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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

British retail sales up in July despite ongoing economic challenges

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) today released its latest figures, showing that sales volumes in July were up 0.6 per cent from June.

A woman carrying several shopping bags

British retail sales climbed beyond forecasts in July, propelled by favourable weather conditions and the UEFA Women's Euros 2025 tournament.

Nevertheless, comprehensive revisions to earlier monthly data have unveiled a less erratic but fundamentally weaker growth trajectory for the year, as reported by .

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) today published its latest figures, demonstrating that sales volumes in July increased by 0.6 per cent compared with June.

This surpassed economists' predictions of a 0.2 per cent increase in a Reuters poll. However, the annual growth rate fell short of expectations at 1.1 per cent.

The ONS clarified that the publication of the figures, which was postponed for two weeks, resulted from the identification of "quality failures" in its data.

The statistics organisation discovered issues with synchronising its survey periods with calendar months, which had previously exaggerated the volatility of retail sales.

James Benford, ONS director of economic statistics, said: "Our annual review of how we adjust for seasonality found that we had not adjusted figures correctly. This resulted in our previous figures overstating the monthly volatility in retail sales in the first half of the year."

He added that "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".