Indian direct-to-consumer sneaker startup Comet Sneakers delivered a breakout performance in FY25, with operating revenue surging to ₹29.1 crore, up from ₹7.3 crore in FY24. The 303.6% year-on-year growth highlights the pace at which young, design-led consumer brands are scaling in India—especially those willing to blend digital reach with physical retail.
Founded in July 2023 by Utkarsh Gupta and Dishant Daryani, Comet is still early in its journey. Yet, its FY25 numbers already place it among the faster-growing entrants in India’s increasingly crowded sneaker and casual footwear market.

Credits:
Growth at Breakneck Speed, Profitability on Hold
Comet’s rapid scale-up came with a predictable trade-off. The company reported a net loss of ₹4.4 crore in FY25, widening from a loss of around ₹2 crore in the previous financial year. Total expenses ballooned to ₹36.1 crore, nearly four times higher than the ₹9.9 crore spent in FY24.
A large chunk of this increase was driven by inventory procurement, which made up over half of the company’s total expenditure. For a footwear brand, inventory depth is critical—not only to meet demand but also to support offline retail, manage returns, and reduce delivery timelines. However, it also locks up capital and adds pressure on cash flows.
Marketing Muscle Powers Brand Recall
Another significant contributor to the cost surge was Comet’s advertising and sales promotion spend, which jumped by nearly 246% year-on-year. In a sneaker market dominated by global giants and aggressively priced domestic brands, visibility is non-negotiable.
Comet’s marketing push reflects a broader D2C playbook: invest early in brand storytelling, social media presence, and performance marketing to drive awareness and conversions. This strategy has helped the brand cut through the noise, particularly among younger, urban consumers who are increasingly looking for affordable yet design-forward footwear.
Alongside marketing, employee-related expenses also rose, mirroring the expansion of teams across operations, retail, supply chain, and customer experience.
Offline Retail Becomes a Strategic Growth Lever
Although Comet began as a digital-first brand, FY25 marked a clear pivot toward offline retail, acknowledging a key reality of footwear buying—customers want to try before they buy.
The company currently operates three brand-owned stores in Bengaluru, Delhi, and Hyderabad. These physical locations serve not just as sales points but also as brand experience centres, allowing Comet to engage directly with customers, collect feedback, and improve fit and design.
In addition, Comet has expanded its reach through nine multi-brand retail partners across major Indian cities. This hybrid model—online discovery paired with offline access—has helped reduce purchase friction and improve trust, especially among first-time buyers.
Capital Infusion Backs Expansion Ambitions
Supporting this aggressive expansion is fresh capital. In July 2024, Comet raised $5 million (approximately ₹42.3 crore) in a Series A funding round led by Elevation Capital, with participation from Nexus Venture Partners and other investors.
The funding is being channelled into product development, marketing campaigns, and expanding distribution, both online and offline. With a growing catalogue of over 15 sneaker styles for men and women, Comet is aiming to strengthen its position in the lifestyle sneaker segment rather than competing solely on price.
Competing in a Crowded, High-Pressure Market
Comet operates in an intensely competitive environment, going up against established brands like Puma and Redtape, as well as digital-native players such as Bacca Bucci and Yoho. The sneaker and casual footwear category is characterised by high customer acquisition costs, fast-changing trends, and constant margin pressure.
Success in this segment depends not just on growth but on differentiation—whether through design, community-building, supply-chain efficiency, or omnichannel execution.

Credits: Indian Retailer
What FY25 Reveals About Comet’s Trajectory
Comet’s FY25 performance fits a familiar D2C narrative: rapid topline growth fuelled by marketing spend, inventory build-up, and retail expansion, with profitability deferred to a later stage.
Still, for a company in just its second full year of operations, the scale of growth points to strong consumer traction and clear brand resonance. The next phase will be critical—testing Comet’s ability to improve unit economics, manage inventory efficiently, and sustain demand in a fiercely competitive market.
For now, Comet Sneakers appears firmly on track to build a scaled, omnichannel sneaker brand from India, one step at a time.




