“…We mainly focus on personal luxury (luxury for oneself) and interpersonal luxury (luxury for others) that has been widely used in numerous papers to explain luxury consumers’ attitudes and behavior (Grace and Griffin, 2009; Wiedmann et al , 2009; Shukla and Purani, 2012; Dubois and Ordabayeva, 2016; Roux et al , 2017; Amatulli et al , 2019; Ko et al , 2019; Kauppinen-Räisänen et al , 2019) but not for attitudes toward luxury websites. Therefore, we suppose that the four profiles of luxury consumers defined and used in recent research through the semiotic square – based on the semantic oppositions luxury for oneself/luxury for others (Veg-Sala, 2019) – can allow us to better understand how and why differences in luxury consumption motivations affect luxury consumer expectations toward luxury brand websites. We implement a qualitative study based on 42 semi-directive interviews.…”