s stock has risen about 85% in the past year.
When Alyson Isaacs joined Meta in 2022, she only had about $200 in her savings account. A six-figure salary offered a chance to rebuild her finances, but her ultimate goal lay outside Big Tech.
After college, Isaacs “completely drained” her savings on a startup she’d co-founded, and found herself grappling with her next career move. After weighing her options, she decided to follow the advice of a mentor: go to “startup rehab” — in other words, takea full-timejob.
“You can always get a job at a Big Tech company,'” said Isaacs, who’s 28 and lives in San Francisco.
About four months later, she landed a product manager role at Meta in the company’s Quest for Business virtual reality division. But her entrepreneurial itch never left, and she eventually began mapping out the best path back into the startup world.
“There are ways you can be entrepreneurial,” she said of working at Big Tech, “but it’s very much not the same.”
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Over the past year, I’ve interviewed more than a dozen workers who, like Isaacs, chose to quit their jobs at major employers — in some cases without another role lined up. While some eventually landed at another large company, others stepped away from the corporate world entirely — joining a smaller business, launching their own venture, pursuing a career pivot, or focusing on personal priorities like parenting.
They’ve become outliers in an economy where workers are quitting at one of the lowest rates in the past decade — a trend driven by a hiring slowdown that’s left some clinging to their jobs with few appealing alternatives. Those who have called it quits told me they did so for a mix of reasons: concerns about job security, shifts in workplace culture, entrepreneurial ambitions, or a desire for more meaningful work. In short, they wanted greater long-term agency over their careers.
Isaacs shared how she decided to take the leap back into entrepreneurship — and offered advice for others facing a similar career crossroads.
Preparing for a return to entrepreneurship
After leaving her post-college startup, Isaacs took a month to reset. She then spent two months interviewing at smaller companies to fine-tune her résumé and sharpen her interview skills. Eventually, she applied for a role at Meta and landed the job. She moved from the Berkeley area to San Francisco and started in May 2022 — about a year after graduation.
While Isaacs didn’t have firm plans to return to entrepreneurship, she knew that if she ever went down that path again, she’d need to be financially prepared for life without a steady paycheck. So she started living well below her means, including living in a less expensive area, going to a basic gym, cooking at home, and avoiding shopping sprees.
“I saved so hard because I knew that this wasn’t going to be the end game for me, and I wanted to start my own thing again eventually,” she said.
Isaacs also prepared for a potential return to entrepreneurship by spending about five hours a week angel investing, which involved scouting and backing startups. After about a year of saving, she began making a few investments, each under $10,000. She said the experience helped her build a network in San Francisco’s startup scene and spot gaps other entrepreneurs could exploit — insights that helped shape her own business ideas.
The final phase of Isaacs’ preparation was soaking up everything she could from her time at Meta, including transitioning to a product manager position at Instagram — one of Meta’s subsidiaries — in 2024. She said the roles gave her knowledge and experience that entrepreneurship alone couldn’t provide.
“Traditional entrepreneurship was just flying by the edge of my seat and seeing what worked,” she said. “But I needed that level of expertise to go farther in my career.”
The question was when to make the leap and leave Meta. Isaacs said the death of her father in 2024 weighed heavily on her thought process.
“That really triggered this thought in my brain of, ‘Is being a product manager at a Big Tech company what I want to do for the rest of my life?'” she said. “And the answer was resoundingly no — I wanted to do something on my own and prove myself.”
By mid-2025, Isaacs found herself thinking more and more about a startup idea in the consumer AI space — and struggling to focus on her job at Meta. On July 1, she resigned; the next day, she began working full-time on her startup, which she described as an “agentic AI solution for personal wellness.” The company is currently in stealth, meaning the team isn’t publicly sharing full details while the product is still in development. She said she and her two co-founders are testing the product with users and plan to open a pre-seed funding round in the spring.
Read more about people who’ve found themselves at a corporate crossroads
Advice for others weighing big career moves
Isaacs said she knows many people might hesitate to give up a Big Tech job. But she believes some underestimate their chances of finding a new role or building something themselves — and end up stuck in jobs they don’t enjoy.
“It’s kind of like dating,” she said, adding that if you anticipate a bad dating pool, “you’re going to stay with your bad ex.”
Isaacs said she wasn’t worried about resigning from Meta, in part because she’s a “super optimist” about her career. If her startup doesn’t work out, she’s confident in her backup plan — the same one she relied on after her post-college startup opportunity fell through.
“Leaving Meta wasn’t scary for me because I was like, ‘I can always get another job in Big Tech,'” she said.
Isaacs has a few pieces of advice for other aspiring entrepreneurs. She recommends connecting with as many people as possible who are relevant to the venture you want to pursue — and looking for ways to help them, whether through angel investing, advising, or offering support.
