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U.S. Retail Sales Beat Forecasts in May, Rising 0.6% as Consumers Defy Iran War Headwinds

Key Takeaways

  • Sales beat expectations: U.S. retail sales rose to $763.7 billion in May, exceeding the 0.5% growth forecast.
  • Prior month revised: April’s reading came in at a 0.5% expansion.
  • Strong annual growth: Retail sales were up 6.9% year-on-year in May.
  • Retail trade outperforms: Retail trade sales specifically rose 1.0% from April and 7.5% from a year ago.
  • Nonstore retailers surge: Online and other nonstore retailers jumped 12.2% year-on-year — the standout category.
  • Food services resilient: Restaurants and bars were up 2.7% from May 2025, signaling continued consumer confidence in discretionary spending.
  • Fed implications: The stronger-than-expected reading adds to evidence of a resilient U.S. economy ahead of today’s Fed decision.

Retail sales in the United States increased to $763.7 billion in May, the U.S. Census Bureau reported on Wednesday. The print followed the 0.5% expansion recorded in the previous month and came in above market expectations of 0.5% growth. On a yearly basis, retail sales were up 6.9% during this period.

Retail trade sales were up 1.0% from April 2026 and up 7.5% from a year earlier. Nonstore retailers — which include e-commerce — surged 12.2% from a year ago, while food services and drinking places were up 2.7% from May 2025.

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