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Placer.ai Overall Retail, E-Commerce Distribution, Industrial Manufacturing Index, January 2026

Holiday-season foot traffic data shows strong momentum for both e-commerce and brick-and-mortar retail entering 2026, while January manufacturing visits softened due to weather and calendar effects.

By 
Lila Margalit
February 19, 2026
Placer.ai Overall Retail, E-Commerce Distribution, Industrial Manufacturing Index, January 2026
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Placer.ai's Industrial Manufacturing Index represents a composite of manufacturing facilities across more than 80 companies, covering a diverse set of sectors including aerospace and defense, automakers, auto parts, building materials, containers and packaging, machinery, and specialty chemicals. It can be used in tandem with numbers like durable goods orders. Companies such as General Motors, Ford Motors, Ferguson, International Paper, United States Steel, and 3M are included in the composite. The dataset includes traffic metrics for both employees (estimated using dwell time) and visitors, who often represent logistics partners delivering raw materials, transporting work-in-progress goods, or picking up finished products.

The Placer.ai E-commerce Distribution Index measures foot traffic across more than 400 distribution centers nationwide, including facilities operated by leading retailers such as Amazon, Walmart, and Target. Designed as a barometer for U.S. e-commerce activity, the index captures two key audiences: employees, estimated through dwell-time patterns, and visitors, who often represent logistics partners delivering raw materials, moving in-process goods, or collecting finished products.

Placer.ai's Overall Retail traffic numbers represent foot traffic across more than 1500+ retail chains nationwide, including leading retailers such as Walmart, Costco, Dollar General, Home Depot, Aldi, CVS, Macy's, T.J. Maxx, and Ulta.

Key Takeaways
  • E-commerce distribution centers and brick-and-mortar retail chains both posted positive year-over-year (YoY) visit growth in January 2026, extending their late-2025 momentum.
  • Though e-commerce traffic growth outpaced physical retail during the holiday season, brick-and-mortar also thrived.
  • Industrial manufacturing saw a YoY dip in January 2026, likely driven by weather disruption and calendar effects rather than softer production.

Digital and Physical Retail Move in Parallel

E-commerce distribution centers outpaced brick-and-mortar retail chains in year-over-year (YoY) foot traffic growth throughout the 2025 holiday stretch. This pattern aligns with broader holiday-season data showing that e-commerce sales growth exceeded brick-and-mortar growth in 2025.

Still, physical retail continued to account for the majority of total holiday spending, and in-store visits also saw steady, positive YoY growth throughout the season. The data points to a retail environment where digital and physical channels are not competing for relevance but operating in parallel, each capturing different dimensions of consumer demand. That dynamic carried into the new year as well: January 2026 visits remained above year-ago levels for both e-commerce distribution centers and brick-and-mortar retail, rising 2.6% and 1.8% YoY, respectively.

When Foot Traffic and Sentiment Diverge

Visits to Placer.ai’s Industrial Manufacturing Index, on the other hand, softened in January 2026, following stronger YoY momentum in December. At first glance, this decline may seem surprising: January marked a clear improvement in manufacturing sentiment, with the ISM Manufacturing PMI rising to 52.6% – its first expansionary reading in at least a year – and the Production sub-index also improving. While the ISM captures month-over-month shifts in sentiment rather than year-over-year change, a sharply improving outlook may seem inconsistent with such a steep YoY decline following a positive month.

But a closer look at the weekly data helps explain the divergence. Sentiment surveys capture outlook, orders, and expectations, while foot traffic reflects physical, on-site activity. Winter Storm Fern, which caused widespread disruptions late in the month, weighed heavily on manufacturing visits and pulled down the overall January figure. Weather events like this can meaningfully suppress foot traffic even as underlying sentiment improves – and they tend to register far more clearly in mobility data than in survey-based indicators.

Calendar effects likely contributed as well. January 2026 had one fewer working day than January 2025, a difference that can have an outsized impact on visit-based measures tied to operational and industrial activity.

Looking Forward

Overall, the data points to an economy that ended 2025 with solid momentum across consumer-facing channels, even as early-2026 manufacturing activity reflected short-term disruption. As weather normalizes, will on-the-ground industrial activity rebound?

Follow Placer.ai/anchor for more data-driven insights into the trends shaping retail, logistics, and manufacturing.

Placer.ai leverages a panel of tens of millions of devices and utilizes machine learning to make estimations for visits to locations across the US. The data is trusted by thousands of industry leaders who leverage Placer.ai for insights into foot traffic, demographic breakdowns, retail sale predictions, migration trends, site selection, and more.

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Related Topics

Retail, E-Commerce, Manufacturing, Index
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