“You kind of create this flywheel of people helping you if you help other people first,” she said.
Additionally, even if your end goal is to build a business, Isaacs said having experience at a big-name company can give you valuable credibility as an entrepreneur.
“I needed to be undeniable as a founder, and having a big-box name brand on your résumé gives you that undeniability,” she said.
Adios to casual dating: Young Americans are seeking committed life partners to split bills with.
Quincy Yang, the co-CEO of dating app Coffee Meets Bagel, told Business Insider that money and economics are huge considerations for Gen Z when choosing a partner.
“It’s so hard to afford to buy a house, or any property,” Yang said, adding that a lot of younger people are staying at home with their parents. He said for older generations, it was more affordable to “live the American dream” of buying a home and starting a family.
“Now, you need dual incomes to afford just the median condo or house. You need to have a pretty good job; you can’t slack off too much,” he said.
Yang said the affordability crisis has affected dating. “There’s an incentive now to find a good partner who is financially stable and ambitious.”
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Shn Juay, Yang’s co-CEO, said that this is evident in Gen Zers not being as into hookups as older generations.
“When you talk about dating apps, the first thing that comes to mind will be hookups,” she said. “But the Gen Zs are really more conscious about more real things in their life, they’re not into hookups. Unlike the previous generation, what they imagine of an ideal partner is very pragmatic.”
The CEOs said that daters should choose dealbreakers judiciously while finding a partner.
“You can always go for a higher degree, or you get promoted along the way, but not at age 28 years old, where everybody’s probably still really early in their career,” Juay told Business Insider.
Dual incomes are needed to achieve the American dream
Living in the US is more expensive than ever.
Housing costs have been rising faster than incomes over the last two decades, according to a June 2024 report by the US Treasury Department.
Grocery prices are not providing any relief. US food prices rose nearly 25% from 2020 to 2024, according to data from the US Department of Agriculture.
The Trump administration’s imposition of tariffs on foreign goods this year has exacerbated this problem by forcing retailers like Walmart and Target to raise prices.
In this climate, living alone has become an unaffordable luxury for many Americans.
A Pew Research Center study released in January said more US adults are living with a partner. The study analyzed US Census Bureau data and found that the percentage of adults living without a partner decreased from 44% in 2019 to 42% in 2023.
Life costs more, so money is a priority for younger daters
So naturally, finances are a big priority for daters.
In November, the dating app, which has around 20 million users worldwide, conducted a survey of about 1,050 of its users in the US between the ages of 21 and 35. The respondents were working professionals who said they were either actively seeking a relationship or open to one.
The survey revealed that financial stability was a top priority for them, with 54% of the respondents listing it as such. Almost 60% labeled “ambition/drive” as a must-have in a potential partner, even more than having shared interests.
“While many are looking for someone to spend their life with, practical matters still reign supreme,” said Coffee Meets Bagel, which markets its app as “for serious daters.”
Gen Z is embracing one decades-old phenomenon: Trading card games like Pokémon.
Collectible card games were the most-purchased secondhand product category for Gen Z in the US on eBay so far this year, according to data from the e-commerce platform.
The trend was especially clear among Gen Z men, who collectively shifted spending from electronics to trading cards and other collectibles, according to eBay. Trading cards were also the top secondhand sales category among Gen Z women on the platform, followed by books and cameras.
While trading cards for franchises such as Pokémon and Yu-Gi-Oh! initially became popular with kids and teens in the US in the late 1990s and early 2000s, the data shows that the cards remain popular, even among those who were born as they were taking off.
Part of the enduring popularity is because those people who grew up with trading cards are now passing the interest on to their own kids, Aaron Ottensmann, a 29-year-old who runs card sales business SassyTCG, told Business Insider.
“You’re starting to see people like me having kids, and they’re picking up starter decks and playing with their kids,” Ottensmann said.
Aaron Ottensmann sells collectible trading cards through eBay.
Aaron Ottensmann
While Ottensmann said he sources cards from distributors, the business has become competitive enough that some newer sellers buy cards at retailers like Walmart and Costco, then resell them.
Other customers are after high-dollar cards, with some turning to trading cards as an alternative to investing in the stock market.
In early December on Ottensmann’s eBay shop, shoppers could find about two dozen cards or packs of cards priced over $1,000. His most expensive sale over the past year, a set of 127 early Yu-Gi-Oh! cards, sold for about $75,000 through eBay.
Trading cards are one part of the broader secondhand sales market, which eBay said is expanding in a report released last month.
About 82% of survey respondents said they planned to spend more on secondhand items this holiday season than they did in 2024, according to the company’s Recommerce Report.
Shopping secondhand has gained popularity this year, especially as President Donald Trump’s tariffs have raised the price of some goods and added costs to items ordered from outside the US.
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