Delhi-based streetwear and premium fashion retailer Crepdog Crew (CDC) has crossed Rs 130 crore in annual revenue in FY26, up from Rs 1.9 crore in 2020 — a roughly 68-fold increase in under six years. The company says it has reached this scale profitably and without discounting, an unusual combination in India’s premium fashion segment.
Founded in 2019, CDC operates flagship stores in Delhi, Mumbai, and Hyderabad. The Delhi store draws on New York street culture references; the Mumbai location, which claims to house Asia’s largest sneaker wall, has a gallery-style layout; and the Hyderabad store is designed around a contemporary Indian luxury aesthetic. The company positions each store as a standalone cultural experience rather than a standard retail format.
CDC’s business model centres on acting as a growth platform for the brands it stocks. In addition to shelf space, it offers partner brands support on positioning, marketing, and sales conversion. The company says several homegrown labels it has carried — including Code Brwn, Deadbear, Esthreall, Evemen, Farak Wear, Recnstrct, and Warping Theories — have grown into nationally recognised names with full-price demand.
The platform has also signed retail partnerships with established international brands. Casio, Fila, and Ultrahuman currently sell through CDC; additional international partnerships are described as being in advanced stages.
Commenting on the milestone, Anchit Kapil, Co-Founder of Crepdog Crew, said, “Our vision has never been only about retail. What we have built is a platform that decides what India’s premium youth pays attention to next and the brands, collaborations, and cultural moments we have created are proof that when you get culture right, the business follows. We are just getting started.”
CDC is planning to raise a Series A round in the coming quarter. The company says it intends to use the capital to open stores in additional cities, scale its in-house apparel lines, and expand its international collaboration pipeline.
The fundraise would come at a point of broader momentum in India’s premium consumer market, where a growing urban demographic is demonstrating willingness to pay full price for fashion products tied to identity and subculture — a shift that has benefited retailers with credibility in that space.



