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IGD reveals five trends shaping convenience in 2026

Photo by Efe Kurnaz on Unsplash
Photo by Efe Kurnaz on Unsplash

A new Institute of Grocery Distribution (IGD) report has identified five key trends driving structural change and retailer responses in the convenience channel in 2026.

The convenience channel is predicted to reach £56.2bn by 2030, and is expected to see a CAGR of 2.7% over the next five years, lagging slightly behind the wider grocery market’s 3.0% CAGR, stated IGD. Declining tobacco sales will be the primary restraining factor in convenience, owing to the much greater relative scale of the category in the channel, predicts the firm.

Five key trends steering UK convenience in 2026:

  1. Retailers are facing financial stress: traditional categories are declining, leading to falling sales. Rising retail operating costs are accentuating this issue, creating an unsustainable challenge for some stores.
  2. Symbol growth driven by B2B value: recruitment of symbol stores
    is key to growth for many stakeholders in the channel and groups that are offering better value are growing faster.
  3. Competing with specialists in food-to-go: as retailers work to grow food-to-go sales, competing for share with specialists becomes inevitable, especially
    as they move into hotspots, such as travel hubs.
  4. Quick commerce: aggregator alternatives: while partnering with the aggregators on quick commerce is effective, retailers lose transaction value and do not wholly control the customer interaction.
  5. Increasing, but selective, focus on price: High-profile value and price-matching activity have heightened shopper perceptions that the convenience channel is expensive.
    Assessing the impact of these factors, the IGD Convenience trends report provides actionable insights into navigating the shifting landscape for retailers and suppliers, helping them identify where the real opportunities and challenges lie.
    Patrick Mitchell-Fox, Insight Partner at IGD, comments:
    “The UK convenience channel is facing a future of mixed fortunes, with potential offset by a range of challenges. Retailers and suppliers will need to be aware of how these impact on a store-by-store and category-by-category basis.
    “Secular trends in demographics and shopper behaviour will continue to create opportunities for ongoing growth in the UK convenience market. However, its structural over-dependence on the declining tobacco category will create headwinds that will limit growth overall.”
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This publication contains images and information relating to tobacco products. Please do not view if you are under the age of 18 years old.

This website contains images and information relating to tobacco products. Please do not view if you are under 18 years of age.

This website contains images and information relating to tobacco products. Please do not view if you are under 18 years of age.

This publication contains images and information relating to tobacco products. Please do not view if you are under the age of 18 years old.