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RNS Number : 2513I Dr. Martens PLC 20 November 2025
20 November 2025
Dr. Martens plc
First half results for the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
EXECUTION OF NEW STRATEGY ON TRACK
FULL PRICE DIRECT TO CONSUMER REVENUE GROWTH OF 6%, IN LINE WITH FOCUS ON
IMPROVING QUALITY OF REVENUE, AND MEANINGFUL FINANCIAL PROGRESS
"As we set out in June, we're pivoting from a channel-first to a
consumer-first strategy. Our brand is strong, as evidenced by the 33% increase
in shoes volumes and the successful launch of new products such as the Zebzag
Laceless boot and the 1460 Rain boot. While it's still early days, we are
happy with the advances we're making and are seeing green shoots across each
of our four Levers for Growth. This strategic progress, as well as the
benefits from the cost action plan delivered last year and our continued focus
on cost management, is delivering a meaningful improvement in our financial
performance including a continued reduction in net bank debt.
While the marketplace remains uncertain and consumers are cautious, and our
biggest trading weeks are ahead, we are confident in our plans for the year. I
am laser-focused on execution and setting the business up for growth in the
coming years. I'd like to thank every member of the Dr. Martens team, as well
as our partners around the world, for their continued hard work and passionate
commitment in this endeavour."
Ije Nwokorie, Chief Executive Officer
FY26 H1 RESULTS
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY26 H1 FY25 % change % change
Reported CC(2) Reported Actual CC(2)
Revenue 322.0 327.3 324.6 (0.8%) 0.8%
Adjusted EBIT(1,3) 3.1 3.4 (3.0)
Adjusted PBT(1,3) (9.4) (9.2) (16.6)
PBT (11.0) (12.3) (28.7)
Adjusted basic EPS(1,3) (0.9) (1.2)
EPS (p) (1.0) (2.2)
Net Debt(1) (including leases) 302.3 348.7
Dividend per share (p) 0.85 0.85
Footnotes overleaf
Strategic summary:
We are making good progress with all four Levers for Growth:
· Our Consumer goal for FY26 is to increase full price sales and
reduce clearance activity, and in H1 we delivered Full Price DTC revenue up
6%, with full price DTC mix improving 5pts
· In Product, we are focused on driving more purchase occasions and
achieved a 33% increase in shoe volumes in H1. We reinforced our comfort
credentials with our new Zebzag Laceless boot, and recently launched the
fully waterproof 1460 Rain boot, which gives us access to an entirely new
footwear segment
· With Markets, we've delivered new and expanded distribution
partnerships for Latin America, Italy, UAE and the Philippines and deepened
partnerships with our largest wholesale customers globally
· Under Organisation, we're making progress in simplifying our
ways of working with our Customer Data Platform, Supply and Demand Planning
system and Global Technology Centre all increasing our efficiency and
effectiveness in how we work
Financial summary:
· Group revenue of £322m, up 0.8% CC, with DTC revenue flat CC and
Wholesale revenue up 2% CC. Overall revenue growth was impacted by a focus on
improving the quality of revenue by increasing full price mix and reducing
clearance. As a result, full price(4) DTC revenue was up 6%.
o Americas was the best performing region with revenue up 6% CC; both DTC
and Wholesale were in positive growth
o EMEA revenue declined 3% CC with a continued subdued DTC performance
against a promotional backdrop
o APAC revenue grew 2% CC with particular strength in South Korea and steady
performance in Japan
· Gross margin improved 130bps to 65.3%, with full price
performance and continued good management of input costs more than offsetting
channel mix and the headwind from higher tariff costs
· Strong operating cost control, with non-demand-generating
operating costs flat year-on-year
· Adjusted PBT of £9.2m loss CC, significantly improved versus
£16.6m loss H1 FY25. Reported PBT loss of £11.0m, versus £28.7m loss H1
FY25
· Continued strong cash performance driving balance sheet strength,
with net bank debt (excluding leases) of £154.3m, down from £186.8m last
year
· Interim dividend of 0.85p, set at one-third of the prior year
total dividend, in line with policy
Current trading and guidance
While the trading backdrop across our markets remains volatile, we are focused
on executing our plans, growing profit and taking the right decisions for FY27
and beyond. Since the end of the first half, our Americas business has
continued to deliver positive full price DTC growth. Our EMEA business
continues to see variable trading and a particularly challenging performance
in Retail across our largest markets. Our APAC business continues to trade
well.
The SS26 wholesale order books are healthier year-on-year with the Americas
order book showing good progression indicating a positive shift in confidence
among key accounts and the EMEA order book showing an encouraging breadth of
product, particularly in shoes.
Our focus in managing the increased USA tariffs has been on ensuring that we
mitigate their impact on our business for FY27 and beyond. This aim has driven
both the actions we have taken and the timing of those actions. We expect to
fully mitigate the impact of increased tariffs for FY27 and beyond through
continued tight cost control, flexible product sourcing, and targeted
adjustments to our USA pricing policy.
For FY26 we are trading in line with our expectations and, as of 17 November
2025, the sell-side Adjusted PBT consensus range was £53m to £60m. These
figures did not include any impact from tariffs, and we remain comfortable in
achieving this range on that basis. We can now give guidance on the impact of
tariffs on FY26, and they represent a high single-digit £m headwind. Given
the timing of our mitigation actions, we expect to offset roughly half of this
impact.
Based on current spot rates as at 17 November 2025, we anticipate a currency
impact of a c.£10m headwind to Group revenue and a benefit to Adjusted PBT of
c.£2m. Full financial guidance for FY26 is detailed on page 13.
( )
Footnotes
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. Constant currency applies the prior period exchange rates to current period
results to remove the impact of FX.
3. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
4."Full price" refers to product sold through our own DTC channels at full
price and this also includes the use of targeted welcome codes such as % off
for new consumers or student discount. "Markdown" or "Clearance" refers to
discounts on seasonal products.
Enquiries
Investors and analysts
Bethany Barnes, Director of Investor Relations and
Corporate Communications
Bethany.Barnes@drmartens.com (mailto:Bethany.Barnes@drmartens.com)
+44 7825 187465
Louise Durey, Investor Relations and
Corporate Communications Senior Manager
Louise.Durey@drmartens.com
Press
Sodali & Co
Rob Greening
Ludo
Baynham-Herd
drmartens@client.sodali.com
+44 207 250 1446
Presentation of half year results
Ije Nwokorie, CEO and Giles Wilson, CFO will be presenting the First Half
results at 09:30 (UK time) on 20 November 2025 followed by a Q&A session
for analysts and investors. The live presentation can be viewed on the Dr.
Martens plc website https://www.drmartensplc.com
(https://www.drmartensplc.com) , with a playback and transcripts available
soon afterwards.
About Dr. Martens
Dr. Martens is an iconic British footwear brand founded in Northamptonshire,
England. Its first silhouette, the 1460 boot - named after the date it was
produced - rolled off the production line on 1st April 1960. Originally chosen
by workers for their air-cushioned comfort and durability, "Docs" or "DM's"
were later adopted by musicians and subcultural pioneers who took them from
the street to the global stage.
Over six decades later, Dr. Martens operates in more than 60 countries and
employs around 3,700 people. The Company continues to honour the brand's
heritage through its 'Made in England' footwear, manufactured at its original
Northamptonshire factory, while meeting global demand from multiple
high-quality production sites across Asia. All our products are made with an
unwavering commitment to craft, combined with innovative techniques.
Dr. Martens business spans Direct-to-Consumer (Retail and Ecommerce) and
Wholesale channels, with product segments including the brand's Original
silhouettes (the 1460 boot, 1461 shoe, 2976 Chelsea boot, and Adrian loafer),
Sandals, new product families such as Zebzag and Buzz, a Kids range, and an
expanding line of bags and accessories. Each collection embodies durability,
versatility, and individuality, while collaborations continue to push creative
boundaries and reach new wearers. Dr. Martens has transcended its roots while
staying true to its DNA - and the brand's trademark yellow welt stitching,
grooved sole edge, and scripted "With Bouncing Soles" heel loops are instantly
recognisable worldwide.
Dr. Martens plc (DOCS.L) is listed on the main market of the London Stock
Exchange and is a constituent of the FTSE 250 index.
For more information, visit www.drmartens.com or www.drmartensplc.com
Cautionary statement relating to forward-looking statements
Announcements, presentations to investors, or other documents or reports filed
with or furnished to the London Stock Exchange (LSE) and any other written
information released, or oral statements made, to the public in the future by
or on behalf of Dr. Martens plc and its group companies ("the Group"), may
contain forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements give the Group's current expectations or forecasts
of future events. An investor can identify these statements by the fact that
they do not relate strictly to historical or current facts. They use words
such as 'aim', 'ambition', 'anticipate', 'estimate', 'expect', 'intend',
'will', 'project', 'plan', 'believe', 'target' and other words and terms of
similar meaning in connection with any discussion of future operating or
financial performance. In particular, these include statements relating to
future actions, future performance or results of current and anticipated
products, expenses, the outcome of contingencies such as legal proceedings,
dividend payments and financial results. Other than in accordance with its
legal or regulatory obligations (including under the Market Abuse Regulation,
the UK Listing Rules and the Disclosure and Transparency Rules of the
Financial Conduct Authority), the Group undertakes no obligation to update any
forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future
events or otherwise. The reader should, however, consult any additional
disclosures that the Group may make in any documents which it publishes and/or
files with the LSE. All readers, wherever located, should take note of these
disclosures. Accordingly, no assurance can be given that any particular
expectation will be met and investors are cautioned not to place undue
reliance on the forward-looking statements.
Forward-looking statements are subject to assumptions, inherent risks and
uncertainties, many of which relate to factors that are beyond the Group's
control or precise estimate. The Group cautions investors that a number of
important factors, including those referred to in this document, could cause
actual results to differ materially from those expressed or implied in any
forward-looking statement. Any forward-looking statements made by or on behalf
of the Group speak only as of the date they are made and are based upon the
knowledge and information available to the Directors on the date of this
report.
BUSINESS REVIEW
A significant amount of work has been done through the first half in
implementing our new Levers for Growth strategy and, while there remains much
more to do, we are making good progress and seeing some encouraging green
shoots.
The new strategy represents a fundamental shift from a channel-first to a
consumer-first mindset in order to increase our growth opportunities. Our
overarching ambition is to establish Dr. Martens as the world's most-desired
premium footwear brand. Over the medium-term we expect to deliver sustainable,
profitable revenue growth above the rate of the relevant footwear market, with
operating leverage driving a mid to high-teens EBIT margin, underpinned by
strong cash generation.
As a reminder, the four Levers For Growth are:
1. Consumer
Engage more consumers
· Lead marketing with product, grounded in comfort, craft and
confidence
· Deliver a seamless omni-channel experience tailored to each
consumer
· Build post-purchase engagement to increase purchase frequency and
consumer spend
2. Product
Drive more purchase occasions
· Reinforce premium positioning of our icons through elevated
collections
· Manage hero product families to optimise newness across diverse
wearing occasions
· Extend our offer in sandals, bags and other adjacent categories
· Innovate to enhance comfort, lightness and sustainability
3. Markets
Curate market right distribution
· Expand B2B through long-term product and marketing partnerships
with top-tier accounts
· Build a differentiated DTC footprint to elevate the brand,
aligning operating models to each market
· Enter new growth markets with capital-light distribution models
4. Organisation
Simplify the operating model
· Simplify how we work to drive efficiency, scale and speed
· Optimise the cost base to support strategic priorities
· Build a culture of excellence, care and accountability,
strengthening organisational clarity, talent development and disciplined
execution
First half performance summary
Consumer
A key focus across the business for FY26 is on improving the quality of our
revenue, which we are achieving by increasing full price mix and reducing both
the time we are on promotion of seasonal lines and the depth of the discounts
offered. As expected, this activity impacted our overall revenue performance
in H1, as it will do in the full year, and is particularly the case in our
ecommerce performance. This focus doesn't however mean that we no longer offer
any discounts or undertake clearance activity as appropriate. We are
increasingly using Retail outlets to clear end of season lines, as these prove
the most cost-efficient clearance channel.
Full price revenue increased by 6% in our DTC channels, with full price mix
improving by 5pts across DTC and the average discount of promotions also
declining meaningfully. This shift was driven by the Americas where the DTC
full price mix improved by 9pts year-on-year.
Product
Overall pairs were up 1% to 4.7m, with DTC pairs down 3% driven by reduced
clearance activity and wholesale pairs up 4%. Full price DTC pairs were up 6%,
in line with the growth in full price DTC revenue.
