For decades, luxury sold aspiration through ownership.

Today, increasingly, it sells something less tangible and arguably more valuable: the promise of feeling better.

That shift sits at the heart of Alo Yoga’s expansion onto the French Riviera, where the Los Angeles-born brand has moved well beyond activewear. New retail openings in Cannes and Saint-Tropez, a takeover of the pier at Hôtel Martinez and the launch of the 72-metre ALO Voyage yacht together signal something much bigger than summer brand theatre.

Retail, hospitality and wellness are converging fast, creating a new kind of experience economy where product is often only the entry point.

ALO understood that early.

“There was never one moment when ALO became about lifestyle,” Summer Nacewicz, ALO’s EVP of Marketing and Creative, told me. “We were built that way from the beginning.”

Many brands expand into experiences once product growth slows, bolting hospitality or lifestyle onto an existing business model. ALO’s trajectory feels different. Its founders built around movement, mindfulness and mind-body connection first; apparel simply became the most scalable expression of that philosophy.

Today that philosophy stretches far beyond clothing, into wellness clubs, beach takeovers, recovery spaces and destination experiences designed around how consumers want to live, travel and feel.

Athleisure has moved far beyond the gym. It now sits inside travel, work, leisure and identity, functioning increasingly like modern luxury tailoring once did: a daily uniform that signals values as much as taste.

“Activewear has absolutely become a modern uniform,” says Nacewicz. “But the bigger shift is what that uniform represents. Wellness has moved from the margins of people’s lives to the center of how they want to feel, dress, travel, and spend their time.”

The fastest-growing premium categories increasingly orbit sleep, recovery, longevity, movement and optimisation. Consumers are spending not simply to look better, but to function better.

“Wellness is the true luxury because it changes how you experience everything else,” Nacewicz says. “Luxury today is felt. It’s experienced. It’s less about what you own and more about how you live.”

Status has traditionally been visible. Possessions signalled success. Increasingly, modern status is being expressed through something harder to buy and harder to fake: time, energy, clarity and access to extraordinary experiences.

The viral success of the ALO yacht sits neatly inside that evolution.

Virality, however, is not the same as long-term brand value, something ALO appears acutely aware of.

“Ultimately, success is when a viral moment becomes a lasting relationship with the brand,” Nacewicz explains.

The yacht is not really the product. Nor is the beach club. They function instead as physical expressions of the wider ALO world, inviting consumers deeper into an ecosystem spanning apparel, digital studios, wellness clubs and community.

Consumers, meanwhile, appear increasingly receptive to exactly this kind of physical immersion, particularly as digital fatigue intensifies.

“People are definitely craving IRL experiences that bring them back into their bodies and into real connection,” Nacewicz says.

The transaction is becoming less visible. The strongest brands increasingly win not by pushing product harder, but by creating environments people want to belong to.

ALO’s Riviera takeover offers a sharp illustration of where premium consumer spending is heading.

Not towards more “stuff”, but towards experiences that make people feel better, live better and connect more deeply – the joie de Vivre.

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