
Back-to-school season remains one of the biggest retail moments of the year—and 2025 is expected to follow suit. Total spending is projected to reach $84.51 billion, with K–12 shoppers alone contributing nearly $50 billion—59% of the total. E-commerce will also play a major role, accounting for 37.4% of total back-to-school sales.
However, 2025 shoppers may be facing even higher costs due to the incoming tariffs with everything from laptops and lunchboxes to kids’ clothing and crayons becoming more expensive. In anticipation of these rising prices, shoppers might once again start early to score deals. Last year, 55% of back-to-school and college shoppers had already started buying items in July for the upcoming school year. This early start coincided with major July promotions like Amazon Prime Day, in which U.S. shoppers spent a record $14.2 billion online, where school-related purchases surged by over 200%.
Whether you’re marketing school essentials or offering services to help students succeed, it’s easy to default to the same go-to audiences. This blog post highlights overlooked back-to-school segments to help you build personalized back-to-school strategies that resonate with students, parents, and educators. You can find the complete audience segment names in the appendix.
School the competition: How Experian can help you connect with 2025 shoppers
With summer just around the corner, back-to-school might not be top of mind, but there’s no better time to start planning. Whether you’re reaching parents, students, or educators, Experian’s syndicated audiences can help ensure your marketing messages make the honor roll by landing with the right people at the right time.
- Experian’s 2,400+ syndicated audiences are available directly on over 30 leading television, social, programmatic advertising platforms, and directly within Audigent for activation within private marketplaces (PMPs).
- Reach consumers based on who they are, where they live, and their household makeup. Experian ranked #1 in accuracy by Truthset for key back-to-school attributes such as Presence of Children.
- Access to unique audiences through Experian’s Partner Audiences available on Experian’s data marketplace, within Audigent for activation in PMPs, and directly on platforms like DirectTV, Dish, Magnite, OpenAP, and The Trade Desk.
Meet your overlooked back-to-school audiences
Back-to-school shoppers aren’t one-size-fits-all. From parents prepping supply lists to students outfitting dorms, reaching the right audience is key to making the grade with your campaign.
Let’s go beyond the basics. Here are four back-to-school audience categories you can target with Experian:
- New year, new gear-ers
- Weeknight TV watchers
- Parenting personas
- School-season meal planners
Let’s open our notebooks and break down the audience segments within each group. Whether your customers are buying backpacks, stocking the fridge, or searching for school essentials, these insights will help your campaign pass with flying colors.

New year, new gear-er
From teens picking out their first-day outfit to college students stocking up for dorm life, these audiences represent a wide range of priorities, needs, and spending behaviors. They’re also heavily influenced by trends, technology, and value-driven purchases.
Don’t overlook these five high-potential audiences in your strategy:
- Big-Box Electronics Stores: High Spenders
- Amazon Frequent Spenders
- Department Store Deal Shoppers In Store Spenders
- Teen Apparel (Clothing): Online and In Store High Spenders
- Dell Computer and Apple Mac Purchaser

Weeknight TV watchers
Back-to-school season is also back-to-routine season. Families are gathering for more shared TV time in the evenings—especially in August and September. This makes co-viewing households a prime audience for messaging tied to school-year prep.
Rethink your back-to-school approach with these five overlooked segments:
- Co-Watchers
- Co-Watchers with Children
- Cord Cutters: Recent
- Engagement Channel Preference: Streaming TV
- Digital Video

Parenting personas
Targeting by household structure helps tailor messaging to the right family dynamic—whether it’s parents with toddlers or households with college students.
Four audiences you might be missing this back-to-school season:
- Digital Moms and Dads
- Sports Utility Families
- Colleges and Cafes
- Kids and Cabernet

School-season meal planners
Food and grocery shopping routines shift during the school season. These audiences are ideal for promotions tied to lunch prep, after-school snacks, and weeknight meals.
Add these four under-the-radar audiences for back-to-school success:
- Online Grocery Delivery Services: High Spenders
- Grocery Stores: High Spenders
- Fast Food/QSR Frequent Spenders
- Fast Food/QSR Pizza Frequent Spenders

