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Fall Is Officially the Most Popular Season in America

With each turn of the calendar from one season to the next comes the age-old debate: What time of year is really the best? According to new Morning Consult data, the answer is clear — it’s fall. 

When prompted to identify their favorite season, 41% of U.S. adults chose fall. Spring and summer each received 24% of the total favorite vote, while only 11% of respondents said winter is their season of choice.

Notably, fall wins out as the favorite season among every major demographic grouping, including gender, generation and region. 

Brands tap into fall fandom

While Americans generally exhibit an aversion toward most forms of advertising, it appears that fall’s all-encompassing favorability lends some credence to season-specific marketing tactics. 

More than half (55%) of U.S. adults indicated they are interested in fall-themed content from brands on social media, while close to two-thirds of U.S. adults (63%) said they have a favorable opinion of brands that run fall-themed advertising. The above figures are even higher among Gen Zers and millennials.

Many brands have already executed on this insight by breathing new life into nostalgic activations. Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc., for instance, is bringing its Halloween “Boorito” promotion back to stores on Oct. 31, this time with a BeReal twist. Rewards customers will have the chance to win one of 10 “free burritos for a year” prizes if they share a photo of themselves in costume on the nascent social media app. 

Hot Topic Inc. — known for its 1990s grunge aesthetic — is also getting in on the social-forward fall fun via the launch of its first-ever virtual clothing line on the gaming platform Roblox, dubbed “Halloween Forever.”

No matter how spooky things get (only 12% of respondents indicated they have no interest in purchasing fall-related items), consumer appetite for fall appears alive and well.

The Oct. 10-11, 2022, survey was conducted among a representative sample of 2,210 U.S. adults, with an unweighted margin of error of plus or minus 2 percentage points.

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Billy Koelling

Update: 2024-08-06