Markdown strategy: How to clear inventory without destroying your margins in 2026 

In this blog

Illustration of a retail shelf with a “70% discount” sign, surrounded by gear icons representing promotion optimization or automated pricing.

Introduction

Picture this: it’s mid-February and you’re staring at three hundred units of a holiday sweater that never moved. Your warehouse team wants the shelf space back. Your CFO wants to know about margin targets. And somewhere in your gut, you know that slapping a “70% OFF” sticker on everything is going to feel like a fire sale, because it basically is one.

A disciplined markdown strategy is what separates retailers who recover cleanly from those who bleed out, and it has to be built before the crisis, not during it. 

What is a markdown strategy?

A markdown strategy is a planned, systematic approach to reducing retail prices to stimulate demand, clear excess inventory, and manage product lifecycles

This isn’t the same as putting items on sale when you feel like it. Compare the two:

Without a markdown strategy  With a markdown strategy 
Price cuts happen in a panic  Triggers are defined in advance 
Margins erode unpredictably  A margin floor is set and defended 
Deep cuts arrive too late  Staged discounts start early, go deeper as needed 
Customers learn to wait for sales  Urgency is built into the cadence 

The difference compounds over time. Retailers with a disciplined markdown strategy spend less on clearance, recover more capital per unit, and carry less dead stock into the next season.

Why most markdown strategies fail

Before getting to the framework of a markdown strategy, it helps to name the failure patterns,  because at least a few of these will be familiar.

Waiting too long: The instinct to hold out for full-price buyers is understandable and costly. A product that clears at 25% off in week 8 needs 50% off in week 12. Early, shallow markdowns almost always outperform late, deep ones.

Confusing markdowns with promotions: A promotion is temporary, the price returns to normal when the event ends. A markdown is a permanent (or semi-permanent) price change tied to the product lifecycle. Different intent, different duration, different strategic impact. 

No margin floor: Deloitte puts the average net profit margin for the top 250 retail companies at just 3.1%-3.7%. Marking down without knowing your break-even price, factoring in cost of goods, holding, and fulfillment, is how you accidentally sell at a loss.

Blanket discounts instead of SKU-level targeting: A site-wide 30% sale moves some inventory but also destroys margin on products that would have sold anyway. Effective markdown strategies are surgical, not sweeping.

The 5 pillars of a solid markdown strategy

1. Define your triggers before the season starts

Decide in advance what conditions initiate a markdown. The three most common trigger types:

  • Time-based: “Apply 20% off after 30 days on shelf; 40% after 60 days.”
  • Sell-through rate: “Begin markdowns when sell-through falls below 40% at week 8 of the selling season.”
  • Inventory aging: Flagged automatically by your POS or inventory system.


Pre-defining triggers removes the emotional decision-making that causes retailers to hold too long. Build your markdown calendar at the same time you build your buy plan.

2. Use a tiered discount structure

A single dramatic markdown signals desperation and trains customers to wait. Tiered markdowns work differently: start shallow to capture deal-seekers who still act quickly, then deepen the cut for the stubborn stock.

A simple structure for apparel:

  • Week 1 of sale: 25% off, captures early deal-seekers
  • Week 3: 40% off, catches the next wave
  • Week 5: 60% off, clears whatever remains

Timeline graphic showing a tiered markdown strategy: 25% off in week 1 to attract early deal-seekers, 40% off in week 3 to drive additional sales, and 60% off in week 5 to clear remaining inventory.

3. Set and defend a margin floor

Before any markdown strategy goes live, know the minimum price at which you still break even:

Break-even price = COGS + Holding costs + Fulfillment costs

Markdown floor = Break-even price + Minimum acceptable margin %

Example: If your COGS is $18, holding cost $2, and fulfillment $3, your break-even is $23. With a 10% margin floor, you should never mark below $25.30. Given that average retail net margins sit at 3.1%-3.7%, every dollar below floor is real loss, not just lost margin.

4. Segment by SKU, channel, and location

Not all inventory responds to markdowns the same way.

