Retail footfall sees major drop on New Year's Eve

Shopper footfall saw an unexpected and significant drop on New Year's Eve as cautious consumers switched their spending to online retailers, figures show.
The drop in footfall and its magnitude was unexpectedThe drop in footfall and its magnitude was unexpected
The drop in footfall and its magnitude was unexpected

Bricks and mortar retailers suffered a 10.5% drop in footfall compared with the same 24 hours on New Year’s Eve last year, according to monitoring service Springboard.

Shoppers did have to contend with wind and rain from Storm Dylan, which could have led some to change plans, but the weather had mainly cleared up by the early evening.

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The poor performance follows an overall 4.5% fall on Boxing Day, while footfall was down 2.3% between December 27 and December 30 - when it was hoped retailers would see their tills recover during the peak sales period.

High street footfall for the Boxing Day sales fell by 5.9% on last year as the number of shoppers hunting for bargains on Christmas Day rose.

However footfall recovered on New Year’s Day, rising by 16.8% on the same time last year, although at least part of this uplift is thought to have been due to January 1 falling on a Monday.

Diane Wehrle, insights director at Springboard, said: “The drop in footfall on New Year’s Eve was unexpected, and particularly the magnitude of the decline.

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“Overall the Christmas and New Year trading period this year has been challenging for bricks and mortar stores, with noticeably lower footfall than last year.

“In part this is a reflection of caution amongst consumers, but is also a function of underlying structural shifts in consumers’ shopping habits due to online activity and the fact that spending is spread across a wider range of products than ever before which is increasingly encompassing leisure experiences rather than purely physical goods.”