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Sephora Quiet Hours Are Here for Anyone Who Needs a Breather
If you’ve ever run out of your favorite cleanser and headed to Sephora for a restock, you know the drill. Coffee in hand, you find parking up front, only to open the doors and get hit with loud music, competing fragrances and bright lights that suddenly make a simple errand feel like a lot. To tackle that kind of sensory overload, Sephora Quiet Hours are here.
So, what happens during Quiet Hours at Sephora? Background music is turned down or swapped for soft ambient tracks, lighting is dimmed, moving digital screens are adjusted or switched off and strong fragrance sprays and sample testing are put on pause. In some locations, shoppers may even be offered a “Do Not Disturb” tag to place on their shopping bags if they want to browse sans interruption.
There isn’t a one-size-fits-all corporate schedule for Quiet Hours. Instead, individual locations are designating their own local hours each week, often focusing on quieter weekday mornings or select evening blocks, so it’s best to consult your go-to location to find out if they’re participating.
Sephora developed the initiative with feedback from its neurodivergent community, who helped identify the parts of the in-store experience that can feel overstimulating, from music and lighting to fragrance and frequent interaction. The brand also worked with the global research agency Open Inclusion, the inclusion-focused consultancy Purposeful Futures and Sephora’s own internal employee resource groups. That said, Sephora Quiet Hours welcome anyone who appreciates a break from the usual pace of beauty retail.
And the strategy is already proving its worth. Before going global, Sephora ran a pilot across 32 stores in eight markets, and the feedback was overwhelmingly positive. The majority of neurodivergent shoppers reported that the quiet blocks significantly improved their in-store experience, while 90 percent of all customers agreed it made Sephora feel like a more inclusive and welcoming place. By turning down the volume, the retailer is making more room for everyone.