Almost 170,000 retail staff lost their jobs during 2024, up 42% on the previous year, and at the highest level since the height of the pandemic in 2020 when non-essential retail stores were forced to close with experts warning of more pain to come for high streets across Britain in 2025.
End of year figures compiled by the Centre for Retail Research who have been analysing, evaluating and forecasting retail trends for more than 25 years show that, during the 2024 calendar year, a total of 169,395 retail jobs were lost โ up 49,990, an increase of 41.9%, compared with 2023.
38 major retailers went into administration in 2025 including household names like Lloyds Pharmacy, Homebase, The Body Shop, Carpetright and Ted Baker.
Around 33%, a third of all retail job losses in 2024, 55,914 in total, resulted from Administrations.
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The remainder of the jobs lost were through โrationalisationโ as part of cost cutting programs by large retailers or independents simply shutting up shop for good.
Professor Joshuaย Bamfield, Director of the Centre for Retail Research, said โthe comparatively low figures for 2023 now look like an anomaly โ a pause for breath by many retailers after lockdowns if you likeโ adding โthe problems of changed customer shopping habits, inflation, rising energy costs, rents and business rates have continued and forced many retailers to cut back even more strongly in 2024โ.
Independent retailers, those small businesses generally with 1 to 5 stores, shed 58,616 jobs in total during 2024.
Alex Probyn, President of Property Tax at the real estate adviser Altus Group, said โthe cut in the business rates discount from 1st April will disproportionately affect independent retailers who will see their bills rise on average by 140% adding an extra ยฃ5,024 for the average shop.โ
The current 75% discount to business rates โ due to end on 31st March 2025 โ will be replaced by a less generous discount of 40% โ still with a maximum discount of ยฃ110,000 โ a move that will save HM Treasury but cost the retail sector an extra ยฃ688 million Altus Group forecasts.
Whilst the British Retail Consortium estimates that the retail sector will face a ยฃ2.3 billion bill from April after the implementation of the increase in employer NICs from 13.8% to 15%, as well as the reduction in the earnings threshold that they must start paying it from ยฃ9,100 to ยฃ5,000.
Professor Bamfield warned of a bleak outlook for 2025, he said, โby increasing both the costs of running stores and the costs on each consumerโs household it is highly likely that we will see retail job losses eclipse the height of the pandemic in 2020โ estimating 202,000 jobs could be lost.
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