Mango has reported surging sales in the first half of the financial year, despite what boss Toni Ruiz described as the continuingly “uncertain sectorial, macroeconomic and geopolitical environment”.

Mango London Oxford Street

Source: Mango

The retailer managed to open 78 new stores and complete 30 refurbishments worldwide

The Spanish fashion giant reported a 12% jump in turnover for the first half of 2025, up 14% on constant exchange rates, which it said reflected a “sustained growth in its business” for the period.

International markets also boomed for the brand in the first half, and now account for 78% of total sales turnover. Alongside Spain, Mango said that France, Turkey, Germany and the United States are now its biggest markets.

In terms of its store estate, the brand said it had opened 78 new stores in the period and completed 30 refurbishments worldwide, bringing its total estate to over 2,925 across 120 countries.

In the first half of 2025, the brand set aside €110m (£95.13m) to strategic projects, 70% of which were concentrated on new store openings and refurbishments. These included the world’s first Mango Home store in Barcelona, the first Mango Man store in the UK and the first Mango Teen store in Portugal.

Online also performed strongly, with sales turnover now representing 31% of the group’s total. During the period the brand launched online shopping personalisation tool Mango Stylist.

New chair and chief executive Ruiz said the results were “positive” in the first half, despite the global economic headwinds the brand and all retailers were facing into.

“In an uncertain sectorial, macroeconomic and geopolitical environment, the positive results of the first half of the year confirm the robustness of our model and strengthen our strategy.

“We continue to grow with a long-term vision, executing a differential value proposition that is well received by our customers around the world, and with continuous improvement of our sales channels”.