The "death of the high street" headlines have been wrong, in both directions, for five years. The reality in 2026 is more nuanced, and the businesses that read the data correctly are the ones quietly doing very well.
The real numbers (Europe, Q1 2026)
What's happening
- Hybrid work has permanently shifted weekday flows out of business districts.
- Suburban centres are absorbing those flows: people work-from-home and shop locally.
- Evening leisure has overtaken lunch in many city centres: restaurants pivoting to dinner are winning.
- Weekends are stronger everywhere: the retail flat-week is a thing of the past.
Implications by category
- Cafés in business districts: pivot to weekends, brunch, and remote-worker afternoons.
- Restaurants: invest in evenings, especially Tuesday-Thursday: the hybrid-work dinner crowd.
- Retail in suburbia: this is your moment. Foot traffic is up; competitors are still focused on city centres.
- Services (hair, beauty): Saturday and Sunday hours are now table stakes.
What the next 12 months look like
Weekday city-centre traffic will not recover to 2019: assume the new normal. Suburban growth has another 1-2 years of upside. Evening leisure continues to grow. Sunday opening, where legal, will become the default for local businesses.