Rent the Runway is shifting its business strategy as it aims to enhance customer experience following a successful fiscal year 2025 marked by significant inventory investments. The New York-based clothing rental company increased its inventory to reduce cancellations, improve subscriber retention, and pave the way for future growth. Now, CEO Jennifer Hyman emphasizes that 2026 will focus on helping subscribers navigate the larger selection available to them.
“If 2025 was about inventory acquisition, 2026 is about discovery,” Hyman stated during the company’s fourth-quarter and full-year earnings call on April 14. She elaborated that Rent the Runway is working to move beyond conventional eCommerce layouts, utilizing AI technology to create a personalized shopping experience that offers more choice and flexibility than ever before.
The company’s investment in artificial intelligence is multifaceted, targeting both customer engagement and operational efficiency. On the customer-facing side, Rent the Runway is developing tools that will change how subscribers interact with their catalog. Outfit grouping features aim to present complete looks rather than requiring customers to envision combinations themselves. Furthermore, product detail pages are being redesigned to include images featuring various models and motion-based visuals, along with AI-generated fit recommendations. The company is also working on a conversational search feature that will allow subscribers to query options by occasion rather than just garment type.
On the operational side, Rent the Runway is integrating computer vision technology into its quality control processes. This will help identify wear and tear on returned items, allowing the company to prolong the life of its inventory while reducing labor costs. Machine learning is also being applied to dynamic pricing strategies, a yield-maximization approach set to optimize the rental inventory.
Additionally, AI-assisted coding is reportedly accelerating the output of the technical team, streamlining features such as back-in-stock notifications. Hyman characterized the ambition as providing subscribers with “a stylist in your pocket at all times.”
As the company enters fiscal year 2026, it is also restructuring its inventory acquisition approach. After spending $74.9 million on rental products in fiscal year 2025, Rent the Runway plans to reduce this expenditure to between $45 million and $50 million in fiscal year 2026. The company intends to bridge this gap through revenue-share agreements within its Share by RTR program, where brand partners supply inventory in exchange for a percentage of rental revenue rather than upfront costs.
Rent the Runway is also exploring new revenue streams designed to maximize the value of its logistics infrastructure and subscriber base. In March, the company launched a pilot marketplace aimed at a select group of loyal subscribers, offering curated items such as shoes, shapewear, and beauty products for both rental and outright purchase. According to the company, 86% of surveyed members expressed interest in purchasing these complementary items through the platform.
A B2B dry cleaning service, initiated in March with one partner, represents an early effort to monetize the company’s cleaning and logistics capabilities beyond its subscriber base. Alongside this, the advertising segment is expanding, with a significant partnership with Air France serving as a model for connecting brand partners to a “high-net-worth customer” during important life events.
Hyman shared other noteworthy developments from the earnings call. Inventory-related cancellations decreased by 7.6% year-over-year in Q4, a direct outcome of the aggressive inventory strategy implemented in 2025, reinforcing the notion that selection depth enhances subscriber retention. Exclusive design partnerships are also set to expand in fiscal year 2026, allowing the company to produce collections at approximately 40% lower costs than comparable brand inventory.
The company’s City Ambassador program, launched in October 2025, now boasts over 1,000 on-the-ground brand advocates. The community-driven Muse content engine generated over 13 million impressions in Q4 alone, prompting a strategic shift toward reallocating a significant portion of its paid marketing budget to organic community channels and search engine optimization in fiscal year 2026.
For fiscal year 2025, Rent the Runway reported revenue of $91.7 million in Q4, marking a 20% increase year-over-year and surpassing analyst expectations of $76.6 million by $15.1 million. The full-year revenue reached $329.8 million, up 7.7% from the previous year. The company ended Q4 with 143,796 active subscribers, reflecting a 20.1% year-over-year increase, while average active subscribers rose to 146,356, a growth of 16%. Looking ahead, Q1 fiscal year 2026 revenue is projected to range between $85 million and $87 million, indicating a year-over-year growth rate of 22% to 25%.
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