June heatwave keeps shoppers away from the high street in blow to retailers


Juneโ€™s record heatwave brought a blow to retailers as the uncomfortable temperatures kept shoppers away from the high street, figures show.

Total UK footfall was down 3.4% year on year last month, with the high street suffering the sharpest 6.2% decline in shopper numbers, according to British Retail Consortium (BRC)-Sensormatic data.

Air-conditioned shopping centres and retail parks proved more resilient, with visitors down 2.5% and 0.3% respectively on last June.

Scotland was the only nation to experience a rise in overall footfall, up 1.7%, with Northern Ireland, Wales and England seeing declines of 0.9%, 2.3% and 3% respectively.

BRC chief executive Helen Dickinson said: โ€œThe heatwave may have affected footfall, but retailers face a bigger challenge: rising costs.

โ€œBusinesses are working hard to deliver value for customers, yet higher taxes and regulatory burdens are making it harder to invest, create jobs and grow.

โ€œGovernment action on business rates and energy costs would help unlock investment to revive our local communities.โ€

Andy Sumpter, a retail consultant for Sensormatic, said: โ€œJune saw UK retail footfall remain under pressure, with total visits down 3.4% year-on-year, bringing the year-to-date figure down to minus 3.3% at the halfway point.

โ€œWhile the overall trend remains subdued, it continues to reflect a cautious consumer who is making fewer, more considered trips.

โ€œExceptionally high temperatures are likely to have influenced behaviour, particularly in the South, where record heat and travel disruption made shopping trips less appealing.

โ€œAt the same time, consumer confidence is improving slightly but remains low, with wider uncertainty continuing to weigh on discretionary spend.โ€

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