As a proportion of H1 FY26 Group revenue, boots accounted for 50%, shoes 30%,
sandals 15% and bags & other 5%.
Just over 40% of our revenue comes from our four iconic silhouettes of the
1460 boot, 1461 shoe, 2976 Chelsea boot and Adrian tassel loafer.
Approximately four-fifths of this revenue comes from continuity lines of these
silhouettes such as Black Smooth, Ambassador or Crazy Horse leather.
We have continued to see a very strong performance in shoes, with DTC pairs up
20% and total shoes pairs up 33%. This meant that during the half we sold more
pairs of shoes than boots through our own DTC channels. The performance of
shoes was driven by our iconic Adrian tassel loafer, which saw pairs growth of
24% and our Adrian Black Polished Smooth was our number two bestselling
overall product through DTC in the half. We also saw strong performances in
our new Buzz shoe, the Mary Jane shoe, and the Lowell shoe. The 1461 shoe was
broadly flat year-on-year, with strong growth in our South Korea market.
Boots pairs declined 17% in DTC or 9% overall, again impacted by our drive to
increase full price mix. As expected, we have seen continued softness in the
performance of our iconic boots, namely the 1460 boot and the 2976 Chelsea
boot, although the decline is now moderating and they remain amongst our top
selling products. We saw a good performance in the new Buzz boot, the
knee-high Kasey boot (which was the number three bestseller in the period) and
the Anistone biker boot. In September we launched the Zebzag Laceless boot
which, like the rest of the Zebzag product family, is centred on easy-on and
instant comfort, and we are pleased with the performance to date. At the start
of November we launched the 1460 Rain boot, which represents significant
innovation of our most iconic product, and gives us access to a new footwear
segment, with a fully waterproof, heat-sealed boot. Early consumer reaction is
encouraging.
We had a weak season in Sandals, which was anticipated given the lack of new
products in the range, with pairs down 8% DTC. Within this we saw continued
good performance of our Zebzag ranges across both sandals and mules. The SS26
sandals range is a step forward, however there is more to go for in the
seasons ahead and improving our sandals range is an area of focus for us.
Our Bags & Other category is a relatively small part of our business and
was up 3%. Within this we saw continued strong success of our Weekender bag
and our Top Handle bag. We will continue to innovate in this category in
future. We also launched Small Leather Goods in AW24 and in AW25 have built on
this range further. Whilst these still represent small volumes, they are
attractive margin products and also increase basket size.
Across our ranges we have also seen consumers buy into higher quality, higher
price point lines. Examples of this are the Kasey knee-high boot (£210 /
€240 / $220), the Weekender Ambassador leather bag (£310 / €330 / $330)
and the recent Rick Owens collaboration (£390 / €420 / $420). This movement
up the price architecture is supportive to gross margin and in line with our
strategy.
Throughout the half we have had a number of brand driving collaborations with
fashion house MM6 and UK-based streetwear brand Palace both
recontextualising our icons, followed up by New York's MadeMe strengthening
the new Buzz franchise. We have seen strong commercial success of our second
instalment of the Netflix hit Wednesday collaboration and the return of our
successful collaboration with Rick Owens. The Wednesday range extends to six
lines including the 1460 boot, Elphie shoe, Buzz Mary Jane shoe and Round
Backpack, and has had a great reaction from consumers. The latest range with
Rick Owens, who is known for his blend of grunge and high fashion, reconsiders
our 1460 silhouette with exaggerated proportions, further cementing our
long-term relationship.
Markets
Across all our major markets we have been working more closely with wholesale
accounts to launch new products and to put the consumer at the heart of our
collective decision making and activity. Examples include: working with our
largest EMEA wholesale partners on our Buzz and Zebzag product launches;
working with our largest USA wholesale partners across both our new product
families and iconic products such as the Adrian tassel loafer; and working
with our key partners in South Korea on our 1461 shoe. There is more activity
planned over the key peak period and this partnership approach is a major
focus of our teams globally.
One of the key aspects of our Markets lever is entering new growth markets
with capital-light distribution models. These markets all represent untapped
growth opportunities, and the low brand awareness and fragmented nature of
them means that entering through distributors makes both strategic and
financial sense. Whilst not yet material financially, we are making good
progress on this front:
· We recently signed a distribution agreement for the UAE with
partner Beside Group, representing our entry into the UAE for the first time.
Beside is a leading partner for international brands in the Middle East, with
significant experience in retail and wholesale, spanning several decades. The
partnership will launch and then grow our presence in the UAE, initially
through wholesale, with mono-branded store openings expected in the future.
· At the end of FY25 we signed a distribution agreement with Crosby
in Latin America, and in August Crosby opened a mono-branded store in Buenos
Aires, which was followed by the opening of a store in Santiago, Chile at the
start of October. The partnership with Crosby covers Mexico, Argentina,
Paraguay and Chile and includes mono-branded retail stores and wholesale.
· In the Philippines we have an existing distribution partner who
is accelerating its expansion plans of our brand, and we're excited about the
growth potential of this market.
We have also begun refining the right distribution model for several existing
markets. In China, where we have nine directly-operated stores mainly in
Shanghai, we have begun working with several partners to open mono-branded
stores in other cities. We opened three in October, in Chengdu, Chongqing and
Hangzhou, with more in the pipeline. Similarly, in Italy, where we have 14
directly-operated stores, we have recently opened a franchise store in Pompei
near Naples, and envisage that future retail growth in this important market
will be delivered through a combination of directly operated stores in key
cities together with franchise stores operated by local partners in other
cities.
Organisation
Work is ongoing on simplifying our operating model to drive efficiency, scale
and speed. Our focus is on ensuring consumer-centricity at the individual
market level. Across the organisation we have continued to embed a culture of
tight cost control - in addition to the savings generated in FY25 through the
cost action plan - which is continuing to benefit our profitability.
We are starting to drive benefits from our Customer Data Platform ("CDP"). Our
focus areas to date have been to optimise the consumer journey, generate
repeat purchases and enhance discount efficiency. We are also increasingly
tailoring product launch marketing to different consumer groups, with some
pleasing early successes. We are confident that there are significant benefits
to come from the CDP in the years ahead.
The final element of our modern systems architecture, the Supply and Demand
Planning System, went live as scheduled in the summer. This new, modern system
is already delivering greater visibility and accuracy over our inventory
forecasting, improving availability of product whilst optimising working
capital. Benefits are anticipated to build over time as integrated
capabilities mature.
The establishment of a new Global Technology Centre (GTC) in India is
delivering benefits. The GTC allows us to build on our existing platforms and
expand our capabilities in a sustainable way. It brings core engineering
in-house to better enable us to leverage the opportunities of data and AI. We
continue to expect the GTC to be fully operational by FY27.
Sustainability is important to both our people and our consumers. Our UK
repair service, in partnership with The Boot Repair Company, continues to
perform well with positive consumer feedback. Our USA resale business, ReWair,
is performing to plan and brings new consumers to the brand as well as
increasing choice for existing consumers.
FINANCE REVIEW
Total revenue declined 0.8% on a reported basis and grew 0.8% CC. Within this,
ecommerce revenues declined by 7.3% (-5.1%
CC), impacted by the planned reduction in clearance activity; this decline was
partially offset by 3.0% retail growth (+4.8% CC) and 0.6% wholesale growth
(+1.8% CC). Adjusted loss before tax(1,5) was £9.4m (H1 FY25: £16.6m loss)
and a £9.2m loss on a CC basis. The improvement was driven by stronger
margins year-on-year, with COGS and opex(1) tightly managed, supported by the
benefit of the cost saving activities initiated in FY25. Within opex we
increased spend on demand generation and delivered a year-on-year decline in
non-demand generating spend. Higher tariffs into the USA added £2.7m
additional costs in the half. Adjusted earnings per share(1,5) was a loss of
0.9p (0.9p loss on a CC basis), compared to a loss of 1.2p in H1 FY25.
In order to assist shareholders' understanding of the performance of the
Group, the narrative below is focused on the adjusted performance for the
period, using several non-GAAP and Alternative Performance Measures (APMs); in
particular adjusted EBIT(1), adjusted profit/loss before tax(1) and adjusted
earnings/loss per share(1). The Directors consider these adjusted measures to
be relevant as they provide a clearer view of the Group's ongoing operational
performance. They also reflect how the business is managed and measured on a
day-to-day basis, aid comparability between periods and, by excluding the
effect of significant non-cash accounting adjustments, more closely correlate
with the cash and working capital position of the Group.
The adjusted measures are before certain exceptional costs(1) as well as
impairment of non-financial assets and currency gains/(losses), as these are
significant non-cash accounting adjustments. In FY25, the definition of
adjusting items was updated to include impairment of non-financial assets.
Comparative figures for H1 FY25 have been re-presented to reflect this revised
definition. A glossary and a reconciliation of these APMs to statutory figures
can be found at the end of this report on pages 29 to 31.
Results - at a glance
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25 % change % change
Reported H1 FY26 Reported Reported CC(1,2)
CC(1,2)
Revenue Ecommerce 81.3 83.2 87.7 -7.3% -5.1%
Retail 98.2 99.9 95.3 3.0% 4.8%
DTC 179.5 183.1 183.0 -1.9% 0.1%
Wholesale(3) 142.5 144.2 141.6 0.6% 1.8%
322.0 327.3 324.6 -0.8% 0.8%
Gross margin 210.3 213.0 207.7 1.3% 2.6%
Opex(1) (173.0) (175.0) (174.1) -0.6% 0.5%
Adjusted EBIT(1,5) 3.1 3.4 (3.0)
Currency gains/(losses) 1.3 (0.3) (1.6)
Impairment of non-financial assets(5) (1.5) (1.5) (1.3)
Exceptional costs(1) (1.4) (1.3) (9.2)
EBIT(1) 1.5 0.3 (15.1)
Adjusted loss before tax(1,5) (9.4) (9.2) (16.6)
Loss before tax (11.0) (12.3) (28.7)
Adjusted loss after tax(1,5) (9.0) (8.8) (11.8)
Loss after tax (10.0) (11.1) (20.8)
Adjusted basic loss per share (p)(1,5) (0.9) (0.9) (1.2)
Basic loss per share (p) (1.0) (1.2) (2.2)
Dividend per share (p) 0.85 0.85
Key metrics Pairs sold (m) 4.7 4.6 1.4%
No. of stores(4) 244 238 2.5%
DTC mix % 55.7% 55.9% 56.4% -0.7pts -0.5 pts
Gross margin % 65.3% 65.1% 64.0% 1.3pts 1.1 pts
EBIT margin %(1) 0.5% 0.1% -4.7% 5.2pts 4.8 pts
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. Constant currency applies the prior period exchange rates to current period
results to remove the impact of FX.
3. Wholesale revenue including distributor customers.
4. Own stores on streets and malls operated under arm's length leasehold
arrangements.
5. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
PERFORMANCE BY CHANNEL
Revenue decreased by 0.8% but increased 0.8% on a CC basis. DTC revenue
declined by 1.9%, however was marginally positive on a CC basis (up 0.1%) and
represented 55.7% of revenue, as already discussed we've been focussed on
growing full price revenue and achieved 6% DTC full price revenue growth.
Wholesale revenues increased by 0.6% or 1.8% on a CC basis. Volume,
represented by pairs sold, increased 1.4% to 4.7m pairs with the improvement
largely occurring in wholesale, up 3.8%, with DTC down 2.5% to 1.7m pairs.
Ecommerce revenue was down 7.3% or 5.1% on a CC basis and represented 25.2% of
revenue mix (H1 FY25: 27.0%). This performance was as expected given the
revenue headwind from reducing clearance activity. All regions saw a decline
in overall ecommerce revenue as a result, with full price ecommerce revenue
increasing in all three regions, particularly in Americas.
Retail revenue improved 3.0% or 4.8% on a CC basis, with growth in Americas
and APAC in both quarters. In EMEA retail was challenging in Q1, driven by
weak footfall in almost all markets, however we saw an improvement in the
latter part of Q2. During the half year we opened 11 new stores and closed
six stores to end the period with 244 own stores. The six stores closed during
the period were in multiple markets and were the result of normal store
portfolio management.
Wholesale revenue was up 0.6% or 1.8% on a CC basis with both EMEA and
Americas delivering positive growth as AW25 orderbooks were fulfilled to
wholesale customers. APAC was down in line with expectations as a result of
distributors cautiously planning their inventory levels.
