Cost-Per-Wear Calculator by Fabric
Compare the true cost of your garments based on fabric, category and estimated lifespan. Data from Textile Exchange, McKinsey Fashion, WRAP UK and Misciano field tests.
Cost per wear: the true measure of a garment s value
A 600 EUR wool coat worn 300 times costs 2 EUR per use. A 60 EUR polyester jacket worn 15 times costs 4 EUR per use. This simple calculation, called cost-per-wear, completely reverses price perception: the most expensive garment at purchase is often the cheapest in use. WRAP UK data shows that 30% of garments in European wardrobes have not been worn in over a year, representing an estimated dormant value of 30 billion EUR per year in Europe. The raw material of a garment is the primary determinant of its lifespan and therefore its cost per wear.
According to the McKinsey State of Fashion 2024 report, the fast fashion industry produces approximately 100 billion garments per year, of which 60% are discarded within a year of purchase. A recycled polyester t-shirt worn 10 times costs 1.50 EUR per use (15 EUR purchase), while a 45 EUR Supima cotton t-shirt worn 120 times costs 0.37 EUR per use. The Textile Exchange 2024 report confirms that quality natural fibers (merino wool, silk, cashmere, ELS cotton) offer 3 to 8 times longer lifespan than low-end synthetic fibers, provided proper care is given.
Our calculator integrates lifespan data by fabric from three independent sources: WRAP UK studies on textile longevity (Valuing Our Clothes, 2023), Textile Exchange technical reports on natural and synthetic fiber durability, and our own field tests conducted on 200 Misciano garments tracked over 36 months of real-world use. Each wear estimate accounts for fabric, garment category (dress, jacket, trousers, sweater, coat), wearing frequency and care conditions.
Investing in quality is not a luxury, it is an economic strategy. A Sustainable Apparel Coalition study shows that a 40-piece quality wardrobe costs on average 25% less over 5 years than a 120-piece fast fashion wardrobe renewed each season. At Misciano, we design every piece to maximize the number of wears: selecting the most durable fabrics, reinforced construction at stress points, and personalized care guides to extend the life of every garment.
Calculate your cost per wear
Enter the price, fabric and category of your garment. The calculator estimates the number of wears and your real cost per use.
Fabric ranking by cost-effectiveness
Calculator methodology
Our cost-per-wear calculator is based on a garment lifespan estimation protocol by fabric, validated by three independent sources: WRAP UK "Valuing Our Clothes" (2023), Textile Exchange technical reports (2024), and our own field tests on 200 Misciano garments tracked for 36 months.
Each fabric is assigned a reference wear count, then adjusted by garment category (coefficient 0.7 to 1.5) and declared wearing frequency (coefficient 0.4 to 1.3). Cost per wear is the purchase price divided by estimated wears.
The fast fashion comparison uses a standardized benchmark: a 30 EUR garment worn 20 times (1.50 EUR/wear), based on WRAP UK average data for fast fashion purchases.
Lifespan by fabric
Each fabric has a reference wear count from WRAP UK and Textile Exchange: silk 150, wool 300, cashmere 200, cotton 100, linen 120, polyester 50, viscose 60, nylon 70. These represent median values for standard to premium quality garments with proper care.
Sources and reference data
WRAP UK is the UK reference body on textile longevity. Textile Exchange publishes the annual Preferred Fiber and Materials Market Report covering 50+ fibers. McKinsey State of Fashion provides industry macroeconomic data. Our field tests complement these with real-world observations on Misciano garments.
Calculation protocol
Cost per wear (CPW) is calculated as: CPW = Price / (Base_wears x Category_coeff x Frequency_coeff). Category coefficients reflect mechanical stress: a coat (1.5) undergoes fewer washes than a t-shirt (0.7). Frequency coefficients adjust for cumulative wear.
Care assumptions
Estimates assume care per manufacturer recommendations: correct wash temperature, air drying for delicates, appropriate ironing. Neglected care reduces lifespan by 30-50% per WRAP UK data. Regular dry cleaning for silk and cashmere extends lifespan by 20% on average.
Construction quality adjustment
Fabric alone does not determine lifespan: construction quality (seams, finishes, reinforcements) plays a major role. Our estimates assume standard to premium construction. A fast fashion blended wool garment will not reach the reference 300 wears. Field tests show a 40-60% gap between budget and premium construction for the same fabric.
Field verification
200 Misciano garments were tracked for 36 months by a panel of 50 customers (France, Italy, Germany). Each piece was photographed every 6 months to assess visible wear (pilling, fading, deformation). Results confirm WRAP UK data within +/- 15% for natural fibers, and reveal 20% shorter lifespan than estimated for polyester and viscose.
Model limitations
This calculator provides an estimate based on statistical averages. Actual lifespan depends on many unmodeled factors: specific construction quality, climate, wearer morphology, storage habits. Figures are medians, not guarantees. The goal is to provide an order of magnitude for rational comparison between fast fashion and investment fashion.
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Frequently Asked Questions: Cost Per Wear
Everything you need to know about cost per wear, fabric lifespan and fashion investment. Data from WRAP UK, Textile Exchange and McKinsey.
What is cost per wear?
