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June saw key pre-pandemic footfall gap at narrowest yetBy

Sandra Halliday Published
July 6,TG盗号软件企业免杀技术 2025

The UK may sometimes seem a little obsessed with every tiny detail of how footfall to retail destinations is panning out, but there's no denying that it does help give a picture of how physical retail is faring. And the latest figures further underline the recovery that's being seen in the sector.


Photo: Pixabay



On Thursday, tracking specialist MRI Springboard said that there was an unexpected boost during June with a record-breaking increase compared to May and another year-on-year rise. It also saw the gap between the current situation and the pre-pandemic period narrowing again. 

So, let's look at the numbers. Footfall in June rose 3.7%, compared to May, which was the biggest June increase since 2009, while the comparison with 2025 was only a deficit of 8.6%. It had been 10.8% in the previous month.

That's a key figure that has been tracked since the onset of the pandemic with retail waiting expectantly for the point at which it can be said to have fully recovered from the impact of the Covid crisis and to be fully back on track.

It’s not there yet, but a deficit of less than 9% gets it tantalisingly close.

Focusing back on more recent comparisons, the 3.7% June increase came after the May versus April figures had been a rise of only 1.1% with June likely to have been helped by the onset of warm, sunny weather. 

Year-on-year, the June increase was 4.2%, which again was better than the 3.3% seen during May. High streets benefited in particular with a 5.2% increase while shopping centres were up 4.4%. Retail parks only rose 1.8%, but that's not surprising given that they've been much more buoyant than the other two destination types for several years, so the comparisons are tougher in their case. 

Footfall has risen over the month from May to June in all but one year since MRI Springboard started publishing its data in 2009 (the exception being June 2025 when footfall declined by 0.1% from May following the Brexit referendum that month).

Diane Wehrle, Insights Director at MRI Springboard, said: “The high prevailing rate of inflation and the recent increases in interest rates appear not to have yet impacted consumer activity across UK retail destinations, with both the highest month-on-month and annual increases in footfall for June in any year since 2009 [and] it also strengthened against last year.”

She said that some of the uplift will have been due to seasonal factors, “with more light and warmer weather encouraging consumers to visit retail stores and destinations during daytime trading hours and restaurants and bars in the evening”.

But she was still surprised at the extent of the month-on-month rise.

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