PERFORMANCE BY REGION
H1 FY26 H1 FY25 % change % change
£m Actual CC(1)
Revenue: EMEA 158.6 162.4 -2.3% -3.2%
Americas 116.8 114.7 1.8% 6.3%
APAC 46.6 47.5 -1.9% 1.5%
322.0 324.6 -0.8% 0.8%
EBIT(1): EMEA 26.8 22.4 19.6%
Americas (1.2) (7.7) 84.4%
APAC 4.3 2.3 87.0%
Support costs(2) (28.4) (32.1) 11.5%
1.5 (15.1) na
Adjusted EBIT(1,3): EMEA 27.3 23.1 18.2%
Americas (0.2) (5.3) 96.2%
APAC 4.3 2.7 59.3%
Support costs(2) (28.3) (23.5) -20.4%
3.1 (3.0) na
EBIT(1) margin by region: EMEA 16.9% 13.8% 3.1pts
Americas -1.0% -6.7% 5.7pts
APAC 9.2% 4.8% 4.4pts
Total(4) 0.5% -4.7% 5.2pts
Adjusted EBIT(1,3) margin by region: EMEA 17.2% 14.2% 3.0pts
Americas -0.2% -4.6% 4.4pts
APAC 9.2% 5.7% 3.5pts
Total(4) 1.0% -0.9% 1.9pts
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. Support costs represent Group-related support costs not directly
attributable to each region's operations and including Group Finance, Legal,
Group HR, Global Brand and Design, Directors, Global Supply Chain and other
Group-only related costs and expenses.
3. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
4. Total EBIT margins are inclusive of support costs.
EMEA Revenue declined 2.3% to £158.6m, or 3.2% on a CC basis. DTC declined by
6.3% (-6.8% CC) with retail and ecommerce down 3.5% and 9.7% respectively
(-4.2% and -9.9% CC). EMEA DTC was impacted by our planned reduction in
clearance activity, against a highly promotional competitive backdrop. Retail
was impacted by weaker footfall in Q1 but improved in Q2 to broadly flat
revenue in the quarter. EMEA wholesale revenue grew by 2.3% (+0.9%CC), with
delivery of a stronger AW orderbook and higher pre orders year-on-year.
During the half year we opened two new stores, in France and Germany. We
closed four stores, as part of normal store portfolio management.
EMEA adjusted EBIT(1) was £27.3m (H1 FY25: £23.1m) driven by improved gross
margin, favourable FX movements and tight management of costs.
Americas Revenue grew 1.8% to £116.8m, or 6.3% CC. DTC revenue grew by 2.6%
(+7.5% CC), with broadly flat ecommerce revenues (down 3.7% reported or up
0.8% CC) with a strong performance in full price being partially offset by the
headwind of planned reduced clearance activity, with retail growth of 10.5%
(+15.7% CC) driven by higher footfall and conversion. Americas wholesale
revenue grew 4.8% on a CC basis benefitting from timing of orderbook shipments
versus last year.
During the half year we opened four new stores and closed one underperforming
store in San Francisco where footfall had permanently changed post-Covid-19.
Americas adjusted EBIT(1,2) improved to a loss of £0.2m (H1 FY25: £5.3m
loss) due to the growth in revenue combined with tightly managed costs.
APAC Revenue declined by 1.9% to £46.6m but grew 1.5% on a constant currency
basis. DTC revenues grew 0.9% or 3.8% CC, with retail up 8.6% (+11.2% CC),
whilst ecommerce revenue declined 10.0% (-6.9% CC), again impacted by
significant planned reduction in clearance activity through ecommerce,
particularly in China and South Korea. The strong performance in retail was
driven by South Korea. Our largest market in APAC, Japan, reported double
digit revenue growth in ecommerce. Wholesale was down 7.6% (-3.2% CC) with a
reduction in H1 sales to the Australian distributor market in line with
expectations.
During the half year we opened five new stores, with three in China and one
each in Japan and Hong Kong. In Japan, in addition to the owned store opening,
we opened one new franchise store, with a healthy pipeline of both DTC and
franchise stores in this market. We closed one own store and two franchise
stores in APAC as part of normal store portfolio management.
APAC adjusted EBIT(1) increased to £4.3m (H1 FY25: £2.7m) due to tight
management of opex.
Support costs within adjusted EBIT(1) have increased by 20.4% to £28.3m due
to additional investment in marketing demand generation.
RETAIL STORE ESTATE
During the half year, we opened 11 (H1 FY25: 10) new own retail stores (via
arm's length leasehold arrangements) and closed 6 stores (H1 FY25: 11) as
follows below.
Opened Closed 28 September 2025
30 March
2025
EMEA: UK 34 - (2) 32
Germany 17 1 (1) 17
France 18 1 - 19
Italy 14 - - 14
Spain 6 - (1) 5
Other 14 - - 14
103 2 (4) 101
Americas: 59 4 (1) 62
APAC: Japan 46 1 - 47
China 7 3 (1) 9
South Korea 17 - - 17
Hong Kong 7 1 - 8
77 5 (1) 81
Total 239 11 (6) 244
The Group also trades from 15 (FY25: 20) concession counters in department
stores in South Korea and a further 91 (FY25: 88) mono-branded franchise and
partner stores around the world with, 25 in Japan (FY25: 24), 26 across
Australia and New Zealand (FY25: 27), four in Canada (FY25: four), one in
Latin America (FY25: nil) and 35 across other South East Asia countries (FY25:
33).
ANALYSIS OF PERFORMANCE BY QUARTER
Our DTC performance was in line with expectations. Q2 showed an improvement
from Q1 driven by retail performance, which grew 8.7% CC in Q2, compared to
0.7% CC growth in Q1. Wholesale also performed in line with expectations.
Q1 Q2
Actual CC Actual CC
Total Revenue -2.3% 0.7% 0.0% 0.9%
Revenue: Ecommerce -4.9% -1.8% -9.1% -7.7%
Retail -2.0% 0.7% 7.7% 8.7%
DTC -3.3% -0.5% -0.7% 0.5%
Wholesale 0.7% 4.2% 0.6% 1.2%
Region: EMEA -7.9% -7.2% 0.4% -1.3%
Americas 5.7% 11.9% -0.1% 3.4%
APAC -2.8% 0.0% -1.2% 2.7%
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
PROFITABILITY ANALYSIS
Gross margin improved by 1.3pts to 65.3% or by 1.1pts on a CC basis with an
increase in full price mix and continued good control of COGS, particularly
through freight savings, more than offsetting USA tariffs costs.
Opex(1) declined by 0.6%, or £1.1m, to £173.0m on an actual currency basis.
Within this, demand generating opex(1) increased due to investment into
product-led brand marketing including some timing differences for campaigns
brought forward into H1 which were included in H2 in the prior period. Opex(1)
not linked to demand generation was very tightly controlled across the
business and declined year-on-year, supported by savings from the cost action
plan in FY25.
EBITDA(1) increased by 47.1% to £35.9m (H1 FY25: £24.4m), with reduced
revenues offset by gross margin improvements and tight cost control.
EBIT(1) improved from a £15.1m loss in H1 FY25 to a profit of £1.5m as a
result of the increase in EBITDA and currency gains of £1.3m (H1 FY25:
currency losses of £1.6m).
Loss after tax is analysed in the following table from EBITDA:
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25
EBITDA(1) 35.9 24.4
Depreciation and amortisation (34.5) (36.8)
Impairment (1.5) (1.3)
Other gains 0.3 0.2
Currency gains/(losses) 1.3 (1.6)
EBIT(1) 1.5 (15.1)
Add back: exceptional costs and adjusting items(1,2) 1.6 12.1
Adjusted EBIT(1,2) 3.1 (3.0)
Net bank interest costs (9.2) (9.9)
Interest on lease liabilities and unwind of provisions (3.3) (3.7)
Loss before tax (11.0) (28.7)
Add back: exceptional costs and adjusting items(1,2) 1.6 12.1
Adjusted loss before tax(1,2) (9.4) (16.6)
Tax 1.0 7.9
Loss after tax (10.0) (20.8)
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
Depreciation and amortisation charged in the period was £34.5m, (H1 FY25
£36.8m), driven lower due to higher disposals of property, plant and
equipment in the prior period, and savings in the current period on warehouses
in the Americas region accounted for as right-of-use assets, and is analysed
as follows:
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25
Amortisation of intangibles(1) 3.1 3.0
Depreciation of property, plant and equipment(2) 6.6 7.6
9.7 10.6
Depreciation of right-of-use assets(3) 24.8 26.2
Total 34.5 36.8
1. Mainly represented by IT related spend with the average useful term of 5 to
15 years.
2. Mainly represented by office and store fit out costs with a useful term of
3 to 15 years.
3. Mainly represented by depreciation of IFRS 16 capitalised leases with the
average useful term remaining of 3.0 years and 272 properties (H1 FY25: 3.4
years and 261 properties).
Foreign currency
Dr. Martens is a global brand selling to consumers across the world in many
different currencies, with the Financial Statements reported in GBP. Foreign
currency amounts in the profit or loss account are prepared on an average
actual currency rate basis for the period. These exchange rates are calculated
monthly and applied to revenue and costs generated in that month, such that
the actual performance translated across the period is dependent on monthly
trading profiles as well as movement in currency exchange rates. To aid
comparability of underlying performance, we have also calculated constant
currency movements across the P&L, which is calculated by applying the
prior period exchange rates to current period results to remove the impact of
FX.
Exchange rates mainly impacting the Group are USD/GBP, EUR/GBP and JPY/GBP.
The following table summarises average exchange rates used in the period:
USD/GBP EUR/GBP JPY/GBP
FY26 FY25 % FY26 FY25 % FY26 FY25 %
H1 1.34 1.28 4.7% 1.17 1.18 -0.8% 196 195 0.5%
H2 - 1.27 - - 1.20 - - 194 -
FY 1.34 1.28 4.7% 1.17 1.19 -1.7% 196 194 1.0%
The Group takes a holistic approach to exchange rate risk, monitoring
exposures on a Group-wide, net cash flow basis, seeking to maximise natural
offsets wherever possible. While COGS purchases for the Group are
predominantly denominated in USD, currency risk is partially offset from USD
revenues earned in Americas and from distributor revenues, which are also
largely USD denominated. Where a net foreign currency exposure is considered
material, the Group seeks to reduce volatility from exchange movements by
using derivative financial instruments. During the period, a £0.2m loss (H1
FY25: £1.2m gain) was recorded in revenues related to derivatives partially
hedging the net EUR inflows.
Retranslation of foreign currency denominated monetary assets and liabilities
in the half resulted in a currency gain of £1.3m (H1 FY25: loss of £1.6m).
This was predominantly due to the revaluation of external purchases balances
following the depreciation of USD against GBP.
Interest
The Group's exposure to changes in interest rates relates primarily to cash
investments, borrowings, and IFRS 16 lease liabilities. Total Group net
interest costs for the period were £12.5m, lower than the prior period (H1
FY25: £13.6m) primarily due to a combination of lower interest on lease
liabilities and lower term loan interest and revolving credit facility (RCF)
non-utilisation fees, due to lower principal amounts following the refinancing
in November 2024.
Adjusting items(1,2)
In May 2024, the Group announced it would be undertaking a cost action plan.
We took swift action to identify and implement savings, which came from
operational efficiency and design, better procurement and operational
streamlining. We saw some benefit in FY25, with the full benefit, of
annualised savings of c.£25m, in FY26. In addition, in February 2025, the
Group commenced a project to change and improve the Global Technology
organisation and capability through the establishment of a new technology
centre in India, which is expected to be completed in H2 FY26. The cost of
these projects have been classed as exceptional.
In the period, the Group incurred exceptional costs of £1.4m (H1 FY25:
£9.2m), which was made up of £0.7m director joining costs relating to the
new CEO and CFO and £0.7m in relation to establishment of the Global
Technology Centre in India. The majority of the exceptional costs incurred in
H1 FY25 related to the cost action plan.
Impairment of non-financial assets, in relation to eight underperforming
stores in EMEA and Americas, and currency gains/losses are presented as other
adjusting items(1) to provide a clearer view of the Group's underlying
operational performance.
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25
Included in selling and administrative expenses
Exceptional costs(1)
Director joining costs 0.7 3.1
Cost savings related costs 0.7 6.1
1.4 9.2
Other adjusting items
Impairment of non-financial assets(2) 1.5 1.3
Currency (gains)/losses (1.3) 1.6
Adjustments to EBIT(1,2) 1.6 12.1
Adjustments to profit before tax(2) 1.6 12.1
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
Tax was a credit of £1.0m (H1 FY25: £7.9m credit) with an estimated
effective tax rate of 9.1% for the full FY26 period (H1 FY25: 27.5%) which is
lower than the UK corporate tax rate of 25.0%, due mainly to overseas tax
rates on profit making entities offsetting the UK Group tax loss credit and
prior year tax adjustments reducing the tax credit further.
