South Africa’s Retail Sales Moderate in Early 2026
According to the latest release from Statistics South Africa (Stats SA), annual retail sales growth eased to 1.6 % in February 2026, down from a robust 4.4 % increase recorded in January. The slowdown reflects a broader trend of weakening consumer spending as higher fuel costs begin to feed through to other prices.
Monthly and Quarterly Trends
On a seasonally adjusted month‑on‑month basis, retail sales fell 1 % in February after a modest 0.9 % rise in January and a 0.5 % dip in December. Looking at the three‑month window to February, sales were up 0.5 % compared with the preceding three months and 2.8 % higher than the same period a year earlier.
These figures suggest that while the retail sector remains positive on an annual basis, momentum is fading in the short term.
Sector‑Level Performance
Stats SA broke down the performance by seven retail groups. Five of the groups posted gains in February, with the “other” category – which includes online stores, jewellers, stationers and sporting‑goods retailers – delivering the strongest contribution.
- The “other” category grew 9.4 % year‑on‑year, adding roughly one percentage point to overall retail sales growth.
- Textiles and clothing followed, rising 3.9 % and contributing 0.6 percentage points to the headline figure.
Not all segments shared this uplift. General traders and retailers specialising in food and beverages recorded a decline, with food‑and‑beverage sales shrinking by 5 % year‑on‑year – the largest negative contribution among the groups.
Outlook and Risks
Analysts note that the current environment is supported by improved household balance sheets, lower credit‑servicing costs and stronger purchasing power, which helped lift consumer sentiment at the start of 2026, particularly among higher‑income households.
Siphamandla Mkhwanazi, senior economist at First National Bank (FNB), highlighted that “consumers entered 2026 on a stronger note, supported by improved purchasing power, stronger balance sheets and lower credit and debt servicing costs.”
However, forward‑looking pressures are mounting. Rising fuel prices – driven in part by geopolitical tensions that could involve the United States, Israel and Iran – are expected to push up transport and production costs, thereby squeezing margins for retailers and potentially dampening investment and hiring.
Mkhwanazi cautioned that “a less supportive external environment is likely to increasingly weigh on domestic demand. Rising operating costs via the oil price channel, coupled with increased uncertainty, could squeeze margins and dampen investment demand through weaker confidence.”
If these pressures persist, they could translate into weaker employment and income outcomes, constraining household spending. Nonetheless, most forecasters still expect consumers to remain a key driver of gross domestic product (GDP) growth in 2026, albeit at a slower pace than earlier projections.
In summary, while South Africa’s retail sector showed resilience in early 2026, the combination of moderating growth, sector‑specific weaknesses and external cost pressures warrants close monitoring by policymakers, businesses and investors alike.


