Target once again tops Twin Cities grocery rankings
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Open embedded content from datawrapper.dwcdn.netTarget is once again the go-to grocer for Twin Cities shoppers, a new ranking shows.
What's new: The Minneapolis-based chain leads competitors when it comes to local market share, per new data from Chain Store Guide, a sales-tracking firm that examined 2021 grocery and liquor store revenue in the 15-county metro.
- Target's standing increased slightly compared to 2020, while Walmart and Cub Foods saw their shares decline by a sliver.
Plus: Predictions that Hy-Vee would gobble up more of the market share have yet to materialize.
- The Des Moines-based brand didn't add any new stores in 2021 and remained stable at just under 3%.
Why it matters: The grocery market is extremely competitive — and given typically slim margins for stores, every customer counts.
Between the lines: Cub Foods has long been a big player in the local grocery wars. Past Chain Store Guide data published in the Star Tribune shows that Cub reigned supreme with 40% of the market in the 1990s, and was in the top spot as recently as 2018.
- And Cub has kept an advantage when it comes to stores, with 74 in the area.
- But the data shows big-box chains like Target (51) and Walmart (25) are still doing better on volume of products sold.
Driving the sales: Grocery sales spiked during the height of the pandemic, as families ate more meals at home.
- Interest in contactless shopping options such as online ordering and curbside pick-up, both of which are offered by the larger chains, also soared.
Of note: A spokesperson for Cub, whose parent company Supervalu was purchased by United Natural Foods in 2018, declined to comment on its standing.
- A handful of local Cub storefronts are owned by other operators, the data shows.
What to watch: Plans to open several Amazon Fresh stores across the Twin Cities will further shake up the local grocery scene.
- Meanwhile, Hy-Vee, which is a relative newcomer to the market, canned plans this month to open five new suburban stores, per The Pioneer Press.
More grocery coverage: While Target and Walmart have the biggest market share, Lunds, Cub and Aldi are the favorites among Axios Twin Cities readers, per a survey last year.
- But no one store has your hearts: Nine in 10 of you shop at two or more stores a month.