Loss per share (basic and diluted) was 1.0p (H1 FY25: basic and diluted loss
per share of 2.2p), or 0.9p loss on an adjusted basis (H1 FY25: 1.2p). The
basic and diluted figures are the same because potential ordinary shares
related to Group share schemes have been excluded from the calculation of
diluted loss per share as they are anti-dilutive for the period ended 28
September 2025. The following table summarises these EPS figures:
H1 FY26 pence H1 FY26 pence H1 FY25 pence
Reported CC(1)
Loss per share Adjusted basic(1,2) (0.9) (0.9) (1.2)
Basic (1.0) (1.2) (2.2)
Diluted (1.0) (1.2) (2.2)
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
CASH FLOWS
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25
EBITDA(1) 35.9 24.4
(Increase)/decrease in inventories (16.0) 0.4
Increase in debtors (32.7) (22.1)
Decrease in creditors 6.0 32.2
Total change in net working capital (42.7) 10.5
Share-based payments 4.0 3.5
Capex (6.3) (11.0)
Operating cash flow(1) (9.1) 27.4
Operating cash flow conversion(1,2) -25.3% 112.3%
Net interest paid (8.9) (9.6)
Payment of lease liabilities (28.0) (28.4)
Tax paid (4.4) (3.2)
Derivatives settlement - 0.1
Dividends paid (8.2) -
Net cash outflow (58.6) (13.7)
Opening cash 155.9 111.1
Net cash exchange translation (1.6) (2.5)
Closing cash 95.7 94.9
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. Adjusted operating cash flow conversion(1) is -16.4% (H1 FY25: 90.8%).
Operating cash flow(1) generated an outflow of £9.1m (H1 FY25: inflow of
£27.4m), impacted by negative working capital cash outflows of £42.7m (H1
FY25: inflow of £10.5m). In H1 FY25, cash outflows on inventory and creditors
were reduced as a result of targeted inventory reduction. H1 FY26 operating
cash outflow has returned to normalised levels with an increase in debtors and
inventory ahead of peak trading.
Capex was £6.3m (H1 FY25: £11.0m) and represented 2.0% of revenue (H1 FY25:
3.4%). The breakdown in capex by category is as follows:
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25
Retail stores 3.7 3.2
Supply Chain - 0.9
IT/Tech 2.6 6.9
6.3 11.0
Net interest paid was £8.9m (H1 FY25: £9.6m), lower than H1 FY25 by £0.7m.
Debt interest payments were £0.8m lower due to the effect of the reduction in
the loan principal, partially offset by £0.5m of one-off transaction costs
related to the refinancing in FY25 which were capitalised with the new loan on
the balance sheet. Cash investment interest received grew by £0.4m primarily
due to the timing of receipts and higher cash invested.
Payment of lease liabilities was £28.0m (H1 FY25: £28.4m) lower than H1 FY25
by £0.4m primarily due to warehouse savings in the Americas region.
Funding and Leverage
The Group is funded by internally generated operating cash flows, bank debt
and equity. In November 2024, the Group agreed with existing and new lenders
to refinance its debt facilities, previously comprising a €337.5m Term Loan
and a RCF of £200.0m. The refinanced facility consists of a £250.0m Term
Loan and a RCF of £126.5m for an initial term of three years, with two
one-year extension options, subject to lender approval. Further details on the
capital structure and debt are given in note 9 of the interim financial
statements.
The facilities are subject to a financial covenant, based on a Net Debt/LTM
EBITDA leverage ratio of <3x which is tested every six months. The total
net leverage test is calculated with a full 12 months of EBITDA (covenant
calculation basis) and net debt being inclusive of IFRS 16 lease liabilities
at the balance sheet date. As at 28 September 2025, the Group had total net
leverage of 2.1 times (H1 FY25: 2.3 times).
BALANCE SHEET
£m 28 September 2025 29 September 30 March
2024 2025
Freehold property 6.5 6.7 6.7
Right-of-use assets 135.8 153.4 143.2
Other fixed assets 71.6 79.3 76.2
Inventory 199.8 245.4 187.4
Debtors 94.7 92.5 63.4
Creditors(1) (133.3) (144.5) (111.4)
Working capital 161.2 193.4 139.4
Other(2) 12.5 7.8 6.0
Operating net assets 387.6 440.6 371.5
Goodwill 240.7 240.7 240.7
Cash 95.7 94.9 155.9
Bank debt (250.0) (281.7) (250.0)
Unamortised bank fees 3.1 1.9 3.7
Lease liabilities (148.0) (161.9) (155.4)
Net assets/equity 329.1 334.5 366.4
1. Includes bank interest of £2.2m (H1 FY25: £8.0m, FY25: £2.4m).
2. Other includes investments, deferred tax assets, income tax assets, income
tax payables, deferred tax liabilities, and provisions.
Inventory
In FY25 we brought inventory back to normalised levels, and in FY26 we expect
inventory to be broadly flat year-on-year. At the half year point inventory
was lower year-on-year and higher than the March year end position, as is
typically the case, as we build inventory levels ahead of the peak trading
season.
28 September 2025 29 September 30 March
£m 2024 2025
Inventory (£m) 199.8 245.4 187.4
Turn (x)(1) 1.4x 1.2x 1.5x
Weeks cover(2) 38 42 35
1. Calculated as historic LTM COGS divided by average LTM inventory.
2. Calculated as 52 weeks divided by inventory turn.
Net Debt
The half year point typically marks the high point for net debt through our
annual cash cycle, as seen in the period with net debt up by £52.8m compared
to the March year end position, however down by £46.4m compared to H1 FY25.
£m 28 September 2025 29 September 30 March
2024 2025
Bank loans (excluding unamortised bank fees) (250.0) (281.7) (250.0)
Cash 95.7 94.9 155.9
Net bank loans (154.3) (186.8) (94.1)
Lease liabilities (148.0) (161.9) (155.4)
Net Debt(1) (302.3) (348.7) (249.5)
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
RETURNS TO SHAREHOLDERS
Our capital allocation philosophy guides our view of returns to shareholders
and usage of excess cash. The first priority is to use excess cash for
business priorities, and we will continue to invest in a targeted manner to
support the long-term growth and resilience of the Group. Beyond this, our
priority is to return excess cash to shareholders through a regular dividend
and, when possible, further returns.
Dividends
Our dividend policy is to payout between 25% and 35% of earnings. Interim
dividends are set at one-third of the previous year's total dividend. In line
with this policy, the Board declares an interim dividend of 0.85p, being
one-third of the FY25 total dividend of 2.55p. This will be paid on 9 April
2026 to shareholders on the register as at 6 March 2026.
£m H1 FY26 H1 FY25 FY25
Dividends paid during the period:
Prior period final dividend paid -(1) - 9.5
Prior period interim dividend paid 8.2(2) - -
Total dividends paid during the period 8.2 - 9.5
(Loss)/profit after tax for the period (10.0) (20.8) 4.5
Dividend in respect of the period:
Interim dividend: 0.85p (Sep 24: 0.85p, Mar 25: 0.85p) 8.2 8.2 8.2
Final dividend: nil (Sep 24: nil, Mar 25: 1.70p) - - 16.4
Total dividend in respect of the period 8.2 8.2 24.6
1. The final dividend in relation to the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025 of
£16.4m was paid on 8 October 2025, which was after the period end.
2. The interim dividend in relation to the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025 of
£8.2m was paid on 8 April 2025.
FY26 GUIDANCE
Our guidance for FY26 is:
· New own store openings of 20 to 25
· Depreciation and Amortisation of around £75m, changed from £75m
to £80m previously
· Net finance costs of around £25m, changed from £25m to £27m
previously
· Blended tax rate of c.26%
· Capex of around £20m, changed from £20m to £25m previously
· Inventory broadly flat year-on-year
· Net debt of around £200m, including lease liabilities
Based on current spot rates as at 17 November 2025, we anticipate a currency
impact of a c.£10m headwind to Group revenue and a benefit to Adjusted PBT of
c.£2m. FX revenue sensitivities are as follows: for every 1%pt movement in US
dollar c.£3.0m; Japanese Yen c.£0.5m and Euro c.£2.5m.
PRINCIPAL RISKS
The Board considers that the principal risks and uncertainties which could
impact the Group over the remaining half of the financial period are unchanged
from the risks presented in the 2025 Annual Report. The principal risks are
summarised as: brand and product; social, environmental and climate; people,
culture and change; supply chain; information and cyber security; financial;
legal and compliance; and macroeconomic uncertainty. These are detailed on
pages 36 to 41 of the 2025 Annual Report, a copy of which is available on the
Company's website at www.drmartensplc.com.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
Note Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 £m Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m £m
Revenue 3 322.0 324.6 787.6
Cost of sales (111.7) (116.9) (275.9)
Gross margin 210.3 207.7 511.7
Selling and administrative expenses (208.8) (222.8) (474.7)
Finance income 1.7 1.7 3.8
Finance expense 5 (14.2) (15.3) (32.0)
(Loss)/profit before tax (11.0) (28.7) 8.8
EBIT(1) 3 1.5 (15.1) 37.0
Net finance expense (12.5) (13.6) (28.2)
(Loss)/profit before tax (11.0) (28.7) 8.8
Tax credit/(expense) 6 1.0 7.9 (4.3)
(Loss)/profit after tax (10.0) (20.8) 4.5
Reconciliation of adjusted EBIT(1): Note Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 £m
£m
EBIT(1) 3 1.5 (15.1) 37.0
Exceptional costs(1) 4 1.4 9.2 16.3
Impairment of non-financial assets(2) 1.5 1.3 4.3
Currency (gains)/losses (1.3) 1.6 3.1
Adjusted EBIT(1) - non-GAAP measure 3.1 (3.0) 60.7
Reconciliation of adjusted (loss)/profit before tax(1): Note
(Loss)/profit before tax (11.0) (28.7) 8.8
Exceptional costs(1) 4 1.4 9.2 17.9
Impairment of non-financial assets(2) 1.5 1.3 4.3
Currency (gains)/losses (1.3) 1.6 3.1
Adjusted (loss)/profit before tax(1) - non-GAAP measure (9.4) (16.6) 34.1
(Loss)/earnings per share Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024
Basic (loss)/earnings per share (1.0p) (2.2p) 0.5p
Diluted (loss)/earnings per share (1.0p) (2.2p) 0.5p
Adjusted (loss)/earnings per share(1) - non-GAAP measure
Adjusted basic (loss)/earnings per share(1,2) (0.9p) (1.2p) 2.4p
Adjusted diluted (loss)/earnings per share(1,2) (0.9p) (1.2p) 2.4p
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
The results for the periods presented above are derived from continuing
operations and are entirely attributable to the owners of the Parent Company.