  • SKU level: Some products are price-elastic (a small cut triggers a big sales spike); others aren’t. Historical data tells you which is which.
  • Channel level: A product not moving in-store might still sell online at a modest discount. Manage channels independently.
  • Location level: Summer apparel stops selling in Maine weeks before it stops selling in Arizona. Blanket markdowns across all stores leave margin on the table where demand is still healthy.

Illustration showing three levels of markdown optimization: SKU-level pricing based on product elasticity, channel-level pricing across in-store and online sales, and location-level pricing adjusted by regional demand differences.

5. Measure, learn, and feed the next season

A markdown strategy only improves if you close the loop. Track these KPIs after every event:


If a category consistently requires 40% markdowns, you’re either overbuying or mispricing at launch. The markdown data is the diagnosis.

Markdown strategy by retail category

Fashion and apparel: Start your markdown calendar before the season ends, not after. A staged approach beginning at week 10 of a 14-week season gives you two full markdown tiers before clearance. Build your markdown budget into the initial buy plan. Key pitfall: fashion is highly trend-sensitive, so unsold seasonal inventory loses perceived value fast, early, shallow discounts protect brand positioning far better than end-of-season fire sales. 

Electronics and tech: When a new model launches, the previous generation needs to move fast, consumers know it’s old. Pair markdowns with bundled accessories to increase average order value on discounted units. Typical markdown trigger: initiate within 30-60 days of a successor model’s release, not at the end of a calendar period. Holding too long collapses the price floor as third-party resellers undercut you. 

Grocery and perishables: Markdowns here are triggered by expiry proximity, not sell-through. Automate price changes tied to days-to-expiry windows, for example, 20% off at 5 days remaining, 40% off at 2 days. The cost of not marking down (waste and write-offs) typically exceeds the discount. Unlike fashion or electronics, there is no brand equity risk to aggressive markdowns here; the cost of inaction is entirely operational.

Three retail category tiles labeled Fashion and apparel, Electronics and tech, and Grocery and perishables, illustrated with a high heel shoe, computer monitor, and shopping cart.

Common mistakes to avoid for an optimal markdown strategy


Training customers to wait:
Frequent, predictable markdowns create a base that never pays full price. Vary your timing and use loyalty-program early access rather than public discounts to reward your best customers.

Skipping the post-season review: Markdowns that don’t generate learnings are just losses. A half-day post-season analysis saves multiples of that in next year’s clearance costs.

Marking down everything equally: Different SKUs have different elasticity and cost structures. Apply SKU-level decisions, not category-wide ones.

Conclusion

The retailers who have strong markdown strategies aren’t the ones who never have unsold inventory. They’re the ones who planned for it: triggers built into the buy plan, tiered discounts ready before the season started, a margin floor defended under pressure, and data feeding the next cycle.

Markdowns will happen. The question is whether they happen on your terms or the inventory’s. Build your markdown strategy now, before you’re staring at a warehouse of February sweaters wondering where the season went.

What is a markdown strategy in retail?

A markdown strategy is a planned approach to reducing product prices at defined points in the product lifecycle, using pre-set triggers, tiered discounts, and margin floors, to clear inventory while recovering as much margin as possible. 

A discount is temporary and tied to an event; the price returns to normal afterward. A markdown is a permanent or semi-permanent price change tied to the product lifecycle. Different intent, different duration, different strategic impact.

Earlier than you think. Begin when sell-through falls below your target rate at a defined point mid-season, not at the end. A shallow discount early recovers more margin than a deep discount late.

Markdown percentage = (Original price − Sale price) ÷ Original price × 100. For margin decisions, work backward from your floor price rather than forward from the original retail price. 

Yes. If customers learn that patience pays, full-price sell-through suffers permanently. Use markdowns strategically and sparingly. Frequent markdowns are often a symptom of overbuying or poor demand forecasting, worth addressing at the source.

Yes. The core discipline, pre-defined triggers, tiered discounts, a margin floor, post-season analysis, runs fine on a spreadsheet with a weekly review. Tools add speed and scale; the principles add the actual value.

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