A listing of all retail food stores which are licensed by the Department of Agriculture and Markets.
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To create this layer, OCTO staff used ABCA's definition of “Full-Service Grocery Stores” (https://abca.dc.gov/page/full-service-grocery-store#gsc.tab=0)– pulled from the Food System Assessment below), and using those criteria, determined locations that fulfilled the categories in section 1 of the definition.Then, staff reviewed the Office of Planning’s Food System Assessment (https://dcfoodpolicycouncilorg.files.wordpress.com/2019/06/2018-food-system-assessment-final-6.13.pdf) list in Appendix D, comparing that to the created from the ABCA definition, which led to the addition of a additional examples that meet, or come very close to, the full-service grocery store criteria. The explanation from Office of Planning regarding how the agency created their list:“To determine the number of grocery stores in the District, we analyzed existing business licenses in the Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (2018) Business License Verification system (located at https://eservices.dcra.dc.gov/BBLV/Default.aspx). To distinguish grocery stores from convenience stores, we applied the Alcohol Beverage and Cannabis Administration’s (ABCA) definition of a full-service grocery store. This definition requires a store to be licensed as a grocery store, sell at least six different food categories, dedicate either 50% of the store’s total square feet or 6,000 square feet to selling food, and dedicate at least 5% of the selling area to each food category. This definition can be found at https://abca.dc.gov/page/full-service-grocery-store#gsc.tab=0. To distinguish small grocery stores from large grocery stores, we categorized large grocery stores as those 10,000 square feet or more. This analysis was conducted using data from the WDCEP’s Retail and Restaurants webpage (located at https://wdcep.com/dc-industries/retail/) and using ARCGIS Spatial Analysis tools when existing data was not available. Our final numbers differ slightly from existing reports like the DC Hunger Solutions’ Closing the Grocery Store Gap and WDCEP’s Grocery Store Opportunities Map; this difference likely comes from differences in our methodology and our exclusion of stores that have closed.”Staff also conducted a visual analysis of locations and relied on personal experience of visits to locations to determine whether they should be included in the list.
Comprehensive dataset of 128,525 Grocery stores in United States as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.
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This dataset contains measures of the number and density of grocery stores, supermarkets, food stores, fruit and vegetable stores, meat and fish markets, and warehouse clubs (such as Costco and Sams Club) selling food per United States Census Tract or ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) from 1990 through 2021. The dataset includes four separate files for four different geographic areas (GIS shapefiles from the United States Census Bureau). The four geographies include:● Census Tract 2010 ● Census Tract 2020● ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) 2010 ● ZIP Code Tabulation Area (ZCTA) 2020Information about which dataset to use can be found in the Usage Notes section of this document.
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Explore the Meijer Grocery Store Dataset, a comprehensive collection of data on products available at Meijer, a leading American grocery store chain. This dataset includes detailed information on a wide variety of grocery items such as fresh produce, dairy, meat, beverages, household essentials, and more. Each product entry provides essential details, including product names, categories, prices, brands, descriptions, and availability, offering valuable insights for researchers, data analysts, and retail professionals.
Key Features:
Whether you're analyzing market trends in the grocery sector, researching consumer behavior, or developing new retail strategies, the Meijer Grocery Store Dataset is an invaluable resource that provides detailed insights and extensive coverage of products available at Meijer.
Data Driven Detroit created the data by selecting locations from NETS and ESRI business data with proper NAICS codes, then adding and deleting though local knowledge and confirmation with Google Streetview. These locations are Grocery stores which primarily sell food and don't include convenience stores. Visual confirmation cues included the existence of the word "grocery" in the name, or the presence of shopping carts.