The notes on pages 19 to 27 form part of these Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Comprehensive Income
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m £m £m
(Loss)/profit after tax (10.0) (20.8) 4.5
Other comprehensive (expense)/income
Items that may subsequently be reclassified to profit or loss
Foreign currency translation differences (5.1) (7.1) (3.1)
Cash flow hedges: Fair value movements in equity (2.9) (1.5) (0.3)
Cash flow hedges: Reclassified and reported in profit or loss 0.2 2.9 (0.2)
Tax in relation to share schemes 0.3 (0.7) (0.7)
Tax in relation to cash flow hedges 0.7 (0.5) 0.3
(6.8) (6.9) (4.0)
Total comprehensive (expense)/income (16.8) (27.7) 0.5
The notes on pages 19 to 27 form part of these Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Condensed Consolidated Balance Sheet
As at 28 September 2025
Unaudited Unaudited Audited
28 September 2025 29 September 2024 30 March
£m £m 2025
Note £m
ASSETS
Non-current assets
Intangible assets 273.0 273.8 274.0
Property, plant and equipment 8 45.8 52.9 49.6
Right-of-use assets 8 135.8 153.4 143.2
Investments 1.0 1.0 1.0
Derivative financial assets - 0.2 -
Deferred tax assets 13.0 15.1 11.1
468.6 496.4 478.9
Current assets
Inventories 199.8 245.4 187.4
Trade and other receivables 94.7 89.8 62.4
Income tax assets 6.6 3.4 4.2
Derivative financial assets - 2.5 1.0
Cash and cash equivalents 95.7 94.9 155.9
396.8 436.0 410.9
Total assets 865.4 932.4 889.8
LIABILITIES
Current liabilities
Trade and other payables (129.3) (132.5) (108.9)
Borrowings 9 (2.2) (8.0) (2.4)
Lease liabilities (47.4) (43.8) (45.9)
Income tax liabilities (1.5) (4.5) (1.3)
Derivative financial liabilities (1.6) (4.0) (0.1)
(182.0) (192.8) (158.6)
Non-current liabilities
Borrowings 9 (246.9) (279.8) (246.3)
Lease liabilities (100.6) (118.1) (109.5)
Provisions (6.6) (7.2) (6.5)
Derivative financial liabilities (0.2) - -
Deferred tax liabilities - - (2.5)
(354.3) (405.1) (364.8)
Total liabilities (536.3) (597.9) (523.4)
Net assets 329.1 334.5 366.4
EQUITY
Equity attributable to the owners of the Parent
Ordinary share capital 12 9.7 9.6 9.6
Treasury shares - - -
Hedging reserve (1.3) 1.8 0.7
Capital redemption reserve 0.4 0.4 0.4
Merger reserve (1,400.0) (1,400.0) (1,400.0)
Foreign currency translation reserve 1.5 2.6 6.6
Retained earnings 1,718.8 1,720.1 1,749.1
Total equity 329.1 334.5 366.4
The notes on pages 19 to 27 form part of these Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
Ordinary share capital Treasury shares Hedging reserve Merger reserve Foreign currency translation reserve Retained earnings Total equity
Capital redemption reserve
Note £m £m £m £m £m £m £m £m
At 1 April 2024 9.6 - 0.9 0.4 (1,400.0) 9.7 1,747.6 368.2
Loss for the period - - - - - - (20.8) (20.8)
Other comprehensive income/(expense) - - 0.9 - - (7.1) (0.7) (6.9)
Total comprehensive income/(expense) for the period - - 0.9 - - (7.1) (21.5) (27.7)
Dividends payable 7 - - - - - - (9.5) (9.5)
Shares issued 12 - - - - - - - -
Share-based payments - - - - - - 3.5 3.5
At 29 September 2024 9.6 - 1.8 0.4 (1,400.0) 2.6 1,720.1 334.5
Profit for the period - - - - - - 25.3 25.3
Other comprehensive (expense)/income - - (1.1) - - 4.0 - 2.9
Total comprehensive (expense)/income for the period - - (1.1) - - 4.0 25.3 28.2
Shares issued 12 - - - - - - - -
Share-based payments - - - - - - 3.7 3.7
At 30 March 2025 9.6 - 0.7 0.4 (1,400.0) 6.6 1,749.1 366.4
Loss for the period - - - - - - (10.0) (10.0)
Other comprehensive (expense)/income - - (2.0) - - (5.1) 0.3 (6.8)
Total comprehensive expense for the period - - (2.0) - - (5.1) (9.7) (16.8)
Dividends paid 7 - - - - - - (8.2) (8.2)
Dividends payable - - - - - - (16.4) (16.4)
Shares issued 12 0.1 - - - - - - 0.1
Share-based payments - - - - - - 4.0 4.0
At 28 September 2025 9.7 - (1.3) 0.4 (1,400.0) 1.5 1,718.8 329.1
The notes on pages 19 to 27 form part of these Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Condensed Consolidated Statement of Cash flows
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024
£m £m
Note
Loss after tax for the period (10.0) (20.8)
Add back:
income tax credit 6 (1.0) (7.9)
finance income (1.7) (1.7)
finance expense 5 14.2 15.3
depreciation, amortisation and impairment 36.0 38.0
other gains (0.3) (0.1)
currency (gains)/losses (1.3) 1.6
loss/(gain) realised on matured derivatives 0.2 (1.2)
share-based payments charge 4.0 3.5
(Increase)/decrease in inventories (16.0) 0.4
Increase in trade and other receivables (32.7) (22.1)
Increase in trade and other payables 6.0 32.2
Change in net working capital (42.7) 10.5
Cash flows from operating activities
Cash (used in)/generated from operations (2.6) 37.2
Tax paid (4.4) (3.2)
Settlement of matured derivatives (0.2) 1.3
Net cash (outflow)/inflow from operating activities (7.2) 35.3
Cash flows from investing activities
Additions to intangible assets (2.1) (6.8)
Additions to property, plant and equipment 8 (4.2) (4.2)
Finance income received 2.0 1.6
Net cash outflow from investing activities (4.3) (9.4)
Cash flows from financing activities
Finance expense paid (10.9) (11.2)
Payment of lease interest (3.2) (3.6)
Payment of lease liabilities (24.8) (24.8)
Dividends paid 7 (8.2) -
Net cash outflow from financing activities (47.1) (39.6)
Net decrease in cash and cash equivalents (58.6) (13.7)
Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the period 155.9 111.1
Effect of foreign exchange on cash held (1.6) (2.5)
Cash and cash equivalents at end of the period 95.7 94.9
The notes on pages 19 to 27 form part of these Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
1. General information
Dr. Martens plc (the 'Company') is a public company limited by shares
incorporated in the United Kingdom, and registered and domiciled in England
and Wales, whose shares are traded on the London Stock Exchange. The Company's
registered office is: 28 Jamestown Road, Camden, London NW1 7BY. The principal
activity of the Company and its subsidiaries (together referred to as the
'Group') is the design, development, procurement, marketing, selling and
distribution of footwear under the Dr. Martens brand.
2. Accounting policies
The principal accounting policies adopted in the preparation of the Condensed
Consolidated Interim Financial Statements ('Financial Statements') are the
same as those set out in the Group's Annual Financial Statements for the 52
weeks ended 30 March 2025 other than for the area noted below. The interim
financial information is presented in GBP and to the nearest million pounds
(to one decimal place) unless otherwise noted.
Taxation
As per the requirements of IAS 34 (Interim Financial Reporting) paragraph
30(c), the estimated effective tax rate for the full FY26 period has been
applied to half year results.
Basis of preparation
The Condensed Consolidated Interim Financial Statements have been prepared in
accordance with the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency Rules sourcebook of
the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority, and with UK-adopted
International Accounting Standard (IAS) 34 'Interim Financial Reporting'.
The interim results for the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 and the
comparatives for the 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 are unaudited and the
current period results were not reviewed by the Group's auditors,
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP (PwC).
The financial information for the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025 has been
extracted from the Group Financial Statements for that period and does not
constitute statutory accounts as defined in section 434 of the Companies Act.
These published Financial Statements were reported on by the auditors without
qualification or an emphasis of matter reference and did not include a
statement under section 498(2) or (3) of the Companies Act 2006 and have been
delivered to the Registrar of Companies.
The Condensed Consolidated Interim Financial Statements have been prepared
under the historical cost convention, except for equity investments,
derivative financial instruments, money market funds, share-based payments and
pension scheme assets that have been measured at fair value.
In preparing the Condensed Consolidated Interim Financial Statements
management has considered the impact of climate change, particularly in the
context of the Financial Statements as a whole, in addition to disclosures
included in the Strategic Report of the Group Financial Statements for the 52
weeks ended 30 March 2025. The impact of climate-related risk matters is not
expected to be material to the 28 September 2025 Condensed Consolidated
Financial Statements or on the Group's going concern assessment to 27 December
2026.
Significant judgements and sources of estimation uncertainty
The Group's significant judgements and key sources of estimation uncertainty
are consistent with those disclosed in the Group's latest audited Financial
Statements.
Other areas of judgement and accounting estimates
The other areas of judgement and accounting estimates are consistent with
those disclosed in the Group's latest audited Financial Statements.
Going concern
The interim consolidated financial information has been prepared on the going
concern basis. The going concern assessment covers at least the 12-month
period from the date of the signing of the Financial Statements, and the going
concern basis is dependent on the Group maintaining adequate levels of
resources to operate during the period. To support this assessment, detailed
trading and cash flow forecasts, including forecast liquidity and covenant
compliance, were prepared for the 15-month period to 27 December 2026.
The key stages of the assessment process are summarised as follows:
· The Group planning process forms the basis of the Going Concern
review, starting from a review of strategy and producing outputs for long,
medium and short-term financial plans, based on key assumptions which are
agreed with the Global Leadership Team (GLT) and the Board.
· The trading outlook over the long, medium and short-term is
evaluated, contextualising our assessments within the broader macroeconomic
environment.
· Micro and macro central planning assumptions are identified and
incorporated into the assessments.
· The Directors of the Group have considered the future position
based on current trading and a number of potential downside scenarios which
may occur, including the impact of relevant principal risks crystallising.
· Further details on the potential downside scenarios relevant to the
going concern assessment period have been included below.
The Directors also considered the Group funding arrangements as at 28
September 2025. The Group reports cash of £95.7m, a term loan of £250m, as
well as available undrawn facilities of £122.6m. The initial term of the loan
ends in November 2027, there are two one-year extension options, subject to
lender approval.
Management have modelled, and the Directors have reviewed 'top-down'
sensitivity and stress test, including a review of the cash flow projections
and covenant compliance under a severe but plausible scenario in relation to
three main risks occurring simultaneously:
· the impact of a factory closure in two key production geographic
areas due to climate related events (flooding and heatwaves).
· weaker consumer sentiment and lower demand than currently assumed
in financial plans.
· a cyber-attack occurring during peak trading on our largest website
(USA).
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
2. Accounting policies (continued)
Basis of preparation
(continued)
In the unlikely event of the above three scenarios occurring together, the
Group can withstand material revenue decline and maintain headroom above
covenant requirements. The Group continues to have satisfactory liquidity and
covenant headroom throughout the period under review.
In modelling our severe but plausible downside we have incorporated the impact
of a double-digit decrease in revenue growth from the base plan for the
12-months to December 2026. Under this scenario, certain mitigations are
available or are intrinsically linked to the forecast, including some cost and
cash savings that materialise immediately if the Group's performance is below
budget and other planned and standard cost reductions. A more extreme downside
scenario is not considered plausible.
A reverse stress test has also been modelled to determine the reduction in
revenue required for a cash balance (not including drawdown of the RCF
facility) of -£50m to be reached at the end of the going concern period, at
which point special cash monitoring measures would be triggered. It is
concluded that the business could weather extreme growth reductions without
mitigation versus the base plan. The business would have to experience a
reduction in revenue growth of c.62%pts relative to the base plan in the going
concern period to reach -£50m cash in December 2026.
In addition, a reverse stress test has also been modelled to determine what
could break covenant compliance estimates and liquidity before mitigating
actions at the end of H1 FY27 (Sep 26). Under the covenant breach test it is
concluded that the business could weather extreme growth reductions without
mitigation, c.17%pts reduction in revenue growth in the 12 months to December
2026 relative to the growth plan before covenants are breached. Under both
reverse stress tests, there were no mitigating actions modelled. The Directors
have assessed the likelihood of occurrence to be remote.
We have also assessed the qualitative and quantitative impact of
climate-related risks, as noted in our Task Force on Climate-related Financial
Disclosures (TCFD) scenario analysis as disclosed in the FY25 Annual Report,
on asset recoverable amounts and concluded that there would not be a material
impact on the business and cash flows in the going concern period.
We will continue to monitor the impact of the macroeconomic backdrop and
geopolitical events on the Group in the countries where we operate, and we
plan to maintain flexibility to react as appropriate.
Based on the going concern assessment, the Directors have a reasonable
expectation that the Group has adequate resources to continue in operational
existence for at least 12 months from the date of approval of these Financial
Statements. For this reason, they continue to adopt the going concern basis in
preparing these Financial Statements.
Adoption of new and revised
standards
The following amendment became applicable for the current reporting period.
This amendment does not have an impact on the Group in the current reporting
period, and is not expected to have a material impact in future reporting
periods:
· Amendments to IAS 21 - Lack of exchangeability
The following new or amended IFRS accounting standards, amendments and
interpretations are not yet adopted, and it is expected that where applicable,
these standards and amendments will be adopted on each respective effective
date:
· IFRS 18 - Presentation and disclosure in financial statements
· IFRS 19 - Subsidiaries without public accountability: disclosures
· Annual Improvements to IFRS - Volume 11
· Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7 - Classification and measurement of
financial instruments
· Amendments to IFRS 9 and IFRS 7 - Contracts referencing
nature-dependent electricity
IFRS 18 will replace IAS 1 Presentation of financial statements, introducing
new requirements that will help to achieve comparability of the financial
performance of similar entities and provide more relevant information and
transparency to users. Even though IFRS 18 will not impact the recognition or
measurement of items in the financial statements, its impacts on presentation
and disclosure are expected to be pervasive. In particular, those related to
the Statement of Profit or Loss and providing management-defined performance
measures within the financial statements. Management is currently assessing
the detailed implications of applying the new standard to the Group's
Consolidated Financial Statements.
