Parcelhero's report pointed specifically to the perilous state of the sector, revealing that of the 200 largest surviving department store businesses, 48 were already labelled 'in danger' and 53 had made a loss the previous year. The report asked: 'How long can the sector continue?'
Parcelhero's newly published 2026 follow-up report, '2030: The High Street Fights Back?' reveals the full scale of the devastation. The author of both reports, Parcelhero's Head of Consumer Research, David Jinks M.I.L.T., says: 'Since 2016, over 83% of UK department store space has disappeared – a collapse without parallel in British retail history. According to the commercial property company CoStar, the UK's largest chains, from BHS and Beales to Debenhams and House of Fraser, had 467 stores in 2016, but that had dropped to just 79 by 2021, as Covid accelerated the structural decline that e-commerce had already set in motion.'
David continues: 'Ten years ago, we warned that department stores faced extinction unless they fundamentally reinvented themselves for the digital age. Sadly, for most of the sector, that reinvention never came.
'Parcelhero's 2016 report identified two waves of disruption that had already fatally undermined the department store model. The first was the emergence of supermarkets selling non-food goods, including TVs, homeware and clothing, that had historically been the preserve of the department store. The second blow, which proved decisive, was e-commerce, which offered consumers the same breadth of choice, at lower prices, without leaving their homes. For many stores, the pandemic proved the final nail in their coffin. Both the 2016 and 2026 High Street reports are available at https://www.parcelhero.com/en-gb/resources/ebooks/
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Source: Parcelhero
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