Black Hair Industry Statistics 2022
- Natural hair care made up 8.74 billion of the global hair care market in 2019
- The natural hair care market is estimated to have a growth rate of 4.7% annually from 2019
- Black Americans spend 35% of their money on hair products on styling products.
- South Korean businesses hold a majority of the ethnic hair market with a hold of 60-80%, while black-owned ethnic hair products only make up 3% of the ethnic hair market.
- Black Americans yearly spend 18% of their income on ethnic hair beauty products.
- Black women experience more hair anxiety than other women.
- One out of five black women feels the need to straighten their hair for work.
- More than half of black women have been unsuccessful in finding hair products suitable for their hair.
- Black women experience high levels of anxiety over their natural hair.
- Black women spend more money on products for their hair than white women.
- Black women experience high levels of stigma and bias because of their natural hair among white women.
- On average, back women spend more time tending their hair than white women.
- Black women, a part of the natural hair community, express more preference for natural hair than black women not a part of the community.
- In 2020, the global black hair care market rose to $2.5B
- Households of low-income families make up 43.3% of the natural hair market spending.
50% of black women believe that their natural hair and care are essential to their identities.
- 20% of natural hair product consumers express difficulty finding various products suited to their hair care needs.
- Black women spend billions of dollars on natural hair care and beauty products.
- Black women spend the most (9x more) on natural hair care products than non-black consumers of all genders.
- Hispanic and Black women are the major investors of US personal care sales, including natural hair products and accessories.
- 43% of black consumers spending in the US personal care market comprises black women.
- Styling products for natural hair went over 1.4B in the year 2020.
- During COVID-19, black women were 2.4 more likely than white women to purchase hair treatments.
- Financial status makes no difference amongst black consumers when purchasing natural hair care and styling products.
- 58% of black hair care products contained at least one toxic ingredient.
- 70% of black women read labels on hair care products
- 87% of black women prioritize clean and safe products
- There are currently 34M posts tagged under “natural hair” on Instagram.
- There is a lack of clean products in the natural hair care market than in any other hair market.
- 38% of black hair consumers express a desire to try new styles.
- Black men who regularly change their hairstyle use the highest amount of black hair products.
- The global natural hair care product market was valued at USD 8.74 billion in 2019 and is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 4.7% from 2020 to 2027.
- Rising awareness of the benefits of natural hair care products is one of the key factors fueling market growth.
- Most natural hair care products contain antioxidants containing Vitamin E, which nourish the scalp and promote hair growth.
- Detrimental effects of using chemical-based shampoos and conditioners, such as bad hair quality and rough scalp, have goaded consumers to opt for natural hair care products.
- Natural hair consumers have become ingredient savvy and avoid picking products with sulfates, parabens, mineral oil, and alcohol, thus boosting the demand for natural hair care products.
- White women show explicit bias toward black women’s textured hair.
- White women rate black hair as less beautiful, less sexy/attractive, and less professional than straight hair.
- Black women have significantly more positive attitudes toward textured hair than other women, including black women.
- Millennial naturalistas have more positive attitudes toward textured hair than all other women.
- black women experience high levels of anxiety than white women.
- 1 in 3 black women reports that their hair is the reason they haven’t exercised, compared to one in ten white women.
42. 1 in 5 black women feels social pressure to straighten their hair for work — twice as many as white women.
- Black women are more likely to report spending more time on their hair than white women.
- Black women are more likely to report having professional styling appointments than white women.
- Black women are more likely to report spending more money on products for their hair than white women.
- 1 in 4 black women have difficulty finding products for their hair. More than half have been unable to find them.
- Black women perceive a social stigma against textured hair, substantiated by white women’s devaluation of natural hairstyles.
- Black women part of the natural hair community are more likely to show a preference for black textured hair.
- White women in the natural hair community are 3 times more likely to be neutral than white women towards black hair. However, the majority still show a preference for straight hair.
SOURCES: Grand View Research, afrolovely, ESSENCE, statistica, Treasured Locks, CNBC, MarketResearch.Biz, AskWonder, perception.org.