Fashion design Audience in United Kingdom

Fashion design logo

Fashion design has an estimated audience of 15,619,742 people in United Kingdom. 67.7% are female, 32.3% are male, average age 41.9. Top regions: England, South East, Yorkshire and the Humber.

The average Fashion design fan in United Kingdom is 41.9 years old, more female, and lives primarily in England. The audience is concentrated in England, South East, Yorkshire and the Humber.

Category: Business & Career · Type: Topic · Subtype: Field of study

Demographics of Fashion design fans

Demographic split for Fashion design audience in United Kingdom
MetricValue
Female67.7%
Male32.3%
Average age41.9
Estimated audience size15,619,742

Top regions in United Kingdom

Top regions ranked by reach for Fashion design in United Kingdom
RegionReachAffinity
England11,714,8060.96×
South East2,364,3861.13×
Yorkshire and the Humber1,585,0891.26×
Scotland1,377,2000.98×
East of England1,303,0960.91×
South West1,151,0000.9×
West Midlands986,9051.47×
Wales974,9141.09×
East Midlands827,5730.75×
North West815,3580.49×
North East659,4611.09×
Northern Ireland466,0010.97×

Worldwide distribution

Worldwide audience distribution share by country for Fashion design
CountryShare
United States16.4%
Japan6.6%
Italy5.3%

See Fashion design audiences in other countries

More Field of study audiences in United Kingdom

How to read this data

Audience size is the estimated number of people in United Kingdom who actively search for Fashion design. Affinity is an over-index ratio: 2.0× means the audience is twice as likely to engage with that brand or trait as the country average. Reach is the estimated number of audience members in a region. Regional and brand-affinity tables are sorted from strongest signal to weakest.

About this audience profile

This audience profile is generated by Rascasse from anonymized search-behavior signals across United Kingdom. For methodology see methodology. Affinity values are over-index ratios vs. the country average (1.0 = baseline). Audience sizes are estimated, not measured.