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PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Lidl plans 4,000 jobs in mass rollout of 1,100 º£½ÇÊÓÆµ stores

The retailer set a new ambition for 1,100 sites by 2025.

A Lidl supermarket

Supermarket giant Lidl plans to create 4,000 new jobs over the next three years as part of major expansion plans.

Bosses said they expect to reach their target of having 1,000 stores by 2023 and set a new ambition for 1,100 sites by 2025.

The move comes as the grocer published its accounts for the year to end of February at Companies House, showing how it benefitted during the pandemic from is position as an “essential” retailer.

Sales jumped 12% to £7.7 billion and pre-tax profits hit £9.8 million after a £25.2 million loss a year earlier, according to the accounts.

Lidl is privately owned, meaning it does not need to publish more up-to-date sales data unlike its stock market-listed rivals.

Alongside the numbers, bosses said they opened 55 stores during the first year of the pandemic and spent £17.5 million on boosting staff pay, including £8 million on hourly wage hikes and £9.5 million on bonuses during the Covid-19 crisis.

Profits may have been higher, although Lidl – along with most of its rivals – agreed to repay more than £100 million in business rates savings when Chancellor Rishi Sunak scrapped the tax to support the high street.

Several “essential” retailers made the repayments due to spikes in sales as they remained open while other stores were closed.