The Group will apply the new standard from its mandatory effective date of 1
January 2027, subject to UK endorsement. Retrospective application is
required, and so the comparative information for the financial period ending
28 March 2027 will be restated in accordance with IFRS 18.
Other accounting standards, amendments and interpretations not yet adopted are
not expected to have a material impact.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
3. Segmental analysis
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
EMEA Americas APAC Support costs(4) Total
£m £m £m £m £m
Revenue(1,2) 158.6 116.8 46.6 - 322.0
Gross margin 110.4 66.7 33.2 - 210.3
Staff and operating costs (66.6) (56.1) (24.1) (27.6) (174.4)
Depreciation, amortisation, impairment and other gains (17.0) (11.8) (4.8) (2.1) (35.7)
Currency gains - - - 1.3 1.3
EBIT(3) 26.8 (1.2) 4.3 (28.4) 1.5
Exceptional costs(3) - - - 1.4 1.4
Impairment of non-financial assets 0.5 1.0 - - 1.5
Currency gains - - - (1.3) (1.3)
Adjusted EBIT(3) 27.3 (0.2) 4.3 (28.3) 3.1
Net finance expense (12.5)
Exceptional costs(3) (1.4)
Impairment of non-financial assets (1.5)
Currency gains 1.3
Loss before tax (11.0)
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024(5)
EMEA Americas APAC Support costs(4) Total
£m £m £m £m £m
Revenue(1,2) 162.4 114.7 47.5 - 324.6
Gross margin 106.7 67.6 33.4 - 207.7
Staff and operating costs (67.1) (61.9) (26.0) (28.3) (183.3)
Depreciation, amortisation, impairment and other gains (17.2) (13.4) (5.1) (2.2) (37.9)
Currency losses - - - (1.6) (1.6)
EBIT(3) 22.4 (7.7) 2.3 (32.1) (15.1)
Exceptional costs(3) 0.7 1.1 0.4 7.0 9.2
Impairment of non-financial assets(6) - 1.3 - - 1.3
Currency losses - - - 1.6 1.6
Adjusted EBIT(3) 23.1 (5.3) 2.7 (23.5) (3.0)
Net finance expense (13.6)
Exceptional costs(3) (9.2)
Impairment of non-financial assets(6) (1.3)
Currency losses (1.6)
Loss before tax (28.7)
Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
EMEA Americas APAC Support costs(4) Total
£m £m £m £m £m
Revenue(1,2) 384.2 288.5 114.9 - 787.6
Gross margin 261.1 169.5 81.1 - 511.7
Staff and operating costs (150.1) (134.4) (55.8) (54.4) (394.7)
Depreciation, amortisation, impairment and other losses (36.6) (25.7) (10.3) (4.3) (76.9)
Currency losses - - - (3.1) (3.1)
EBIT(3) 74.4 9.4 15.0 (61.8) 37.0
Exceptional costs(3) 0.8 2.1 0.9 12.5 16.3
Impairment of non-financial assets 2.1 2.1 0.1 - 4.3
Currency losses - - - 3.1 3.1
Adjusted EBIT(3) 77.3 13.6 16.0 (46.2) 60.7
Net finance expense (28.2)
Exceptional costs(3) (16.3)
Impairment of non-financial assets (4.3)
Currency losses (3.1)
Profit before tax 8.8
1. Revenue by geographical market represents revenue from external customers;
there is no inter-segment revenue.
2. Included in EMEA revenue is £53.3m (Sep 24: £56.3m, Mar 25: £142.1m) in
relation to trading in the UK.
3. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
4. All currency gains/losses are included in support costs. Currency
gains/losses are a product of how trading is managed by legal entity globally.
Inclusion in support costs allows performance for each region to be evaluated
exclusive of the currency impact of global operations. EMEA trading entities
incurred a £1.6m currency gain (Sep 24: £6.5m loss, Mar 25: £5.1m loss).
Americas trading entities incurred a £0.5m currency gain (Sep 24: £0.9m
gain, Mar 25: £0.5m gain). APAC trading entities incurred a £0.2m currency
gain (Sep 24: £0.5m gain, Mar 25: £0.5m loss).
5. Segmental presentation has been changed in response to the July 2024 IFRIC
decision on segmental reporting. Comparative periods have been re-presented.
6. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
3. Segmental analysis (continued)
Additional analysis
The Group derives its revenue
in geographical markets from the following sources:
Unaudited 26 Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March
2025
weeks ended 28 September 2025 £m
£m
£m
Revenue by channel
Ecommerce 81.3 87.7 268.3
Retail 98.2 95.3 242.4
Total DTC revenue(1) 179.5 183.0 510.7
Wholesale(2) 142.5 141.6 276.9
Total revenue 322.0 324.6 787.6
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m £m £m
Non-current assets(3)
EMEA(4) 129.0 147.4 135.8
Americas 71.8 77.8 77.3
APAC 14.1 15.4 14.0
Goodwill 240.7 240.7 240.7
Deferred tax 13.0 15.1 11.1
Total non-current assets 468.6 496.4 478.9
1. DTC revenue consists of revenue from the Group's direct-to-consumer (DTC)
channel which is ecommerce plus retail revenue, as defined in the Glossary on
pages 29 to 31.
2. Wholesale revenue including distributor customers.
3. Assets are monitored by the CODM on an entity basis, not by reporting
segment. Therefore, non-current assets are grouped into the above regions
based on legal entity country of registration, with goodwill and deferred tax
being representative of the Group.
4. Included in EMEA non-current assets is £73.0m (Sep 24: £82.3m, Mar 25:
£75.3m) in relation to UK legal entities.
4. Adjusting items
Total adjustments to loss after tax for the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
are a net credit of £1.0m (Sep 24: £9.0m, Mar 25: £18.9m). Adjustments
include exceptional costs(1) and other adjusting items. EBIT(1) includes
exceptional costs of £1.4m (Sep 24: £9.2m, Mar 25: £16.3m) and loss before
tax includes £1.4m (Sep 24: £9.2m, Mar 25: £17.9m) of exceptional costs.
Adjusted results are presented to provide a clearer view of the Group's
ongoing operational performance, reflecting how the business is managed and
measured on a day-to-day basis, and to aid comparability between periods.
The adjustments made to reported EBIT and (loss)/profit before tax are:
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
£m Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m £m
Included in selling and administrative expenses
Exceptional costs(1)
Director joining costs 0.7 3.1 4.6
Cost savings related costs 0.7 6.1 11.7
Total exceptional costs (1) included in selling and administrative expenses 1.4 9.2 16.3
Other adjusting items
Impairment of non-financial assets(2) 1.5 1.3 4.3
Currency (gains)/losses (1.3) 1.6 3.1
Total other adjusting items included in selling and administrative expenses 0.2 2.9 7.4
Adjustments to EBIT(1) 1.6 12.1 23.7
Included in finance expense:
Exceptional costs(1)
Accelerated amortisation of fees on debt refinancing - - 1.6
Total exceptional costs(1) included in finance expense - - 1.6
Adjustments to (loss)/profit before tax 1.6 12.1 25.3
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
4. Adjusting items (continued)
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
£m Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m £m
Tax impact of adjustments:
Exceptional costs(1,2)
Director joining costs - (0.8) (0.6)
Cost savings related costs (0.2) (1.5) (2.9)
Accelerated amortisation of fees on debt refinancing - - (0.4)
Total tax impact of exceptional costs(1) (0.2) (2.3) (3.9)
Other adjusting items
Impairment of non-financial assets(3,4) (0.5) (0.4) (1.0)
Currency gains/(losses)(5) 0.1 (0.4) (1.5)
Total tax impact of other adjusting items (0.4) (0.8) (2.5)
Adjustments to (loss)/profit after tax 1.0 9.0 18.9
1. Alternative Performance Measure (APM) as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. The tax impact of exceptional costs has been calculated by applying the
statutory rate for the entities where these costs have been incurred.
3. The tax impact of impairment of non-financial assets has been calculated by
applying the effective tax rate or statutory tax rate for the relevant
jurisdiction depending on local treatment.
4. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
5. The tax impact of currency gains/losses has been calculated by applying the
Group's effective tax rate.
Exceptional costs(1)
Director joining costs
The CEO and CFO were appointed in the previous period, the 52 weeks ended 30
March 2025. The Group recognised the costs associated with their appointment
as exceptional costs due to their quantum, and nature as sign-on packages
related to their specific appointment, rather than being a standard practice
for the Group. These costs relate only to discretionary compensation for the
Directors relating to the share scheme value they lost because of leaving
previous employment, outside of the Group's LTIP scheme.
During the current period, the Group recognised further costs associated with
the appointment of the Directors of £0.7m (Sep 24: £3.1m, Mar 25: £4.6m).
£0.6m (Sep 24: £1.0m, Mar 25: £1.9m) of the cost incurred relates to the
continued amortisation of the share schemes awarded in the prior period, which
is non-cash. The remaining £0.1m (Sep 24: £0.1m, Mar 25: £0.3m) of expense
relates to payroll taxes accrued on the share-based payment expense which will
be paid in cash when the schemes vest. A further £1.0m of share-based payment
expense is expected to be incurred before the date of vesting assuming all
schemes fully vest.
During the previous periods,
costs in relation to cash-settled compensation for a portion of their share
schemes values lost and associated payroll taxes (Sep 24: £1.6m, Mar 25:
£1.6m) were incurred. Other professional fees relating to the recruitment of
the Directors (Sep 24: £0.4m, Mar 25: £0.4m) and costs of the CEO handover
period (Sep 24: £nil, Mar 25 £0.4m) were also incurred. There are £nil
costs in relation to these amounts during the period ended 28 September 2025.
Cost savings related costs
In FY25, the Group announced it would be undertaking a cost action plan, to
create savings from operational efficiency and design, better procurement and
operational streamlining. In February 2025, the Group commenced a project to
change and improve the Global Technology organisation and capability through
the establishment of the Global Technology Centre in India. Costs incurred in
relation to the establishment of the Global Technology Centre were £0.7m (Sep
24: £nil, Mar 25: £2.8m) during the period, corresponding to a cash outflow
of £0.4m. In the previous periods, cost savings related costs, excluding
those related to the establishment of the Global Technology Centre, were made
up of severance payments (Sep 24: £5.4m, Mar 25: £7.1m) and other cost
savings related costs (Sep 24: £0.7m, Mar 25: £1.8m).
Accelerated fees on debt refinancing
In November 2024, following the refinancing and replacement of its €337.5m
EUR Term Loan the Group incurred costs relating to the immediate acceleration
of unamortised prepaid transaction costs related to the previous debt
extinguishment. These were classified as exceptional costs during the 52 weeks
ended 30 March 2025 due to their non-recurring nature. This approach ensures
that the financial statements present a clearer view of the Group's ongoing
operational performance by excluding these one-time adjustments related to
refinancing. During the current period, £nil (Sep 24: £nil, Mar 25: £1.6m)
costs were recognised in relation to debt refinancing fees.
Other adjusting items
Impairment of non-financial assets
The Group has carried out an assessment for indicators of impairment of
non-financial assets, including the store portfolio. Where an impairment
indicator has been identified, the Group has performed impairment testing
based on the latest Board approved budget and five-year plan future cash flow
projections.
As a result, store impairment testing has identified stores where the current
and anticipated future performance does not support the carrying value of the
stores. A non-cash charge of £1.5m (Sep 24: £1.3m, Mar 25: £4.3m) has been
recorded, of which £0.3m (Sep 24: £0.5m, Mar 25: £1.1m ) relates to
property, plant and equipment, and £1.2m (Sep 24: £0.8m, Mar 25: £3.2m)
relates to right-of-use assets.
Impairment charges have been classified as adjusting items due to their nature
as volatile non-cash accounting charges which do not represent controllable
core operational costs. They are presented separately to provide clarity on
the Group's underlying operational performance excluding these non-cash,
non-underlying charges and to aid comparability between periods.
Currency gains and losses
Currency gains and losses have been classified as adjusting items due to the
volatility in magnitude and directionality over financial periods. By
eliminating the effect of these gains/losses, comparability between periods is
improved and there is greater clarity on the Group's underlying operational
performance.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
5. Finance expense
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
£m Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2024
£m £m
Bank debt and other charges 10.2 11.0 22.1
Interest on lease liabilities 3.2 3.6 6.9
Discount unwind of dilapidation provision 0.1 0.1 0.2
Amortisation of bank loan issue costs 0.7 0.6 1.2
Accelerated amortisation of fees on debt refinancing(1) - - 1.6
Total financing expense 14.2 15.3 32.0
1. Classified as an exceptional cost - see note 4 for detail.
6. Income tax
The Group calculates the tax credit/(expense) for the period using the tax
rate that would be applicable to the expected total annual earnings. The
estimated average annual tax rate used for the 26 weeks to 28 September 2025
is a 9.1% tax credit, compared to a 27.5% tax credit for the 26 weeks ended 29
September 2024 and a 48.9% tax charge for the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025.