Cost per wear is the purchase price of a garment divided by the number of times it is worn. A 600 EUR wool coat worn 300 times = 2 EUR per use. A 60 EUR fast fashion jacket worn 15 times = 4 EUR per use. This calculation enables rational comparison of the real value of two garments at very different price points. WRAP UK studies show that 30% of garments in European wardrobes are never worn, representing 30 billion EUR in annual waste.
Why does fast fashion cost more in the long run?
According to McKinsey State of Fashion 2024, 60% of fast fashion garments are discarded within a year. A 10 EUR t-shirt worn 8 times = 1.25 EUR/wear. A 45 EUR Supima t-shirt worn 120 times = 0.37 EUR/wear. Over 5 years, a 120-piece fast fashion wardrobe renewed each season costs 25% more than a 40-piece quality wardrobe per the Sustainable Apparel Coalition. Low purchase price, high usage cost, plus 92 million tonnes of textile waste annually per UNEP.
Which fabric offers the best cost per wear?
Wool is the most cost-effective fabric at 300 estimated wears. A 150 EUR merino sweater worn 300 times = 0.50 EUR/wear. Cashmere follows at 200 wears, then silk (150), linen (120) and long-staple cotton (100). Polyester, despite low purchase price, caps at 50 wears due to shape loss, pilling and rapid wash degradation. Data from WRAP UK, Textile Exchange and Misciano field tests on 200 garments over 36 months.
How do you estimate the number of wears?
Three factors: fabric (natural vs synthetic), garment category (coat lasts longer than t-shirt) and wearing frequency. Our calculator uses reference data by fabric adjusted by category coefficient (0.7 for t-shirt to 1.5 for coat) and frequency coefficient (0.4 for rare to 1.3 for daily). To estimate yourself: wears per month x wearable months per year x years before replacement. A cashmere sweater worn 2x/week for 6 months over 5 years = 260 wears.
Does care affect garment lifespan?
Significantly. WRAP UK data shows neglected care reduces lifespan by 30-50%. Washing too hot, tumble drying, ignoring label instructions are the main causes of premature degradation. Regular dry cleaning for silk and cashmere extends lifespan by 20% on average. At Misciano, we provide personalized care guides with every piece.
Is cashmere more cost-effective than synthetics?
Yes, when comparing equivalent quality. A 250 EUR cashmere sweater worn 200 times = 1.25 EUR/wear. A 30 EUR acrylic sweater worn 30 times = 1.00 EUR/wear. The gap is small, but cashmere offers 3x better thermal comfort, incomparable hand feel and lasting elegance. Over 10 years, buying 7 replacement acrylic sweaters (210 EUR) costs nearly as much as one cashmere sweater (250 EUR) that lasts the decade.
Is an expensive coat worth the investment?
The coat is the garment where investment pays off most. An 800 EUR double-faced wool coat worn 300 times over 5 winters = 2.67 EUR/wear. A 120 EUR polyester coat worn 40 times over 1.5 winters = 3.00 EUR/wear. The quality coat is cheaper per use, better insulating (wool 1.5 clo vs polyester 0.8 clo), ages beautifully and is easily repaired.
Does repair improve cost per wear?
Yes. Each repair extends lifespan and mechanically reduces cost per wear. Darning a hole in a cashmere sweater costs about 30 EUR and adds 50-100 extra wears. Replacing a jacket zipper (20-40 EUR) extends life by 1-2 years. Per WRAP UK, repair could extend the active life of 30% of currently discarded garments. Add repair cost to purchase price: (Price + Repairs) / Total wears.
Does secondhand change the calculation?
Secondhand dramatically improves cost per wear since purchase price drops 50-80% while remaining lifespan depends on condition. A secondhand wool coat at 200 EUR (new: 800 EUR) with 200 wears remaining = 1.00 EUR/wear. However, secondhand synthetics have already lost significant lifespan. Best strategy: buy secondhand in natural fabrics (wool, silk, cashmere, premium cotton).
What is the environmental impact per wear?
Environmental impact per wear follows the same logic: more wears = lower footprint per use. Per UNEP, a cotton t-shirt generates 2.1 kg CO2 in manufacturing. Worn 10 times = 0.21 kg/wear. Worn 100 times = 0.021 kg/wear. Textile Exchange 2024 shows doubling garment lifespan reduces carbon footprint by 44%. Quality investment is both economic and ecological.
What is the most cost-effective garment in a wardrobe?
Statistically, the wool coat (300+ wears, 5-10 year calendar life, strong resale value), followed by quality denim jeans (400 wears over 5 years) and fine-knit merino or cashmere sweaters (200-300 wears). Least cost-effective: trend pieces in synthetics like polyester dresses, thin viscose tops and faux leather jackets (30-50 wears).
How to calculate cost per wear for your own clothes?
Simple 3-step method. Step 1: note the purchase price (add alterations/repairs). Step 2: estimate wears = frequency per week x weeks per year x estimated years. Example: 2x/week x 26 weeks (fall-winter) x 4 years = 208 wears. Step 3: divide total price by wears. A 600 EUR coat worn 208 times = 2.88 EUR/wear. If you resell for 100 EUR: (600-100)/208 = 2.40 EUR/wear. Our calculator automates this using WRAP UK and Textile Exchange lifespan data.