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Retail sales boosted by sunny weather and football in July

September 5, 2025
in Business
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Retail sales boosted by sunny weather and football in July
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Faarea MasudBusiness reporter, BBC News

Getty Images A woman behind the counter at a clothes shop hands over a bag to a customer, in a clothes shops with railings of clothes behind them.Getty Images

Sunny weather and the women’s Euro football tournament helped to lift retail sales in July, according to the latest official figures.

Retail sales volumes rose by 0.6% in July, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), which was more than analysts had been expecting.

Clothing and footwear stores, as well as online retailers, saw strong sales growth during the month.

The release of the figures had been delayed by two weeks over concerns about the quality of the statistics, and the ONS admitted it had made errors in how its survey data matched up to calendar months.

The ONS has come under fire in recent months over the reliability of some of its statistics, particularly its jobs market figures.

Its statistics are used in deciding government policy, which affects millions, and are also used by the Bank of England to make key financial decisions, such as setting interest rates.

The ONS said that while sales volumes in July rose, sales in the three months to July were down 0.6% when compared with the previous three months.

“Supermarkets, sports shops and household goods stores had a strong start to the year, but spending there has fallen since March,” said the ONS’s director general of economic statistics, James Benford.

However, he added this was partially offset by strong sales online and at clothing and footwear stores.

Mr Benford apologised for errors in past data, and said the ONS had “improvement plans” in place.

The ONS said the problems with the retail sales figures meant seasonal adjustments had not been made properly. Its latest release revises most of the retail sales data for the past year.

“The new figures published today show a similar overall pattern of three-month on three-month growth, but with less volatile month-on-month changes,” Mr Benford said.

A bar chart showing seasonally-adjusted monthly change in the volume of retail sales in Great Britain, from July 2023 to July 2025. The figures were as follows: Jul 2023 (-1.5%), Aug 2023 (0.2%), Sep 2023 (-1.0%), Oct 2023 (0.2%), Nov 2023 (1.5%), Dec 2023 (-3.4%), Jan 2024 (3.9%), Feb 2024 (-0.5%), Mar 2024 (-0.1%), Apr 2024 (-1.6%), May 2024 (2.9%), Jun 2024 (-1.6%), Jul 2024 (0.4%), Aug 2024 (0.9%), Sep 2024 (-0.1%), Oct 2024 (-0.7%), Nov 2024 (-0.3%), Dec 2024 (-0.3%), Jan 2025 (-0.4%), Feb 2025 (1.5%), Mar 2025 (1.2%), Apr 2025 (-0.4%), May 2025 (-1.0%), Jun 2025 (0.3%), and Jul 2025 (0.6%).

The ONS said online retailers and clothing stores saw strong sales growth in July, which retailers put down to new products, the hot weather, and an increase resulting from the UEFA Women’s Euro 2025 tournament.

One of July’s successes was the tech and household appliances chain Currys which said on Thursday that hot weather had led to increased demand for air conditioners and fans.

However, Paul Dales from Capital Economics warned that both these factors were boosts that “won’t be repeated”.

He added that talk of tax rises ahead of November’s Budget may yet hold back the retail sector.

Kris Hamer from the British Retail Consortium said July was a “good month for retail sales, as the warm, sunny weather and packed sporting schedule in the first half of the month got people spending”.

“Unfortunately, this level of sales growth makes little dent on the £7bn of new costs that retailers are having to shoulder following last year’s Budget.”

Since April, businesses have been paying higher National Insurance contributions and a higher minimum wage.

Matt Swannell, chief economic adviser to the economic forecaster EY ITEM Club, said the prospect for future sales growth was heavily dependent on the mood of shoppers.

“Households seem likely to shed some of the significant caution that has characterised the past couple of years,” he said.

“However, softer earnings growth, higher inflation, tighter fiscal policy, and the lagged impact of past interest rate rises for some mortgagors point to much weaker real income growth moving forward.”

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