Singapore — New consumer data from Mintel suggests that by 2030, individuals will reject traditional age expectations, prioritise emotional fulfilment amid digital isolation, and demand greater autonomy over the technologies that shape their daily lives.
According to the report, traditional ideas of youth and ageing are being redefined, with people seeking fulfilment across longer and more fluid life stages. At the same time, emotional connection is becoming increasingly valued amid rising digital isolation, while consumers are showing growing resistance to algorithmic control in favour of more human experiences.
Matthew Crabbe, Mintel’s vice president of trends for APAC, said that rapid disruption across industries continues to reshape consumer expectations.
“Every year brings fresh disruption. AI is redrawing the boundaries of creativity and efficiency. Economic uncertainty is reshaping priorities. Geopolitical tension is changing the context in which brands operate. In 2026 and beyond, consumers across the globe will blur the lines of age and life stage, balance control with creativity, and search for connection in a more automated world,” said Matthew.
The New Young
This trend highlights how longer lifespans and changing milestones are creating what Mintel describes as an “extended middle of life”. The report also notes that people are no longer constrained by age-based expectations, instead embracing reinvention and personal fulfilment later in life.
“As longevity increases and traditional milestones become more fluid, we’re seeing the rise of an extended middle of life where people are no longer bound by age-based expectations. By 2030, demographic change will already be starkly apparent; this is going to force systemic change in everything from education to financial planning and working patterns, creating a blurred existence, rather than distinct separate stages,” he added.
Matthew also stressed that brands that front-load the fulfilment only of the youth defer it to retirement will miss the wealth of opportunity that exists in the extended middle.
“We’ll increasingly see people in their 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, take on bold second (or even third) acts: moving to a new country, changing careers, re-entering the dating world, or pursuing long-postponed passions. Forward-looking brands can respond by creating tools, services, and narratives that make reinvention accessible and rewarding.”
The Affection Deficit
Mintel’s second prediction examines the growing sense of disconnection brought about by digital lifestyles. The company suggests that brands will need to focus more on emotional and cultural connection to address consumers’ “affection deficit”.
“The development of online lives has permanently disrupted socialisation, leading consumers to feel more isolated and disconnected. By 2030, we risk a widening gap of humans being noticed versus being known,” Matthew explained.
He also added that affection and attention are now evaluated through a cost-benefit lens where the ease and immediacy of online interaction outweigh the effort and gradual rewards of real-life connections.
“Brands are in a unique position to become facilitators of genuine connection, but if they want to maintain elements of physical community, it’s paramount that brands help lower the affection cost,” Matthew elaborated.
He continued, “Consumers are looking for broader ways to embrace affection as the timelines for more genuine partnerships grow longer. This opens a door for brands to prioritise the rise of chosen affection, community care, pet companionship, and self-love, that offer emotional stability and meaning outside conventional relationship structures.”
He also explained that in the APAC region, brands are innovating by redefining physical community spaces, such as intergenerational hubs and wellness centres, and developing smartphone applications that support healthy ageing and companionship.
“For example, in China and Japan, digital platforms and community initiatives are helping older adults stay socially connected, while in India, there is a growing emphasis on self-care and community wellness. The human need to nurture is proving to be relentless, but as a society, we must adapt to an expansive view of what nurture can look like.”
Anti-Algorithm
The final trend explores how consumers are reassessing their relationship with algorithm-driven platforms. As automation becomes more pervasive, people are questioning whether algorithms are helping or hindering their sense of autonomy.
“What began as a convenient tool which offered effortless recommendations is leading consumers to question whether the expansion of algorithms has simplified their lives or overwhelmed them. By 2030, the dark side of optimisation will drive an imbalance of convenience versus empowerment.”
Given this, the study also revealed that technologies that operate opaquely will lose favour as consumers value more control of the algorithmic identity and data.
“Consumers will seek platforms that empower them to understand, edit, and even co-create the algorithms that influence their lives as they push back against algorithmic influence and seek more human, intuitive experiences,” he shared.
Moreover, Mintel i the Asia-Pacific region, observed that the trend is already taking shape, with examples such as India’s ‘The Whole Truth’ stepping back from social media to counter algorithm fatigue, China’s Meituan re-evaluating efficiency in favour of more human-centred practices, and emerging technologies across the region giving users greater control.
“Therefore, when brands harness the power of algorithms to amplify genuine emotional connections rather than just chasing trends, they can create a win-win that drives both viral moments and lasting loyalty. Consumers will establish a new benchmark of trust from interacting with digital sources, but the mind and heart will always keep the score of what feels right, not just what gets a task done.
In general, Mintel’s ‘2026 Global Consumer Predictions’ aims to guide businesses and marketers in understanding how evolving lifestyles, technologies, and emotional needs will influence consumer expectations in the coming years.
“Brands will need to identify where they fit, and shape strategies that resonate in a world where empowerment, trust, and creativity matter more than ever.”