Core back-to-school shoppers
Of course, you’ll want to add traditional back-to-school audiences to your strategy. These audiences are highly engaged and often the decision-makers, making them ideal for marketers looking to drive purchase intent early and often.
Here are four key back-to-school audiences you can target–all are available by life stage to reach PreK, elementary, middle, and high school households:
- Back to School Supplies
- Back to School Moderate Spend
- Back to School High Spend
- Back to School Apparel
Make the grade with Experian this back-to-school season
As marketers gear up for the back-to-school season, it’s the perfect time to sharpen your strategy and connect with back-to-school shoppers. Whether you’re building tried-and-true segments or exploring more unexpected, high-potential groups you might have not considered, Experian can help you reach the right audience. If you’re looking to create targeted segments for activation across digital and TV or gain insights to guide your campaign planning, Experian has you covered.
Need a custom audience? Reach out to our audience team and we can help you build and activate an Experian audience on the platform of your choice. Additionally, work with Experian’s network of data providers to build audiences and send to an Audigent PMP for activation.

You can activate our syndicated audiences on-the-shelf of most major platforms. For a full list of Experian’s syndicated audiences and activation destinations, download our syndicated audiences guide.
Explore our other seasonal audiences that you can activate today.
Activate back-to-school audiences today with Audigent
Ready to ace your back-to-school campaigns? Audigent will build customized deals that combine premium Experian syndicated or Partner Audiences and inventory into a single, streamlined deal ID – tailored to your campaign needs. Plus, our powerful supply-side optimization ensures your campaigns deliver top marks in performance.
Connect with the Audigent team today at AudigentAgency_Brands@experian.com to get a head-start on back-to-school success.
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Cookies are leaving us, but that doesn’t have to mean performance has to. That’s why Experian is taking the steps needed to future-proof identity in our Graph, including adding Unified ID 2.0 (UID2) from The Trade Desk. Experian currently supports UID2 in our Graph outputs for demand-side platforms (DSPs). UID2 support in our Graph outputs will be available to all approved partners by December 2023. In this blog post, we talk about why cookieless IDs, like UID2, that are coming to market because of cookie deprecation, are important, and how incorporating cookieless IDs into an identity graph can help you prepare for a cookieless future. What are cookieless IDs? Like cookies, cookieless IDs provide you with a comprehensive view of a consumer’s digital activity. Unlike cookies, identity providers produce cookieless IDs, using user-consented data and deterministic and probabilistic data signals (like hashed emails or mobile ad IDs). Cookieless IDs are a newer identifier that allows the advertising industry to maintain our understanding of consumers’ digital actions, helping to ensure we continue to generate smart, data-driven insights, targets, activation strategies, personalized experiences, and measurement and attribution. Why should you incorporate cookieless IDs into an identity graph? Adding cookieless IDs to an identity graph allows for licensees of the graph to: Resolve the universal ID to a consolidated consumer profile and know which other digital IDs tie to the cookieless ID Establish a unified view of the consumer with a privacy-compliant ID Produce data-driven and informed advertising strategies that still drive results, without the use of cookies Experian’s Graph Experian’s Graph is one of the most robust and signal agnostic identity graphs in the market. Experian’s Graph supports most digital IDs, including cookieless IDs, such as ID5, UID2, and Hadron ID. When you license Experian’s Graph, you increase your ability to better understand the different digital IDs that tie to a household or individual. Additionally, with our cookieless ID support, you can continue to understand your consumer and their digital IDs in the cookieless world. Why is it crucial to include UID2 support in Experian's Graph outputs? The Trade Desk is the largest, independent demand-side platform. They’ve created a cookieless ID, UID2, that they hope can power the advertising world to come across the open web. UID2 is an alternative solution to third-party cookies that when utilized in an identity graph, can offer a clearer picture of your consumer, enabling frequency controls and better management, across both digital and connected TV (CTV). Approved DSPs can add UID2s to their Experian Graph, giving them access to one of the more trusted and prominent cookieless IDs in the market today. Additionally, DSPs can use this identifier to decide whether to bid on certain inventory or not, on behalf of their advertiser partner. And, if we hedge our bets, it will only grow in prominence and use. While only available to approved DSPs today for use in the Experian Graph, the forthcoming encrypted UID2 token will provide this capability to the entire ecosystem, which allows us all to speak the same language and operate as efficiently as possible. "We are excited to support UID2, one of the premier IDs to support the future of addressability across the open internet, in the Experian Graph. We continue to see the adoption of UID2 across the demand-side ecosystem, increasing addressability across growing channels like CTV and beyond. I am personally excited to see how this momentum continues to increase over the remainder of 2023 and into 2024."chris feo, svp, sales & partnerships, experian Future-proof your identity strategy with Experian Graph and UID2 We’ve seen the impact that cookies have had on digital advertising and marketing. With the impending third-party cookie deprecation, you will need to adopt alternative cookieless ID solutions such as Unified ID 2.0. Experian is well-positioned to help you navigate this change, offering UID2 support in our Graph outputs for all approved partners by December 2023. Take the right steps now to future-proof your identity strategy and discover lasting success even without cookies. Alongside Experian’s Graph solution, you can achieve resilience in an ever-changing world of digital marketing and advertising. Now is the time to get ready for a cookieless future. Connect with an Experian team member to learn more about our Graph capabilities today. Learn more about Experian's Graph today Latest posts

