The collapse of department stores didn’t signal the end of retail aggregation or product discovery; it simply shifted their location. What once occured within the walls of physical stores now happens online, increasingly shaped by algorithms and AI agents that organize consumer choice at an unprecedented scale. as we move further into 2026, this shift is no longer a prediction, but a demonstrable reality.
The Long-foreseen Shift
The signals of this conversion have been visible for over a decade.As early as 2014, when eCommerce accounted for roughly 6% of U.S. retail sales,the writing was on the wall. A growing concern was that physical retail wasn’t adapting quickly enough to survive the coming changes [[2]]. At the time, this perspective was often dismissed as alarmist, but the underlying trend proved to be remarkably accurate.
Back then, retail giants like Macy’s and Sears still held dominant positions [[1]], [[1]]. Malls were struggling, but hadn’t yet reached the point of widespread collapse. The prevailing belief was that consumers would always value the tactile experience of physically interacting with products before purchasing.
Though, this assessment missed a crucial element: the fundamental shift in how consumers sought and found products. It wasn’t a rejection of the in-person experience, but a growing preference for convenience and efficiency.
Data Reveals the True Crossover
As we enter 2026, a significant milestone has been reached. Excluding categories like automobiles, gasoline, and a substantial portion of groceries – where in-person shopping remains largely driven by necessity – online and digitally influenced transactions now surpass purely physical sales for the first time. This crossover feels abrupt because the industry has been relying on misleading metrics.
For years, headline figures from the U.S. Census Bureau have placed eCommerce penetration at around 16-17% of total retail sales in 2025 [[1]]. This figure has often been used to downplay the impact of online retail. Though, this statistic is misleading as it uses a denominator that obscures the true extent of digital influence.
The real story emerges when focusing on discretionary spending categories – apparel, electronics, home goods, beauty products, and general merchandise. In these areas, online sales already account for 30-50% of total revenue. These are the categories that historically sustained malls and department stores. Even grocery, long considered a bastion of physical retail, is experiencing a gradual but steady migration online through the increasing popularity of pickup and delivery services [[1]]. The convenience of online ordering has transformed the physical aisle from a place of discovery to a source of friction for many consumers.
The Department Store: The First Domino
This shift didn’t begin with the rise of Amazon or the decline of malls. It started when department stores lost their core purpose. In 1990, department stores controlled approximately 14.5% of U.S. retail sales. By 2024,that share had plummeted to just 0.5% [[1]]. Dollar sales peaked in 2001 and have been in steady decline ever as.
This decline was notably significant because department stores weren’t simply another retail format. They were the foundational infrastructure of physical retail, aggregating demand, curating product selections, and subsidizing the viability of shopping malls.Specialty retailers relied heavily on the foot traffic generated by these anchor stores. As department stores weakened, the entire ecosystem around them became unstable.
By late 2024, the consequences were undeniable. Approximately 1,100 U.S. malls remained operational [[1]], with vacancy rates nearing 9%, more than double the overall retail average.Class C malls faced even more severe challenges, with vacancy rates exceeding 13% [[1]]. Anchor store closures led to decreased foot traffic, which in turn forced smaller retailers to close their doors.
Even the luxury retail sector wasn’t immune. The 2024 merger of Saks and Neiman Marcus was presented as a digital-era reinvention, but increasingly appears to be a consolidation effort driven by pressure. The potential bankruptcy of Saks Global at the end of 2025 [[1]] threatens to put dozens of Class A properties at risk, with further store closures and ripple effects throughout the mall landscape.
The failure of department stores wasn’t due to a lack of innovation; it was because their core function – the physical aggregation and curation of products – became obsolete.
Aggregation Reimagined: The Rise of Digital Platforms and AI
The function that department stores once provided hasn’t disappeared; it has simply migrated online. The new anchors are no longer physical buildings, but search engines, marketplaces, social media feeds, recommendation algorithms, and increasingly, AI agents that dynamically and personally organize commerce. This happens in seconds [[1]].
For over a century, department stores solved the “paradox of choice” by curating assortments that consumers trusted. Digital platforms took over this role by making search inexpensive and selection limitless. Now, AI agents are taking it a step further by proactively acting on behalf of the consumer, finding, comparing, and deciding without requiring the consumer to actively browse [[1]].
This is the fundamental reason why physical retail lost its competitive advantage. Once aggregation and discovery could happen digitally, continuously, and at scale, the economics of maintaining a physical inventory under one roof no longer provided value to consumers.
The Significance of the 2026 Crossover
The 2026 crossover isn’t just about online sales surpassing brick-and-mortar in key categories. It represents the breaking point of the economic logic behind physical aggregation. Department stores were built to address the problems of “too much choice” and “too much friction,” but that logic only held provided that discovery required a physical presence and selection was limited by shelf space.
Digital technology eliminated both of these constraints. Search has dramatically reduced the cost of finding desired products.Marketplaces have expanded selection without the risks associated with inventory. Social media and algorithms have reshaped consumer influence. And now, AI agents are compressing the entire process of discovery, comparison, and decision-making into a single, continuous process that doesn’t require a store visit at all [[1]].
Physical retail isn’t disappearing, but it’s losing its central role as the primary location for product discovery and decision-making. Omnichannel strategies, where consumers seamlessly move between online and offline channels, will become essential for retailers to thrive. Stores are evolving into execution points – fulfillment centers, pickup locations, and showrooms – rather than the anchors of the retail ecosystem.
The department store didn’t fail because consumers stopped shopping; it failed because the function it performed moved elsewhere. That same shift is now defining the entire retail landscape.
In 2026, online doesn’t “win” simply because it’s bigger. It wins because it has become the central hub for aggregation, discovery, and decision-making. This year marks the point where the full extent of that shift becomes undeniably visible.
