Tired of paying expensive alterations for pants that are too long? While most brands charge for this service, a famous Japanese brand offers to do your hems for free in store. A little-known tip that does a lot of good for purchasing power.
Finding perfectly fitting pants is often an obstacle course. Too long, too short, poorly cut… even when you think you’ve found the right piece, you still have to go through the alterations box. And there, the bill quickly climbs: between 10 and 15 euros for a simple hem at the designer’s. As a result, many people give up or leave their clothes lying around in the back of the closet, due to lack of time or budget.
In a context where fast fashion is cutting back on services to keep prices low, few brands are still focusing on customer comfort. However, a brand from Japan is going completely against this trend. Better yet: it transforms a detail often perceived as a constraint into a real argument for loyalty.
Because yes, this service does exist, and it remains surprisingly unknown to the general public. In Uniqlo stores, it is possible to have a hem made directly in store. And the good surprise is that this service is free for pants from €19.90. For cheaper models, or for a more discreet finish with an invisible hem, the service becomes chargeable, but remains very accessible, around 3 euros. A simplicity that changes everything, especially at a time when every euro counts.
Valérie, 1.58 m, experienced this recently. “Before, I always had to budget extra to shorten my pants. There, everything is taken care of at no additional cost. Honestly, it changes everything “, she confides. At her side, her son Thomas, 19 years old, however, adds nuance: “You have to come back the next day to get the pants, but for my student budget, it’s well worth it.“
This little extra is, however, only one element of a much more global strategy. The Japanese brand has won over thanks to a particularly fluid in-store experience. It’s impossible not to notice its new generation crates: all you have to do is place your items in a bin for the total to be displayed instantly, thanks to RFID technology. No one-to-one scanning, no endless waiting, everything is designed to save time.
Added to this is a clear positioning: rather than chasing ephemeral trends, the brand focuses on durable and functional basics, brought together under the LifeWear concept. Clothing designed to last, easy to wear and combine, which meets real everyday needs. This approach, going against the tide of overconsumption, is becoming more and more attractive.
Behind this vision, we find Tadashi Yanai, who has built a simple philosophy: placing the customer at the heart of all decisions and designing useful clothing, designed to improve everyday life.
By bringing concrete and accessible services up to date, Uniqlo proves that it is still possible to stand out without artifice. A discreet, but extremely effective strategy for retaining customers over the long term.


