Liying Qian, Global Insight Manager - Tissue and Hygiene, Euromonitor International: ‘Consumers continue to focus on affordability and simultaneously demand enhanced value’

Liying Qian, Global Insight Manager – Tissue and Hygiene, Euromonitor International

State of the industry: consumer tissue industry snapshot

  • Global market retail volume in 2025 (tonnage): 30m
  • Incremental volume growth 2025-2030 to come from APAC: 38%
  • Growth CAGR in retail volume term 2025-2030: +1.5%

Regional industry composition and evolution

  • Toilet paper leads tissue consumption across the board
  • Facial tissues marginally leads volume growth, predominantly in APAC, driven by wellness demand and beauty-inspired innovations
  • Paper Towels foresees similar growth, mainly in NA and WE, due to increased use occasions and product variety

The consumer landscape and key trends

  • Consumers continue to focus on affordability and simultaneously demand enhanced value
  • 72% of consumers are concerned about the rising cost of everyday goods
  • 69% of consumers are looking for ways to simplify life
  • 35% of professionals said their company plans to align innovation more with changing consumer values

Businesses have limited room to raise prices while facing rising costs and uncertainties

  • Stagnating incomes: affordability remains a paramount concern for consumers
  • Rising costs + uncertainties: businesses are grappling with rising costs, tariffs, and market volatility
  • Squeezed profit margin: businesses can no longer pass on costs. Delivering enhanced value is imperative
  • Top trends shaping consumer tissue
  • Wiser wallet: affordability is only a starting point
  • Price opens the door, but value secures the sale
  • Relevance now comes from smarter consumption, not cheaper products

Price and quality: duality anchors product desirability

  • World: product features desired, household essentials, 2026: 
  • Top three priorities: value for money, high quality, low price
  • Last three priorities: ingredient formulation, energy efficient, sustainably produced

Redefining value through longer-lasting formats

  • Peru: Elite XL marks Softys’ brand debut in the high-length segment
  • US: Charmin’s “forever roll” resets toilet paper beyond regular durability
  • Wiser wallets: value add needs to be communicated explicitly and credibly
  • Abundance and longevity are most tangible value priorities
  • Convenience will aid brands appealing to attention-scarce, time-pressured consumers

Comfort zone: mental wellbeing in vogue

  • Experiential as a value differential: from functional to feel-good
  • Time-saving and frictionless design for different occasions and lifestyles
  • Culturally tailored sensorial cues (texture, scent or colour that evokes comfort, nostalgia and playfulness)

Occasion-targeted stress relief as a new luxury

  • Germany: Essity’s Tempo “machine washable” facial tissues ease laundry anxiety
  • US: Kleenex Snap & Go’s durable stylish pack to ensure on-the-go convenience
  • Sensorial enhancements as premium value cues
  • Japan: Daio Paper enhanced Elleair toilet paper in Japan with natural fibre softeners and fragrance-retaining film to boost softness and extend scent longevity

Comfort zone

  • Engineer emotional comfort through the senses.
  • Simplify routines through precision, not reduction
  • Build trust via consistency and familiarity
  • Eco logical: Sensibly green
  • Practical approach to sustainable consumption
  • Green attributes often seen as complementary benefits, not always the sole purchase motivator

Planet-friendly remains the dominant spend driver, while sustainable sourcing is the fastest-growing engine. Affordability and trust determine whether ESG strategies translate into adoption and returns. Main barriers hindering sustainable purchases 2025: high price – unclear labelling – low assortment where I shop – lack of trust in sustainable claims – lower quality.

Sustainability as the new normal: making recycled easy to choose through clarity, aesthetics, and accessibility.

WEPA’s “Beige ist besser” campaign repositions natural beige aesthetics as a trusted quality signal, normalising sustainability as the category baseline.

Who Gives A Crap is scaling purpose-led, recycled and bamboo tissue from DTC into mainstream retail, pairing bold, recognisable branding with transparent social impact.

Eco Logical

  • Leverage sustainability claims with strong consumer resonance in your category and market
  • Solutions that are affordable and sustainable are ideal
  • Integrate sustainability with functional benefits for easier adoption

Business implications

Redefine value beyond price: move from low-price signalling to clearly articulated benefits, durability, longevity, convenience, and emotional reassurance that justify choice in a tight wallet environment. Compete on emotional utility as much as function: embed comfort, familiarity, and stress-reducing cues into everyday products to strengthen relevance and loyalty in an anxious, value-conscious world. Design for wiser wallets, not cheaper baskets: prioritise longer-lasting formats and smarter pack architecture that reduce replacement frequency, shopping trips, and decision fatigue. Scale sustainability only where it strengthens core value: treat planet-friendly as entry stakes, but prioritise affordable, trusted sourcing and packaging claims that reinforce performance and core value.