The effective tax rate for the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 is lower than
the UK corporation tax rate of 25.0%, due mainly to overseas tax rates on
profit making entities netting down the UK Group tax loss credit and prior
period tax adjustments reducing the tax credit further. The effective tax rate
for the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025 was impacted by a lower profit before tax
in the period which meant that tax adjustments disproportionately impacted the
effective tax rate as they were a higher percentage of profit before tax.
Factors that may affect future tax charges
On 20 June 2023, Finance (No.2) Act 2023 was substantively enacted in the UK,
introducing a global minimum effective tax rate of 15% for large groups for
financial years beginning on or after 31 December 2023.
All territories in which the Group operates are expected to qualify for one of
the safe harbour exemptions such that top-up taxes should not apply. To the
extent that this is not the case there is the potential for Pillar Two taxes
to apply, but these are not expected to be material.
7. Dividends
Unaudited 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
£m Unaudited 26 weeks ended 29 September 2024 Audited 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
£m £m
Dividends paid during the period:
Prior period final dividend paid -(1) - 9.5
Prior period interim dividend paid 8.2(2) - -
Total dividends paid during the period 8.2 - 9.5
Dividend in respect of the period:
Interim dividend: 0.85p (Sep 24: 0.85p, Mar 25: 0.85p) 8.2 8.2 8.2
Final dividend: nil (Sep 24: nil, Mar 25: 1.70p) - - 16.4
Total dividend in respect of the period 8.2 8.2 24.6
1. The final dividend in relation to the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025 of
£16.4m was paid on 8 October 2025, which was after the period end.
2. The interim dividend in relation to the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025 of
£8.2m was paid on 8 April 2025.
The Board has approved and the Company has declared an interim dividend of
0.85 pence per share (Sep 24: 0.85 pence).
8. Property, plant and equipment
Movements in property, plant and equipment since 30 March 2025 predominantly
relate to additions of £3.6m, depreciation charged of £6.6m and impairment
charged of £0.3m.
Unaudited 28 September 2025 £m Unaudited 29 September 2024 £m
Audited 30 March 2025 £m
Net book value:
Freehold property and improvements 6.5 6.7 6.7
Leasehold improvements 28.0 33.5 30.7
Plant, machinery, fixtures and fittings 10.1 10.7 10.7
Office and computer equipment 1.2 2.0 1.5
45.8 52.9 49.6
Movements in right-of-use assets since 30 March 2025 predominantly relate to
additions of £9.1m, remeasurements of £9.5m, impairment of £1.2m and
depreciation charged of £24.8m. Additions include £0.6m of direct costs and
£0.1m in relation to costs of removal and restoring.
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
9. Borrowings
Unaudited 28 September 2025 Unaudited 29 September 2024 Audited
£m £m 30 March 2025
£m
Current
Bank interest 2.2 8.0 2.4
Lease liabilities 47.4 43.8 45.9
Total current 49.6 51.8 48.3
Non-current
Bank loans (net of unamortised bank fees) 246.9 279.8 246.3
Lease liabilities 100.6 118.1 109.5
Total non-current 347.5 397.9 355.8
Total borrowings(1) 397.1 449.7 404.1
Analysis of bank loan:
Non-current bank loans (net of unamortised bank fees) 246.9 279.8 246.3
Add back unamortised fees 3.1 1.9 3.7
Total gross bank loan(1) 250.0 281.7 250.0
1. From total borrowings, only the gross bank loan (which exclude unamortised
bank fees) and lease liabilities are included in net debt for bank loan
covenant calculation purposes.
In November 2024, the Group agreed with existing and new lenders to refinance
its debt facilities, previously comprising a €337.5m Term Loan and revolving
credit facility (RCF) of £200.0m. The refinanced facility consists of a
£250.0m Term Loan and RCF of £126.5m for an initial term of three years,
with two one-year extension options, subject to lender approval.
A proportion of the RCF commitment is earmarked for ancillary commitments of
which £3.9m (Sep 24: £3.4m Mar 25: £3.7m) has been utilised primarily for
landlord bank guarantees.
10. Financial instruments
All financial instruments are measured at amortised cost with the exception of
derivatives, cash amounts held within Money Market Funds, and investments in
equity instruments which are measured at fair value. IFRS 13 requires the
classification of financial instruments measured at fair value to be
determined by reference to the source of inputs used to derive fair value. The
fair values of all financial instruments, except for leases, in all periods
are materially equal to their carrying values. Derivatives and Money Market
Funds are classified as Level 2 under the fair value hierarchy, and
investments in equity instruments as Level 3, which is consistent with that
defined in note 2.15 of the Consolidated Financial Statements for the 52 weeks
ended 30 March 2025.
Unaudited 28 September 2025
Assets at amortised cost Fair value through other comprehensive income Fair value through profit or loss Total
£m £m £m £m
Assets as per Balance Sheet
Investments - 1.0 - 1.0
Trade and other receivables excluding prepayments and accrued - - 85.8
income
85.8
Derivative financial assets - Current - - - -
Derivative financial assets - Non-current - - - -
Cash and cash equivalents 62.9(1) - 32.8(2) 95.7
148.7 1.0 32.8 182.5
1. £31.2m sits in term deposits with terms of less than 90 days.
2. A proportion of cash is invested in high-quality overnight money market
funds to mitigate concentration and counterparty risk.
Liabilities at amortised cost Fair value through other comprehensive income Fair value through profit or loss Total
£m £m £m £m
Liabilities as per Balance Sheet
Bank debt (excluding unamortised bank fees) 250.0 - - 250.0
Bank interest - Current 2.2 - - 2.2
Lease liabilities - Current 47.4 - - 47.4
Lease liabilities - Non-current 100.6 - - 100.6
Derivative financial instruments - Current - 1.6 - 1.6
Derivative financial instruments - Non-current - 0.2 - 0.2
Trade and other payables excluding non-financial liabilities (mainly tax and 114.9 - - 114.9
social security costs)
515.1 1.8 - 516.9
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
10. Financial instruments (continued)
Unaudited 29 September 2024
Assets at amortised cost Fair value through other comprehensive income Fair value through profit or loss Total
£m £m £m £m
Assets as per Balance Sheet
Investments - 1.0 - 1.0
Trade and other receivables excluding prepayments and accrued income 78.3 - - 78.3
Derivative financial assets - Current - 2.5 - 2.5
Derivative financial assets - Non-current - 0.2 - 0.2
Cash and cash equivalents 41.8(1) - 53.1(2) 94.9
120.1 3.7 53.1 176.9
1. £Nil sits in term deposits with terms of less than 90 days.
2. A proportion of cash is invested in high-quality overnight money market
funds to mitigate concentration and counterparty risk.
Liabilities at amortised cost Fair value through other comprehensive income Fair value through profit or loss Total
£m £m £m £m
Liabilities as per Balance Sheet
Bank debt (excluding unamortised bank fees) 281.7 - - 281.7
Bank interest - Current 8.0 - - 8.0
Lease liabilities - Current 43.8 - - 43.8
Lease liabilities - Non-current 118.1 - - 118.1
Derivative financial instruments - Current - 4.0 - 4.0
Trade and other payables excluding non-financial liabilities (mainly tax and 117.0 - - 117.0
social security costs)
568.6 4.0 - 572.6
Audited 30 March 2025
Assets at amortised cost Fair value through other comprehensive income Fair value through profit or loss Total
£m £m £m £m
Assets as per Balance Sheet
Investments - 1.0 - 1.0
Trade and other receivables excluding prepayments and accrued income 56.8 - - 56.8
Derivative financial assets - Current - 1.0 - 1.0
Derivative financial assets - Non-current - - - -
Cash and cash equivalents 97.2(1) - 58.7(2) 155.9
154.0 2.0 58.7 214.7
1. £58.5m sits in term deposits with terms of less than 90 days.
2. A proportion of cash is invested in high-quality overnight money market
funds to mitigate concentration and counterparty risk.
Liabilities at amortised cost Fair value through other comprehensive income Fair value through profit or loss Total
£m £m £m £m
Liabilities as per Balance Sheet
Bank debt (excluding unamortised bank fees) 250.0 - - 250.0
Bank interest - Current 2.4 - - 2.4
Lease liabilities - Current 45.9 - - 45.9
Lease liabilities - Non-current 109.5 - - 109.5
Derivative financial instruments - Current - 0.1 - 0.1
Trade and other payables excluding non-financial liabilities (mainly tax and - - 95.9
social security costs)
95.9
503.7 0.1 - 503.8
Notes to the Condensed Consolidated Financial Statements (continued)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
11. Pensions
The Group does not recognise the defined benefit plan surplus on the grounds
that Airwair International Limited is unlikely to derive any future economic
benefits from the surplus. As such, an asset ceiling has been applied to the
Balance Sheet, and the net surplus of £8.2m (Sep 24: £9.3m, Mar 25: £8.7m)
has not been recognised on the Balance Sheet. The net surplus has been
restricted to £nil (Sep 24: £nil, Mar 25: £nil).
The Group's Annual Report and Accounts for the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025
disclosed the appeal to the judgement in the High Court case of Virgin Media
vs NTL Trustees which was handed down on 16 June 2023 and dismissed on 25 July
2024. The judge ruled that where benefit changes were made without a valid
'section 37' certificate from the Scheme Actuary, those changes could be
considered void. This judgement could have material consequences for some
defined benefit schemes. In response, the Government has introduced draft
legislation into the Pension Schemes Bill which, if passed in its current
form, will allow affected schemes to obtain retrospective actuarial
confirmation that historical benefit changes in scope of section 37 were valid
(subject to various provisions).
The Group has considered the extent to which it should investigate the
implications of the Virgin Media ruling on its IAS 19 disclosures as at 28
September 2025 in relation to the Dr Martens Airwair Group Pension Plan. The
Plan was contracted-out of the State Pension during the relevant period and
therefore is in scope of the ruling. The Group is not aware of any evidence
that there are any amendments that were made during the relevant period that
did not receive the appropriate actuarial confirmation.
In light of the above and the draft legislation, disclosures have been
prepared assuming that the ruling will not affect the Plan's benefits.
12. Ordinary share
capital
Audited 30
Unaudited 28 Unaudited 29 March
September
2025
September
2024
2025
No. £m No. £m No. £m
Authorised, called up and fully paid
Ordinary shares of £0.01 each 966,407,209 9.7 962,197,384 9.6 964,537,323 9.6
The movements in ordinary share capital during the relevant periods were as
follows:
Unaudited 28 September 2025
No. £m
As at 31 March 2025 964,537,323 9.6
Shares issued 1,869,886 0.1
As at 29 September 2025 966,407,209 9.7
Unaudited 29 September 2024
No. £m
As at 1 April 2024 961,878,608 9.6
Shares issued 318,776 -
As at 29 September 2024 962,197,384 9.6
Audited 30 March 2025
No. £m
As at 1 April 2024 961,878,608 9.6
Shares issued 2,658,715 -
As at 30 March 2025 964,537,323 9.6
13. Related party transactions
The Group's related party transactions are with key management personnel and
other related parties as disclosed in the Group's Annual Report and Accounts
for the 52 weeks ended 30 March 2025. There have been no material changes to
the Group's related party transactions during the 26 weeks to 28 September
2025.