This is a collection of maps, layers, apps and dashboards that show population access to essential retail locations, such as grocery stores. Data sourcesPopulation data is from the 2010 U.S. Census blocks. Each census block has a count of stores within a 10 minute walk, and a count of stores within a ten minute drive. Census blocks known to be unpopulated are given a score of 0. The layer is available as a hosted feature layer.Grocery store locations are from SafeGraph, reflecting what was in the data as of October 2020. Access to the layer was obtained from the SafeGraph offering in ArcGIS Marketplace. For this project, ArcGIS StreetMap Premium was used for the street network in the origin-destination analysis work, because it already has the necessary attributes on each street segment to identify which streets are considered walkable, and supports a wide variety of driving parameters.The walkable access layer and drivable access layers are rasters, whose colors were chosen to allow the drivable access layer to serve as backdrop to the walkable access layer. Alternative versions of these layers are available. These pairs use different colors but are otherwise identical in content.Data PreparationArcGIS Network Analyst was used to set up a network street layer for analysis. ArcGIS StreetMap Premium was installed to a local hard drive and selected in the Origin-Destination workflow as the network data source. This allows the origins (Census block centroids) and destinations (SafeGraph grocery stores) to be connected to that network, to allow origin-destination analysis.The Census blocks layer contains the centroid of each Census block. The data allows a simple popup to be created. This layer's block figures can be summarized further, to tract, county and state levels.The SafeGraph grocery store locations were created by querying the SafeGraph source layer based on primary NAICS code. After connecting to the layer in ArcGIS Pro, a definition query was set to only show records with NAICS code 445110 as an initial screening. The layer was exported to a local disk drive for further definition query refinement, to eliminate any records that were obviously not grocery stores. The final layer used in the analysis had approximately 53,600 records. In this map, this layer is included as a vector tile layer.MethodologyEvery census block in the U.S. was assigned two access scores, whose numbers are simply how many grocery stores are within a 10 minute walk and a 10 minute drive of that census block. Every census block has a score of 0 (no stores), 1, 2 or more stores. The count of accessible stores was determined using Origin-Destination Analysis in ArcGIS Network Analyst, in ArcGIS Pro. A set of Tools in this ArcGIS Pro package allow a similar analysis to be conducted for any city or other area. The Tools step through the data prep and analysis steps. Download the Pro package, open it and substitute your own layers for Origins and Destinations. Parcel centroids are a suggested option for Origins, for example. Origin-Destination analysis was configured, using ArcGIS StreetMap Premium as the network data source. Census block centroids with population greater than zero were used as the Origins, and grocery store locations were used as the Destinations. A cutoff of 10 minutes was used with the Walk Time option. Only one restriction was applied to the street network: Walkable, which means Interstates and other non-walkable street segments were treated appropriately. You see the results in the map: wherever freeway overpasses and underpasses are present near a grocery store, the walkable area extends across/through that pass, but not along the freeway.A cutoff of 10 minutes was used with the Drive Time option. The default restrictions were applied to the street network, which means a typical vehicle's access to all types of roads was factored in.The results for each analysis were captured in the Lines layer, which shows which origins are within the cutoff of each destination over the street network, given the assumptions about that network (walking, or driving a vehicle).The Lines layer was then summarized by census block ID to capture the Maximum value of the Destination_Rank field. A census block within 10 minutes of 3 stores would have 3 records in the Lines layer, but only one value in the summarized table, with a MAX_Destination_Rank field value of 3. This is the number of stores accessible to that census block in the 10 minutes measured, for walking and driving. These data were joined to the block centroids layer and given unique names. At this point, all blocks with zero population or null values in the MAX_Destination_Rank fields were given a store count of 0, to help the next step.Walkable and Drivable areas are calculated into a raster layer, using Nearest Neighbor geoprocessing tool on the count of stores within a 10 minute walk, and a count of stores within a ten minute drive, respectively. This tool uses a 200 meter grid and interpolates the values between each census block. A census tracts layer containing all water polygons "erased" from the census tract boundaries was used as an environment setting, to help constrain interpolation