Homes feel increasingly out of reach and loan installments weigh more heavily on many Indonesian households. Amid the constant rise in the cost of living, local perfume is growing aggressively and has become one of the consumer categories that keeps expanding.
Perfume sales on Indonesian e-commerce reached Rp6.1 trillion (about USD386 million) in 2025, up 53 percent compared with the previous year. This growth is happening at a time when Indonesia's middle class is shrinking and people's purchasing power remains under pressure.
This phenomenon can be read through the concept of the lipstick effect, a consumption theory explaining that when economic conditions worsen, people still seek small forms of luxury that still feel affordable. When houses, cars, and vacations become harder to reach, consumers tend to keep setting aside money for something that provides comfort, confidence, and a personal experience in their daily lives.
In Indonesia, this form of affordable luxury increasingly appears through local perfume. The "cheap alternative" label that clung to local perfume for years is beginning to lose its relevance as consumer behavior shifts and the industry develops.
Local brands now no longer compete through scent alone, but also through story, emotional closeness, and an identity that feels relevant to young Indonesians. This shift is what makes the growth of the local perfume industry interesting to watch, especially because it is happening amid economic pressure that has not fully eased.