First half/second half analysis (Unaudited)
For the 26 weeks ended 28 September 2025
H1 H2 FY
Unaudited Unaudited Unaudited Audited
FY26 FY25 Variance FY25 FY25
£m £m % £m £m
Revenue by channel:
Ecommerce 81.3 87.7 -7.3% 180.6 268.3
Retail 98.2 95.3 3.0% 147.1 242.4
DTC 179.5 183.0 -1.9% 327.7 510.7
Wholesale(5) 142.5 141.6 0.6% 135.3 276.9
322.0 324.6 -0.8% 463.0 787.6
Gross margin 210.3 207.7 1.3% 304.0 511.7
EBIT(1) 1.5 (15.1) na 52.1 37.0
Adjusted EBIT(1) 3.1 (3.0) na 63.7 60.7
(Loss)/profit before tax(2) (11.0) (28.7) 61.7% 37.5 8.8
Adjusted (loss)/profit before tax(1,3) (9.4) (16.6) 43.4% 50.7 34.1
Tax credit/(expense) 1.0 7.9 -87.3% (12.2) (4.3)
(Loss)/profit after tax for period (10.0) (20.8) 51.9% 25.3 4.5
(Loss)/earnings per share
Basic (1.0p) (2.2p) 54.5% 2.7p 0.5p
Diluted (1.0p) (2.2p) 54.5% 2.7p 0.5p
Adjusted (loss)/earnings per share(1,3)
Basic (0.9p) (1.2p) 25.0% 3.6p 2.4p
Diluted (0.9p) (1.2p) 25.0% 3.6p 2.4p
Key metrics:
Pairs sold (m) 4.7 4.6 1.4% 5.9 10.5
No. of stores(4) 244 238 2.5% 239 239
DTC mix % 55.7% 56.4% -0.7pts 70.8% 64.8%
Gross margin %(1) 65.3% 64.0% 1.3pts 65.7% 65.0%
EBIT %(1) 0.5% -4.7% 5.2pts 11.3% 4.7%
Revenue by region:
EMEA 158.6 162.4 -2.3% 221.8 384.2
Americas 116.8 114.7 1.8% 173.8 288.5
APAC 46.6 47.5 -1.9% 67.4 114.9
322.0 324.6 -0.8% 463.0 787.6
Revenue mix:
EMEA % 49.2% 50.0% -0.8pts 47.9% 48.8%
Americas % 36.3% 35.3% 1.0pts 37.5% 36.6%
APAC % 14.5% 14.7% -0.2pts 14.6% 14.6%
EBIT(1) by region:
EMEA 26.8 22.4 19.6% 52.0 74.4
Americas (1.2) (7.7) 84.4% 17.1 9.4
APAC 4.3 2.3 87.0% 12.7 15.0
Support costs (28.4) (32.1) 11.5% (29.7) (61.8)
1.5 (15.1) na 52.1 37.0
EBIT %(1):
EMEA 16.9% 13.8% 3.1pts 23.4% 19.4%
Americas -1.0% -6.7% 5.7pts 9.8% 3.3%
APAC 9.2% 4.8% 4.4pts 18.8% 13.1%
Total(6) 0.5% -4.7% 5.2pts 11.3% 4.7%
1. Alternative Performance Measure 'APM' as defined in the Glossary on pages
29 to 31.
2. Post-adjusting items.
3. In FY25 the definition of adjusting items was changed to include impairment
of non-financial assets. Comparative information has been re-presented.
4. Own stores on streets and malls operated under arm's length leasehold
arrangements.
5. Wholesale revenue including distributor customers.
6. Total EBIT margins are inclusive of support costs.
Glossary and Alternative Performance Measures (APMs)
The Group tracks a number of key performance indicators (KPIs) including
Alternative Performance Measures (APMs) in managing its business, which are
not defined or specified under the requirements of IFRS because they exclude
amounts that are included in, or include amounts that are excluded from, the
most directly comparable measures calculated and presented in accordance with
IFRS or are calculated using financial measures that are not calculated in
accordance with IFRS.
The Group believes that these APMs, which are not considered to be a
substitute for or superior to IFRS measures, provide stakeholders with
additional helpful information on the performance of the business. These APMs
are consistent with how the business performance is planned and reported
within the internal management reporting to the Board.
These APMs should be viewed as supplemental to, but not as a substitute for,
measures presented in the Consolidated Financial Statements relating to the
Group, which are prepared in accordance with IFRS. The Group believes that
these APMs are useful indicators of its performance. However, they may not be
comparable with similarly titled measures reported by other companies due to
differences in the way they are calculated.
The Audit and Risk Committee has reviewed the overall presentation of APMs to
ensure they have not been given undue prominence, and that reconciliations are
sufficiently clear. Further to this it has evaluated all revisions to APMs and
types and classifications of exceptional costs.
Metric Definition Rationale APM KPI
Revenue Revenue per Financial Statements. Helps evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational No Yes
performance and efficiencies.
Revenue by geographical market Revenue per the Group's geographical segments. Helps evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational No Yes
performance and efficiencies.
Revenue: EMEA
Revenue: Americas
Revenue: APAC
Revenue by channel Helps evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational No Yes
performance and efficiencies.
Revenue: ecommerce Revenue from the Group's ecommerce platforms.
Revenue: retail Revenue from the Group's own stores (including concessions).
Revenue: DTC Revenue from the Group's direct-to-consumer (DTC) channel (= ecommerce plus
retail revenue).
Revenue: wholesale Revenue from the Group's business-to-business channel, revenue to wholesale
customers, distributors and franchisees.
Constant currency basis Constant currency applies the prior period exchange rates to current period Presenting results of the Group excluding foreign exchange volatility. No No
results to remove the impact of FX.
Gross margin Revenue less cost of sales (mainly raw materials and consumables). Helps evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational No No
performance and efficiencies.
Revenue and cost of sales are disclosed in the Consolidated Statement of
Profit or Loss.
Gross margin % Gross margin divided by revenue. Helps evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational Yes No
performance and efficiencies.
Exceptional costs Costs or incomes considered significant in nature and/or quantum, and/or Excluding these items from profit metrics provides readers with helpful Yes No
relate to activities which are outside the ordinary course of business, and information on the underlying performance of the business because it aids
are not reflective of consistency across periods and is consistent with how the business performance
is planned by, and reported to, the Board.
operational performance, including items such as:
- Director joining costs
- Cost savings related costs
- Accelerated amortisation of fees on debt refinancing (relates to prior
period only).
Opex Selling and administrative expenses less depreciation, amortisation, Opex is used to reconcile between gross margin and EBIT. Yes No
impairment, other gains/losses, exceptional costs and currency gains/losses.
EBITDA Profit/loss for the period before income tax expense, finance expense, EBITDA was used as a key profit measure because it shows the results of Yes No
currency gains/losses, depreciation of right-of-use assets, depreciation, normal, core operations exclusive of income or charges that are not considered
amortisation and impairment. to represent the underlying operational performance. EBIT is now considered a
more relevant measure, but EBITDA continues to be reported for bank covenant
purposes.
Glossary and Alternative Performance Measures (APMs) (continued)
Metric Definition Rationale APM KPI
EBITDA % EBITDA divided by revenue. EBITDA % was used to evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess Yes No
operational performance and efficiencies.
EBIT Profit/loss for the period before net finance expense and income tax expense. EBIT is used as a key profit measure because it shows the results of normal, Yes Yes
core operations exclusive of only income or charges that relate to capital and
tax burdens.
EBIT % EBIT divided by revenue. Used to evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational Yes Yes
performance and efficiencies.
Adjusted EBIT EBIT before exceptional costs, impairment of non-financial assets and currency Used as a key profit measure because it shows the results of normal, core Yes Yes
gains/losses. operations exclusive of income or charges that relate to capital and tax
burdens, exceptional costs, impairment of non-financial assets and currency
gains/losses. This improves comparability between periods by eliminating the
effect of non-recurring costs and large currency gains/losses.
Adjusted EBIT margin Adjusted EBIT divided by revenue. Used to evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational Yes Yes
performance and efficiencies.
Operating cash flow EBITDA less change in net working capital, share-based payment expense and Operating cash flow is used as a trading cash generation measure because it Yes Yes
capital expenditure. shows the results of normal, core operations exclusive of income or charges
that are not considered to represent the underlying operational performance.
Operating cash flow Operating cash flow divided by EBITDA. Used to evaluate the efficiency of a company's Yes Yes
conversion operations and its ability to employ its earnings
toward repayment of debt, capital expenditure and
working capital requirements.
Adjusted operating cash flow conversion Operating cash flow divided by EBITDA excluding the impact of exceptional Used to evaluate the efficiency of a company's operations and its ability to Yes Yes
costs on EBITDA and working capital. employ its earnings toward repayment of debt, capital expenditure and working
capital requirements, exclusive of the impact of exceptional costs.
Net debt Net debt is calculated by subtracting cash and cash equivalents from bank Used to aid the understanding of the reader of the financial statements in Yes No
loans (excluding unamortised bank fees) and lease liabilities. respect of liabilities owed.
Adjusted profit before tax Profit/loss before tax and before exceptional costs, impairment of Helps evaluate growth trends, establish budgets and assess operational Yes No
non-financial assets and currency gains/losses. performance and efficiencies on an underlying basis exclusive of exceptional
costs, impairment of non-financial assets and currency gains/losses.
Adjusted profit after tax Profit/loss after tax and before exceptional costs, impairment of Adjusted profit after tax is the denominator for the calculation of adjusted Yes No
non-financial assets and currency gains/losses. basic and diluted earnings per share.
Earnings per share IFRS measure. This indicates how much money a company makes for each share of its stock, No Yes
and is a widely used metric to estimate company value.
A higher EPS indicates greater value because investors will pay more for a
company's shares if they think the company has higher profits relative to
its share price.
Basic earnings per share The calculation of earnings per ordinary share is based on earnings after tax
No Yes
and the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during the period.
Used to gauge the quality of EPS if all convertible securities were
exercised.
Calculated by dividing the profit attributable to ordinary equity holders of
the parent by the weighted average number of ordinary shares in issue during
the period plus the weighted average number of ordinary shares that would have
Diluted earnings per share been issued on the conversion of all dilutive potential ordinary shares into
ordinary shares.
No No
Glossary and Alternative Performance Measures (APMs) (continued)
Metric Definition Rationale APM KPI
Adjusted basic earnings per share The calculation of adjusted earnings per ordinary share is based on Helps evaluate basic earnings per share exclusive of exceptional costs, Yes No
profit/loss after tax excluding exceptional costs, impairment of non-financial impairment of non-financial assets and currency gains/losses that are not
assets and currency gains/losses and the weighted average number of ordinary considered to represent the underlying operational performance.
shares in issue during the period.
Calculated by dividing the profit/loss after tax attributable to ordinary
equity holders of the parent excluding exceptional costs, impairment of Helps evaluate diluted earnings per share exclusive of exceptional costs,
non-financial assets and currency gains/losses by the weighted average number impairment of non-financial assets and currency gains/losses that are not
of ordinary shares in issue during the period plus the weighted average number considered to represent the underlying operational performance.
of ordinary shares that would have been issued on the conversion of all
Adjusted diluted earnings per share dilutive potential ordinary shares into ordinary shares.
Yes No
Ecommerce mix % Ecommerce revenue as a percentage of total revenue. Helps evaluate progress towards strategic objectives. No Yes
DTC mix % DTC revenue as a percentage of total revenue. Helps evaluate progress towards strategic objectives. No Yes
No. of stores Number of 'own' directly operated stores open in the Group. Helps evaluate progress towards strategic objectives. No Yes
Pairs Pairs of footwear sold during a period. Used to show volumes and growths in the Group. No Yes
Company Information
Shareholders' enquiries
Any shareholder with enquiries relating to their shareholding should, in the
first instance, contact our registrar, Equiniti, using the telephone number or
address on this page.
Electronic shareholder communications
Shareholders can elect to receive communications by email each time the
Company distributes documents, instead of receiving paper copies. This can be
done by registering via Shareview at no extra cost, at www.shareview.co.uk. In
the event that you change your mind or require a paper version of any document
in the future, please contact the registrar.
Access to Shareview allows shareholders to view details about their holdings,
submit a proxy vote for shareholder meetings and notify a change of address.
In addition to this, shareholders have the opportunity to complete dividend
mandates online which facilitates the payment of dividends directly into a
nominated account.
Registered office
28 Jamestown Road
Camden
London
NW1 7BY
Investor relations
investor.relations@drmartens.com
Registrar
Equiniti Limited
Aspect House
Spencer Road
Lancing
West Sussex
BN99 6DA
Tel: 0371 384 2030 (from the UK)
Tel: +44 121 4157047 (from overseas)
Independent Auditor
PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP
1 Embankment Place
London
WC2N 6RH
Tel: +44 (0) 20 7583 5000
Statement of Directors' responsibilities
The Directors confirm that these condensed interim Financial Statements have
been prepared in accordance with UK adopted International Accounting Standard
34, 'Interim Financial Reporting' and the Disclosure Guidance and Transparency
Rules sourcebook of the United Kingdom's Financial Conduct Authority and that
the interim management report includes a fair review of the information
required by DTR 4.2.7 and DTR 4.2.8, namely:
· an indication of important events that have occurred during the
26 weeks ended 28 September 2025 and their impact on the condensed set of
financial statements, and a description of the principal risks and
uncertainties for remainder of the financial year; and
· material related-party transactions in the 26 weeks ended 28
September 2025 and any material changes in the related-party transactions
described in the last annual report.
The Directors of Dr. Martens plc are listed in the Dr. Martens plc annual
report for 30 March 2025. A list of current Directors is maintained on the Dr.
Martens plc website: www.drmartensplc.com (http://www.drmartensplc.com) .
By order of the board
Giles Wilson, CFO
19 November 2025
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