into/across bodies of water. The same layer use used to "shoreline" the Nearest Neighbor results, to eliminate any interpolation into the ocean or Great Lakes. This helped but was not perfect.Notes and LimitationsThe map provides a baseline for discussing access to grocery stores in a city. It does not presume local population has the desire or means to walk or drive to obtain groceries. It does not take elevation gain or loss into account. It does not factor time of day nor weather, seasons, or other variables that affect a person's commute choices. Walking and driving are just two ways people get to a grocery store. Some people ride a bike, others take public transit, have groceries delivered, or rely on a friend with a vehicle. Thank you to Melinda Morang on the Network Analyst team for guidance and suggestions at key moments along the way; to Emily Meriam for reviewing the previous version of this map and creating new color palettes and marker symbols specific to this project. Additional ReadingThe methods by which access to food is measured and reported have improved in the past decade or so, as has the uses of such measurements. Some relevant papers and articles are provided below as a starting point.Measuring Food Insecurity Using the Food Abundance Index: Implications for Economic, Health and Social Well-BeingHow to Identify Food Deserts: Measuring Physical and Economic Access to Supermarkets in King County, WashingtonAccess to Affordable and Nutritious Food: Measuring and Understanding Food Deserts and Their ConsequencesDifferent Measures of Food Access Inform Different SolutionsThe time cost of access to food – Distance to the grocery store as measured in minutes
Comprehensive dataset of 451 American grocery stores in United States as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.
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Graph and download economic data for Producer Price Index by Industry: Supermarkets and Other Grocery Stores: Supermarket and Other Grocery Store Services (PCU4451104451103) from Dec 1999 to May 2025 about groceries, services, PPI, industry, inflation, price index, indexes, price, and USA.
Comprehensive dataset of 212 Grocery stores in Wyoming, United States as of July, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.
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Graph and download economic data for Retail Sales: Grocery Stores (MRTSMPCSM4451USS) from Feb 1992 to Apr 2025 about groceries, retail trade, sales, retail, and USA.
Comprehensive dataset of 765 Grocery stores in Utah, United States as of June, 2025. Includes verified contact information (email, phone), geocoded addresses, customer ratings, reviews, business categories, and operational details. Perfect for market research, lead generation, competitive analysis, and business intelligence. Download a complimentary sample to evaluate data quality and completeness.
This dataset is no longer being updated but is being kept for historical reference. A list of grocery stores in Chicago and last known status (open or closed). This dataset will be updated approximately weekly, or as needed.
Bodegas & Grocery Stores Receiving Recognition from Borough President's Office
Each year, bodegas and grocery stores located in and around Action Center catchment areas participate in the Shop Healthy NYC program's Retail Challenge to increase (1) availability of healthier foods, such as low-sodium canned goods, healthier snacks and deli options; (2) promotion of healthier foods by posting Shop Healthy marketing materials for healthier foods and removing unhealthy advertising from the front door; and (3) visibility of healthier foods by placing them in more prominent locations, such as placing produce at the checkout counter or near the front entrance of the store, and water and other low-calorie drinks at eye-level. Stores that have implemented all of the program’s criteria at the conclusion of the Retail Challenge, and maintain them for at least one month, receive a recognition award from the Borough President's Office to acknowledge their efforts and dedication to make the healthy choice, the easier choice for their communities.
This is a manually compiled list of stores, which is based on data collected through implementation checklists; these are forms completed by Shop Healthy staff as part of store observations that track whether each criteria has been met. At this time, the program does not have processes in place to ensure that stores maintain the changes past one-month.
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Listing of all active businesses currently registered with the Office of Finance. An "active" business is defined as a registered business whose owner has not notified the Office of Finance of a cease of business operations. Update Interval: Monthly.
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Location information for all Supermarkets and Convenience Stores in Allegheny County was produced using the Allegheny County Fee and Permit Data for 2016.
Support for Health Equity datasets and tools provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS) through their Health Equity Initiative.
