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15 things millennials stopped buying (and why it matters)

15 Things Millennials Stopped Buying (And Why It Matters)

In a capitalist society, your wallet is basically your ballot, and Millennials have been voting loudly. Entire industries haven’t collapsed overnight, but they’ve definitely felt the shift as younger consumers spend differently than previous generations.

Here are 15 industries Millennials have cooled on (or at least side-eyed into irrelevance).

Diamond Engagement Ring
Openverse

Diamond Engagement Rings

Turns out, “three months’ salary” was more marketing than mandate. Millennials are opting for lab-grown diamonds, alternative stones, or skipping traditional rings altogether—thanks to cost concerns and ethical sourcing questions.

four women's assorted dresses
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Fast Fashion

Millennials helped fuel fast fashion and then immediately started calling it out. Concerns over waste, quality, and labor practices have pushed many toward secondhand and sustainable brands, or toward buying fewer things (a radical concept, apparently).

black remote control on brown wooden table
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Cable TV Packages

Pay $150 for 800 channels you don’t watch? Hard pass. Streaming didn’t just disrupt cable—it obliterated the idea that anyone should tolerate contracts, hidden fees, and channel bundles from 2003.

assorted title book
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Printed Books

Let’s not go too far here—books aren’t dead. But Millennials have absolutely embraced e-books and audiobooks for convenience. Physical books are now more of a vibe than a necessity.

white plastic bottles on white plastic container
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Brand-Name Cleaning Products

Millennials read labels. Like… all of them. That’s led to a rise in generic brands, eco-friendly products, and DIY solutions. Bonus: fewer mystery chemicals with names that sound like boss fights.

black spin exercise bike lot
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Traditional Gyms

It’s not that Millennials don’t work out—it’s that they refuse to be locked into a 12-month contract for a treadmill they hate. Boutique fitness, apps, Pelotons, and at-home workouts have taken over.

disposable diapers
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Disposable Diapers

Cloth diapers and eco-friendly alternatives are making a comeback. Not universal—but enough to make the disposable diaper industry notice.

disposable razors
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Disposable Razors

Subscription razors, safety razors, and—plot twist—not shaving at all have cut into the disposable razor market. Sustainability meets “this is getting expensive.”

bottled water
Openverse

Bottled Water

Paying for water in a plastic bottle? Millennials said no (mostly). Reusable bottles, home filtration systems, and a general distrust of paying $3 for… water… have shifted habits.

pink green and yellow plastic straw lot
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Single-Use Plastics

From straws to shopping bags, Millennials have been a driving force behind reducing single-use plastics. Entire policies and corporate strategies have changed because of it.

two toothbrushes in a cup with toothpaste
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Manual Toothbrushes

Electric toothbrushes are on the rise, and dentists tend to prefer them for effectiveness. Manual toothbrushes aren’t gone, but they’re definitely losing ground.

cups of coffee are hanging from a rack
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Disposable Coffee Cups

Millennials still love coffee. They just don’t love the waste. Reusable cups, sustainability discounts, and mild barista judgment have helped push this shift.

vegetable stand
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Non-Organic Produce

This one’s more nuanced. Millennials prefer organic and local when possible, but price still matters. So while demand for organic food has grown, it hasn’t fully replaced conventional options.

yellow taxi cab on road near white concrete building during daytime
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Traditional Taxis

Ride-sharing apps didn’t just compete with taxis—they rewrote the entire experience. Upfront pricing, app-based convenience, and not having to awkwardly explain directions? Game over.

traditional bank
Openverse

Traditional Banking

Millennials didn’t abandon banks, but they did demand better ones. Online banks, fintech apps, and digital-first services have exploded, largely because younger consumers expect transparency, low fees, and mobile access. Also… 2008 didn’t exactly build trust.

photo of three person sitting and talking
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So… Did Millennials “Kill” These Industries?

Not exactly. But they did force them to evolve. The common thread here isn’t rebellion—it’s priorities: convenience, transparency, sustainability, and value.

Turns out, if you ignore those long enough, people stop buying your stuff. Weird how that works.

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This article originally appeared on Resourcebuzz and was syndicated by MediaFeed.co.

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