More people visited shopping malls in Poland in April this year than at the equivalent time 2019, before the pandemic wrought havoc on the retail sector. While the figures indicate a return to pre-Covid shopping habits, they are also likely to have been impacted by the arrival of millions of Ukrainian refugees.

Overall visits to indoor shopping centres – based on the footfall density index – were up 2.5% in April 2022 compared to April 2019, according to the Polish Council of Shopping Centres (PRCH), a not-for-profit association representing around 200 such businesses.

In March, overall turnover figures were 1.1% higher than they were three years earlier. There were particularly large increases in spending on food shopping, domestic appliances and restaurants.

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The biggest shopping centres have benefited most from an upturn in visits from shoppers. Those with floor space of more than 60,000 square metres recorded turnover 5.9% higher than three years ago, while smaller malls of between 20,000 and 40,000 square metres saw a drop of 5.5%.

The figures partly reflect shopping done by and on behalf of Ukrainian refugees, says the PRCH, which notes that April’s footfall increases were especially large in cities and regions with a high concentration of refugees.

Over three million people have fled across the border into Poland since Russia’s invasion in February, and it is estimated that 1.5 to 2 million remain in the country. They have settled in particular in large cities such as Gdańsk, Katowice, Wrocław and Kraków.

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However, PRCH adds that the increased spending in shopping mall restaurants indicates a return to pre-pandemic habits and a desire to renew contacts.

“The latest data…show that results have surpassed pre-pandemic levels,” said Krzysztof Poznański, PCRH’s managing director. “The trend of customers returning to shopping centres is getting stronger and shop leaseholders are achieving better and better operating results.”

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Main image credit: Adrian Grycuk/Wikimedia (under CC BY-SA 3.0 PL)

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