Top Fourth of July Fashion Deals 2026: 80% Off Gap, Lululemon, Aritzia
Aritzia is running what they call a Summer Sale at "up to 50 percent off everything." Lululemon's Summer Sale is reportedly "more enticing than its famous 'We Made Too Much' section." Gap is at half-off on shorts, T-shirts, and swimwear.

What the confirmed discounts actually look like
The WWD roundup lists these specific markdowns, brand by brand:
- Abercrombie & Fitch: up to 40 percent off select styles — denim, one-piece swimsuits, cover-ups, dresses.
- Anthropologie: an extra 50 percent off applied to already-reduced inventory; pieces reported starting at $4.95.
- Aritzia: up to 50 percent off everything for the duration of the Summer Sale.
- Gap: 50 percent off shorts, T-shirts, and swimwear, framed as a nation's-birthday promotion.
- Lululemon: no percentage figure in the source, but the piece names the off-price "We Made Too Much" section as the value lane.
- Old Navy: markdowns down to $2 on flip-flops.
ABC News corroborates the summer-sale status of Gap, Old Navy, Good American, and Levi's — flagging them as the red/white/blue apparel options. Home and mattress deals (Casper at 30 percent, Nolah and Bear at 35 percent) are part of the same holiday sales cycle but fall outside the fashion box.
The math most coverage skips
"America250" framing aside, what matters is original price versus sale price. Anthropologie's stacked discount is the most aggressive confirmed structure: you get 50 percent layered on already marked-down goods, which produces the lowest cost-per-piece in this batch. Aritzia at "up to 50 percent" is the wider discount spread but applies to full-price inventory, so items that "rarely see a price drop" are still on the table. Abercrombie at 40 percent off is the ceiling among the mid-tier brands listed. Gap at exactly 50 percent on a narrow category (shorts, tees, swimwear) is the smallest discount surface, even if the messaging makes it sound like a sweeping event.
The Old Navy $2 flip-flop line item is the only verified absolute floor. If you wear flip-flops, that is the closest thing to a no-brainer in the bunch — cost-per-pair is functionally irrelevant at that price point.
What to verify before you check out
A few checks before entering payment details:
- Confirm the percentage is applied to MSRP, not to a previous promo price. Anthropologie's stack is the only one explicitly described this way in the source.
- On Lululemon, the "We Made Too Much" section is reported as the value tier — verify item condition (final-sale policy, return window) before assuming parity with full-price returns.
- Watch for minimum spend thresholds and code-specific restrictions. Neither source provides a unified code list.
- Pricing on these landing pages is dynamic. ABC News explicitly notes that "some prices are dynamic and may change from the date of publication" — the discount you see today may not be the discount you see at checkout tomorrow.
Nothing here replaces a subscription box, and none of these brands ship curated monthly. But if a wardrobe restock is the use case and you have a cart already half-built, the Anthropologie stack and the Old Navy $2 line are the two data points worth acting on before the holiday window closes.