02_Elements/Icons/ArrowLeft Back to Insight

Insights > Audiences

Asian millennial women use their buying power to protect the environment

5 minute read | March 2025

Eco-conscious AANHPI female millennials offer growth opportunity for brands


This yearโ€™s International Womenโ€™s Day theme #accelerateaction puts the spotlight on how women are driving change around the world. With 2024 being the warmest year on record for the U.S., climate change and sustainability is a big concernโ€”and definitely for women who are 7% more likely to feel that our society should do much more to protect the environment/planet. For Asian American, Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander (AANHPI) millennial women in particular, that number is even more pronounced, with 25% of them more likely to feel that way1.

For AANHPI millennial women, itโ€™s not just a feeling, they are also acting by putting their money where their heart is: they are twice as likely to pay more for eco-friendly products and services compared to the total population1. And brands are taking note. For example, K-Beauty company Innis Free doubled down on its eco-friendly, cruelty free ingredients and packaging for the U.S. market and opened its flagship store in New York City with the Millennial and Gen Z consumer in mind. Asian millennial women are also more likely than Asian millennial men to perform eco-friendly activities from recycling to donating to environmental causes:

AANHPI millennial women donโ€™t just influence brandsโ€”they also influence their peers. In fact, 36% of AANHPI women agree that they are considered the leader in trends by their friend/peer groupยฒ. This influence extends to purchasing power, as their choices around sustainability and eco-consciousness shape what their peers buy. Brands that align with these values can tap into a powerful network of consumers who actively share and promote the products they believe in.

When it comes to protecting the environment, the influence of Asian women to #accelerateaction goes back to earlier generations. Miya Yoshitani, Executive Director of the Asian Pacific Environmental Network has been a leader of the environmental justice movement since the 1990s. Through organizing in Asian-American communities, she fights for healthy communities and also paved the way for todayโ€™s social media activists. AANHPI women millennials have dedicated platforms for doing good, enabling them to reach audiences 18+ who spend almost eight hours a week on social media (Q3 2024). Jewish-Filipina Kristi Drutman of browngirlgreen is a self-described โ€œenvironmental educator passionate about working at the intersections between media, diversity, and environmentalismโ€. South Asian Aditi Mayer blends the โ€œworlds of art, industry, and educationโ€” all with a socially conscious slantโ€.

These platforms offer a way for brands to create meaningful connections with Asian female millennials who are early in their consumer lifecycle. They have the buying power: average monthly earnings of Asian women ($1,331) are higher than those of their counterparts, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. They have expectations: 56% of AANHPI women expect the brands they buy to support the causes they care about2. Brands looking to grow their business can’t afford to ignore eco-conscious Asian female millennials.ย 

Data sources: 

1Scarborough USA+ 2024 Release 1 Total (Jan 2023-Apr 2024)

2Nielsen Attitudes on Representation Study, 2023

Continue browsing similar insights

Our products can help you and your business

  • Scarborough

    Discover consumer insight solutions with Nielsen’s Scarborough-local and national market data on behaviors,…