Global Department Stores Market Trends and Insights
Accelerated Repeat Purchases Through Omnichannel Integration
Department stores are connecting digital discovery with store-based services to streamline shopping journeys and drive repeat visits. Operators continue to prioritize buy online, pickup in store, and ship from store to reduce delivery times and increase conversion rates for high-intent baskets. Nordstrom enabled store fulfillment for Rack digital orders across more than 100 Rack locations in 2024, improving inventory turns while lowering last-mile expenses in dense trade areas. John Lewis expanded its delivery-from-store capabilities during FY2024/25 to maintain availability, reduce reliance on distribution centers, and enhance the in-store proposition through better service allocation. Macy’s broadened its “Reimagine 125” program to elevate merchandising and staffing at a defined store cohort, and these locations outperformed the fleet on comparable sales in late 2025. As online’s share of United States retail sales reached 16.4% in Q3 2025, integrated fulfillment and service continue to help the department stores market convert hybrid shoppers who expect speed, convenience, and consistent assortments across channels.Recovery of Destination Shopping Trips After the Pandemic
Premium department stores are repositioning flagships as service-centric destinations to reinforce in-person visits and strengthen brand engagement. Selfridges completed a major beauty hall refurbishment that delivered higher appointment volumes and stronger category sales following reopening, which validated investment in clienteling and hands-on services. Macy’s reported that elevated staffing and visual standards at “Reimagine 125” locations supported better traffic conversion and relative comp sales in 2025, which supports a focus on targeted upgrades over broad footprint growth. ICSC surveys in 2026 indicate that consumers continue to value in-store experiences in the post-pandemic period, which helps well-positioned centers maintain resilient performance relative to lower-tier venues. Department store operators are pairing service expansion with omnichannel features such as click-and-collect to improve trip productivity and support a balanced ticket mix. As a result, the department stores market benefits from a flight-to-quality pattern that concentrates traffic at top assets where experience, service, and brand curation are strongest.Competitive Pressure From E-Commerce Pure-Play Retailers
Pure-play e-commerce retailers continue to drive pricing transparency and higher convenience expectations, putting pressure on margins for large-format department stores. With online sales representing a growing share of total retail activity, department stores are responding through omnichannel strategies, including same-day pickup, curated fittings, and personalized in-store service. Off-price banners and marketplace models help maintain value perception while managing inventory and markdown risks. Investments in unified merchandising, digital tools, and supply chain enhancements allow operators to sustain conversion amid rising online competition. Premium categories such as beauty and luxury services remain resilient, as experiential offerings and personalized clienteling drive a higher willingness to pay than for commoditized goods.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Growing Middle-Class in APAC Driving Higher Discretionary Spending
- Off-Price Spin-Offs Attract Value-Oriented Consumers
- Declining Mall Foot Traffic in Mature Western Markets
Segment Analysis
Apparel & Accessories accounted for 40.22% of 2025 revenue, while Softline is projected as the fastest-growing category with a 7.86% CAGR during 2026-2031 in the department stores market. The department stores market has leaned on home textiles, décor, and furnishings to capture at-home lifestyle upgrades that remain relevant in 2026. TJX’s HomeGoods banner continues to add stores across the U.S., and fleet expansion is supported by opportunistic buying and high repeat intent among value-focused decorators. John Lewis reported outperformance in home-related categories alongside new brand partnerships, which signals durable demand for practical, design-forward products that are easy to maintain. Grocery-led banners in broader retail ecosystems reinforce multi-trip behaviors that benefit adjacent home lines, and food halls inside premium department stores can support visit frequency and incremental cross-category sales.The department stores market also adapts to changing fashion dynamics through more flexible merchandising and service-led selling. Selfridges invested in immersive brand activations and enhanced beauty services during 2024-2025, which supported higher appointments and healthy category sell-through after the renovation. Department stores are broadening their circular and resale offerings in accessories, watches, and handbags to serve value- and sustainability-minded shoppers, complementing full-price newness with lifecycle options. Operators are also deepening private label where relevant to manage margin pressure and retain design control, especially in basics and seasonal accents within the department stores industry. Compliance frameworks for packaging, product safety, and environmental reporting are now embedded in buying and sourcing, and these requirements influence costs, lead times, and on-shelf claims across soft goods.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Product Type