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This dataset represents the locations of grocery stores in the City of Baltimore. This may not be a complete list. To leave feedback or ask a question about this dataset, please fill out the following form: Grocery Stores feedback form.
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Graph and download economic data for All Employees: Retail Trade: Grocery Stores in New Orleans-Metairie, LA (MSA) (SMU22353804244510001A) from 1990 to 2024 about groceries, New Orleans, LA, retail trade, sales, retail, employment, and USA.
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Analysis of ‘Grocery Products Purchase Data’ provided by Analyst-2 (analyst-2.ai), based on source dataset retrieved from https://www.kaggle.com/alexmiles/grocery-products-purchase-data on 28 January 2022.
--- Dataset description provided by original source is as follows ---
The data-set is mainly collected by one of the retail store of Kroger in USA. This data was collected during a super-saver weekend to understand more about the customers buying behavior.
The data mainly consist over 9000+ records which is gathered over 3 days of weekend Supersaver deal in one of the kroger retails grocery store.
This data-set may help the retail grocery stores in Up selling and Cross selling of their products.
--- Original source retains full ownership of the source dataset ---
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this graph was created in R and Canva :
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The dataset offers a comprehensive view of grocery inventory, covering 990 products across multiple categories such as Grains & Pulses, Beverages, Fruits & Vegetables, and more. It includes crucial details about each product, such as its unique identifier (Product_ID), name, category, and supplier information, including Supplier_ID and Supplier_Name. This dataset is particularly valuable for businesses aiming to optimize inventory management, sales tracking, and supply chain efficiency.
Key inventory-related fields include Stock_Quantity, which indicates the current stock level, and Reorder_Level, which determines when a product should be reordered. The Reorder_Quantity specifies how much stock to order when inventory falls below the reorder threshold. Additionally, Unit_Price provides insight into pricing, helping businesses analyze cost trends and profitability.
To manage product flow, the dataset includes dates such as Date_Received, which tracks when the product was added to the warehouse, and Last_Order_Date, marking the most recent procurement. For perishable goods, the Expiration_Date column is critical, allowing businesses to minimize waste by monitoring shelf life. The Warehouse_Location specifies where each product is stored, facilitating efficient inventory handling.
Sales and performance metrics are also included. The Sales_Volume column records the total number of units sold, providing insights into consumer demand. Inventory_Turnover_Rate helps businesses assess how quickly a product sells and is replenished, ensuring better stock management. The dataset also tracks the Status of each product, indicating whether it is Active, Discontinued, or Backordered.
The dataset serves multiple purposes in inventory management, sales performance evaluation, supplier analysis, and product lifecycle tracking. Businesses can leverage this data to refine reorder strategies, ensuring optimal stock levels and avoiding stockouts or excessive inventory. Sales analysis can help identify high-demand products and slow-moving items, enabling better decision-making in pricing and promotions. Evaluating suppliers based on their performance, pricing, and delivery efficiency helps streamline procurement and improve overall supply chain operations.
Furthermore, the dataset can support predictive analytics by employing machine learning techniques to estimate reorder quantities, forecast demand, and optimize stock replenishment. Inventory turnover insights can aid in maintaining a balanced supply, preventing unnecessary overstocking or shortages. By tracking trends in sales, businesses can refine their marketing and distribution strategies, ensuring sustained profitability.
This dataset is designed for educational and demonstration purposes, offering fictional data under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Users are free to analyze, modify, and apply the data while providing proper attribution. Additionally, certain products are marked as discontinued or backordered, reflecting real-world inventory dynamics. Businesses dealing with perishable goods should closely monitor expiration and last order dates to avoid losses due to spoilage.
Overall, this dataset provides a versatile resource for those interested in inventory management, sales analysis, and supply chain optimization. By leveraging the structured data, businesses can make data-driven decisions to enhance operational efficiency and maximize profitability.
A listing of all retail food stores which are licensed by the Department of Agriculture and Markets.