Why Is Cashmere So Expensive?
Why is cashmere
so expensive?
Short answer: supply and demand. Long answer: a combination of fiber scarcity, labor intensity, impossible-to-replicate geography, and a supply chain that produces roughly 150 grams of usable material per animal per year. Here's the full breakdown.
It starts with the goat.
Most luxury pricing is about brand margin. Cashmere pricing is different — it starts with a genuine supply constraint that no amount of money can quickly fix. Each cashmere goat produces approximately 150 grams of usable fiber per year. A single sweater requires the fiber of three to five animals. There are approximately 600 million cashmere goats in the world, primarily in Inner Mongolia, Mongolia, and Central Asia — and that number is bounded by the land available to support them.
Compare this to wool: a Merino sheep yields 3–10 kg of wool annually. Cashmere production is 20 to 60 times less efficient per animal by weight. Total global cashmere production is approximately 6,500 metric tons per year. Global wool production is around 2 million metric tons. Cashmere represents less than 0.3% of total wool production — which is why it costs what it does.
The cashmere goat's undercoat develops in response to cold. In Inner Mongolia, where winters reach –40°C at altitude, the animals produce the finest, longest fiber on earth. The same goat in a warmer climate grows a thinner, coarser undercoat. Geography determines quality — it can't be moved.
Cashmere goat herds require significant land and can cause desertification if overstocked. The harsh terrain that drives fiber quality also limits herd density. Mongolia and Inner Mongolia have expanded herds significantly since the 1990s, which has actually reduced fiber quality as land becomes overgrazed. Scale and quality move in opposite directions.
The finest fiber — Grade A — is only accessible through hand-combing, which removes the soft undercoat without cutting the coarser guard hairs. Shearing takes everything and requires expensive dehairing to separate the good fiber from the rest. Combed cashmere is gentler on the animal and produces longer, finer fiber. It takes longer and costs more.

Not all cashmere costs
the same — why.
If you've seen cashmere sweaters priced anywhere from $60 to $2,000, you're seeing a real quality spectrum, not brand markup alone. The key variables are fiber grade, ply count, and construction method.
| Factor | How it affects price |
|---|---|
| Fiber grade | Grade A (under 19 microns, over 36mm long) costs significantly more than Grade B or C. Most "cashmere" sold under $150 uses shorter, coarser fiber that pills faster and loses shape sooner. |
| Fiber color | White fiber commands a premium because it accepts dye in any color. Brown and grey fiber limits colorway options. Quinn uses exclusively white Grade A fiber. |
| Ply count | 2-ply is the standard for durability — two strands twisted together. Single-ply is cheaper and more fragile. 3-ply or 4-ply adds weight and warmth at higher cost. |
| Construction | Fully fashioned knitting — where each panel is knitted to shape — produces less waste and cleaner seams than cut-and-sew. It's slower and more expensive, but the garment wears better. |
| Tariffs (2025) | For U.S. importers, current tariffs add approximately 45–50% to landed cost on Chinese-origin cashmere. This cost is either absorbed in margin or passed to the consumer — often both. |
Why $60 cashmere
should raise a flag.
Given fiber cost, processing, construction, and (for U.S. imports) tariffs, Grade A cashmere cannot be produced and sold profitably at retail below approximately $150–$200 for a sweater. If the price is significantly lower than that, something was traded away — fiber quality, ply count, construction standards, or ethical labor costs.
Almost certainly blended with other fiber (wool, acrylic, nylon) or uses very short, low-grade cashmere that will pill heavily. May not contain meaningful cashmere content despite the label.
Possible for 100% cashmere at Grade B quality with efficient manufacturing. Acceptable durability. Will pill more than Grade A over time. Check for 2-ply construction and a clear fiber origin disclosure.
The range where Grade A, 2-ply cashmere with quality construction becomes viable. Quinn prices in this range. The piece should last 10+ years with proper care. Cost per wear is lower than most $100 sweaters.

The math that makes
it worth it.
A $298 Quinn cashmere sweater worn 30 times per year for 10 years costs approximately $1 per wear. A $60 "cashmere" sweater that pills out and is unwearable in two seasons, worn 20 times per year, costs $1.50 per wear — and ends up in a landfill.
This is the core economics of buy-less-buy-better applied to knitwear. The upfront cost is higher. The total cost over time, including environmental cost, is lower.
The caveat is that this math only holds if the cashmere is actually Grade A and constructed properly. A low-quality piece at $298 is worse than a high-quality piece at $198. Price is a signal, not a guarantee. Which is why we explain exactly what you're buying.