- Apparel & Accessories
- FMCG
- Hardline
- Softline
- By Store Format
- Full-line
- Off-price
- Discount
- Luxury
- Online Department Stores
- Small-format / Neighborhood
- By Ownership Model
- Publicly Listed
- Private
- Cooperative
- State-owned
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- South America
- Brazil
- Peru
- Chile
- Argentina
- Rest of South America
- Europe
- United Kingdom
- Germany
- France
- Spain
- Italy
- BENELUX
- NORDICS
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- India
- China
- Japan
- Australia
- South Korea
- South-East Asia
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- Middle East and Africa
- United Arab Emirates
- Saudi Arabia
- South Africa
- Nigeria
- Rest of Middle East and Africa
- North America
Geography Analysis
North America accounted for 42.31% of 2025 revenue, and its growth profile remains steady as operators close underperforming stores and invest in omnichannel assets that drive conversion and speed in the department stores market. Macy’s closed weaker locations and concentrated capex on a defined cohort of reimagined stores and a new automated fulfillment center that together back unified service promises across selling channels. Nordstrom expanded store fulfillment across Rack stores and reported stabilization in select subcategories as service, speed, and breadth converged. The online share of retail in the United States rose to 16.4% in Q3 2025, which keeps pressure on prices and logistics while reinforcing stores as the locus of experience in the department store market.Asia-Pacific is projected to grow at a 6.86% CAGR through 2031, supported by urbanization, higher discretionary budgets, and service innovation anchored by leading domestic groups in Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia. Isetan Mitsukoshi posted record operating profit for the nine months ended December 31, 2025, and expanded its app-based engagement to serve both domestic and inbound shoppers with culturally relevant content and support. Lotte Shopping is establishing an international headquarters in Singapore in 2026 and pursuing premium retail projects in Southeast Asia aligned with regional consumption growth. Central Retail reported new mall openings in Vietnam and planned renovations in Thailand for 2025, which strengthen anchor-tenant draw and footfall for department store banners in mixed-use projects. These efforts reflect integrated strategies that blend flagship experience with mobile-first engagement to grow the department stores market in APAC.
Europe remains a large and mature region with a focus on store refurbishments, digital capability upgrades, and category curation that aligns with local preferences in the department stores market. John Lewis reported improved profitability in FY2024/25 and outlined a plan to invest in stores, technology, and supply chain in FY2025/26 to reinforce service and assortment depth. Marks & Spencer delivered a strong FY2024/25 performance and continued to optimize its store network and product mix across food and general merchandise to meet changing shopper needs. El Corte Inglés continued multi-site upgrades in early 2025, with investments to modernize stores that support premium brands and service-led selling. Across EMEA, off-price and value channels also expand, including partnerships that extend store networks into the Middle East, such as TJX’s strategic stake in Brands for Less, which adds to the region’s accessible fashion and home offer.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Macy’s Inc.
- Kohl’s Corp.
- Nordstrom Inc.
- Dillard’s Inc.
- JCPenney
- Marks & Spencer Group
- John Lewis Partnership
- Selfridges & Co.
- Galeria Karstadt Kaufhof
- El Corte Inglés
- Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings
- Takashimaya Co.
- Lotte Shopping
- Hyundai Department Store
- David Jones
- Myer Holdings
- Falabella S.A.
- Liverpool (El Puerto de Liverpool)
- Hudson’s Bay Co.
- Central Department Store (Thailand)
- SM Store (Philippines)
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Macy’s Inc.
- Kohl’s Corp.
- Nordstrom Inc.
- Dillard’s Inc.
- JCPenney
- Marks & Spencer Group
- John Lewis Partnership
- Selfridges & Co.
- Galeria Karstadt Kaufhof
- El Corte Inglés
- Isetan Mitsukoshi Holdings
- Takashimaya Co.
- Lotte Shopping
- Hyundai Department Store
- David Jones
- Myer Holdings
- Falabella S.A.
- Liverpool (El Puerto de Liverpool)
- Hudson’s Bay Co.
- Central Department Store (Thailand)
- SM Store (Philippines)