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Appendix
New year, new gear-ers
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Shopping Behavior > Big-Box Electronics Stores: High Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Shopping Behavior > Big Box and Club Stores: Amazon Frequent Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Shopping Behavior > Department Store In Store Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Apparel > Teen Apparel (Clothing): Online High Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Apparel > Teen Apparel (Clothing): In Store High Spenders
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Technology > Dell Computer Model
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Technology > Apple Mac Purchaser Model
Weeknight TV watchers
- Television (TV) > Household/Family Viewing > Co-Watchers
- Television (TV) > Household/Family Viewing > Co-Watchers with Children
- Experian > Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Entertainment > Streaming/Video/Audio/CTV/Cable TV: Cable/Broadcast TV: Cord Cutters: Recent
- TrueTouch: Communication Preference > Engagement Channel Preference > Streaming TV
- TrueTouch: Communication Preference > Engagement Channel Preference > Digital Video
Parenting personas
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Personas > Digital Moms
- Lifestyle and Interests (Affinity) > Personas > Digital Dads
- Mosaic – Personas – Lifestyle and Interests > Group D: Suburban Style > D15 – Sports Utility Families
- Mosaic – Personas – Lifestyle and Interests > Group O: Singles and Starters > O53 – Colleges and Cafes
- Mosaic – Personas – Lifestyle and Interests > Group A: Power Elite > A03 – Kids and Cabernet
School-season meal planners
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Grocery > Online Grocery Delivery Services: High Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Grocery > Grocery Stores: High Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Food and Drink > Restaurants: Fast Food/QSR QSR Frequent Spenders
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Food and Drink > Restaurants > Fast Food/QSR Pizza Frequent Spenders
Core back-to-school shoppers
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Moderate Spend – PreK (Early Ed – PreK)
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Moderate Spend – Elementary School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Moderate Spend – Middle School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Moderate Spend – High School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School High Spend – PreK (Early Ed – PreK)
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School High Spend – Elementary School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School High Spend – Middle School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School High Spend – High School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Apparel – PreK (Early Ed – PreK)
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Apparel – Elementary School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Apparel – Middle School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Apparel – High School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Supplies – PreK (Early Ed – PreK)
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Supplies – Elementary School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Supplies – Middle School
- Retail Shoppers: Purchase Based > Seasonal > Back to School Supplies – High School