The Times Australia
Fisher and Paykel Appliances
The Times World News

.

At the end of 2025, how are small retail and services businesses faring in Australia?

  • Written by Times Media

As 2025 draws to a close, the picture for small retail and services businesses in Australia is mixed — but cautiously optimistic. After years of margin pressure, many are finally catching a breather, even as structural challenges remain.

✅ What’s improving — cautious optimism and stabilising margins

  • According to recent data, the median operating profit margin for small businesses “improved a little” over the year to March 2025, and margins remained roughly stable across most industries.

  • The quarterly survey index for small firms (the Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman — ASBFEO — “Small Business Pulse”) ticked up by 0.6% in August 2025, marking the second consecutive quarterly increase. This suggests a shift in mood: away from immediate survival mode, toward “durability, growth, innovation and productivity.”

  • Many businesses took advantage of easing cost-growth pressures: non-labour costs — historically a drain on small operators — moderated, giving firms more breathing room.

  • Consumer spending has revived modestly. Despite household retrenchment, there’s evidence of increased retail turnover, supported by falling interest rates and improving consumer confidence.

  • For some sectors — especially those that adapted to hybrid/in-store + online models — demand is buoyant. E-commerce remains a critical outlet for many small retailers and services businesses, helping offset reduced foot traffic for some.

In short: after several tough years, small businesses are seeing flickers of stability — margins ticked up, owners are more optimistic, and cash flow dynamics eased a bit for many.

⚠️ But headwinds remain — uncertainty, cost pressures, and shifting consumer behavior

  • Even though inflation has eased from the peaks of 2022, many costs remain elevated — from rent and utilities to wages, freight, and general operating expenses.

  • For many small businesses, cash flow remains a concern; some continue to struggle with liquidity, debt servicing, and juggling rising overheads against unpredictable revenue cycles.

  • Consumer spending is still conservative. Households under cost-of-living pressure are more selective. Spending on essentials continues to dominate, while discretionary expenses — non-essentials such as boutique retail, luxury services, or non-urgent hospitality — remain soft.

  • Many small operators report that growth plans — renovations, staff expansion, new outlets — remain on hold. The lingering impact of higher borrowing costs and cautious demand is still prompting many to adopt a “wait and see” stance.

  • For those reliant on discretionary spending — boutiques, specialty retailers, leisure and hospitality services — the rebound is slower and more fragile than for essential-goods retailers. Those firms remain vulnerable to even small dips in consumer confidence or spikes in costs.

So while conditions have improved, many small businesses remain in a delicate balancing act — managing costs, cash flow, and uncertainty over demand.

🔄 Adaptation, resilience — and a pivot to new models

One of the defining features of 2025 has been resilience and adaptation among small business owners:

  • Many are tightening internal operations — renegotiating leases and supplier contracts, cutting waste, reducing non-essential overheads, and scrutinising energy usage.

  • Digital transformation is gaining traction. More small retailers and service providers are investing in e-commerce, hybrid shopping models (online + in-store), and streamlining operations with technology — from inventory management to point-of-sale systems.

  • There’s also renewed focus on customer loyalty: small offers, discounts, membership/reward models — even experience-driven retail and services — to retain existing clients rather than chase new ones in a cautious market.

  • Some are diversifying into areas less dependent on discretionary spending or seasonal trends — or branching into sectors where demand remains firmer (e.g. essential retail, repair/maintenance services, local produce).

In other words: the narrative in 2025—at least for many small operators—is no longer just “survive”, but “adapt and position for the next cycle.”

📊 Macroeconomic context — the backdrop shaping small business fortunes

  • Inflation, while down from the 2022 peak, remains elevated compared with pre-pandemic norms. That has kept cost pressures — rent, utilities, wage pressure, supply costs — persistent.

  • Interest rates remain a headwind. Higher borrowing costs continue to restrict expansion and limit flexibility for many small firms.

  • Global supply chain disruptions, geopolitical uncertainty (import costs, tariffs, freight delays) continue to flow through to pricing and availability — a particular burden for small retail businesses reliant on imported goods.

  • On the flip side: as macro conditions gradually stabilise, consumer sentiment is slowly improving. With inflation moderating and interest rates forecast to soften, there is potential for a slow-burn rebound in retail and services demand.

📰 What this means for 2026 — cautious hope, conditional on adaptability

For many small retail and services businesses, 2025 feels like the first step in a long recovery. If inflation and borrowing costs continue to ease, and consumer confidence steadily builds, there is room for gradual improvement.

But success won’t come automatically — it will favour those who have adapted: diversified their offerings, tightened cost-control, embraced hybrid business models (online + offline), and focused on delivering value, convenience, or unique experiences.

For others — especially small boutique operators reliant purely on discretionary spend, or those with high fixed costs — the road remains difficult. Unless they innovate or restructure, the risk of closure or stagnation remains real.

As interest rates and inflation recede, many small businesses might get a second wind — but only if they stay lean, nimble, and responsive to changing consumer habits.

Times Magazine

Australia’s electric vehicle surge — EVs and hybrids hit record levels

Australians are increasingly embracing electric and hybrid cars, with 2025 shaping up as the str...

Tim Ayres on the AI rollout’s looming ‘bumps and glitches’

The federal government released its National AI Strategy[1] this week, confirming it has dropped...

Seven in Ten Australian Workers Say Employers Are Failing to Prepare Them for AI Future

As artificial intelligence (AI) accelerates across industries, a growing number of Australian work...

Mapping for Trucks: More Than Directions, It’s Optimisation

Daniel Antonello, General Manager Oceania, HERE Technologies At the end of June this year, Hampden ...

Can bigger-is-better ‘scaling laws’ keep AI improving forever? History says we can’t be too sure

OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman – perhaps the most prominent face of the artificial intellig...

A backlash against AI imagery in ads may have begun as brands promote ‘human-made’

In a wave of new ads, brands like Heineken, Polaroid and Cadbury have started hating on artifici...

The Times Features

The way Australia produces food is unique. Our updated dietary guidelines have to recognise this

You might know Australia’s dietary guidelines[1] from the famous infographics[2] showing the typ...

Why a Holiday or Short Break in the Noosa Region Is an Ideal Getaway

Few Australian destinations capture the imagination quite like Noosa. With its calm turquoise ba...

How Dynamic Pricing in Accommodation — From Caravan Parks to Hotels — Affects Holiday Affordability

Dynamic pricing has quietly become one of the most influential forces shaping the cost of an Aus...

The rise of chatbot therapists: Why AI cannot replace human care

Some are dubbing AI as the fourth industrial revolution, with the sweeping changes it is propellin...

Australians Can Now Experience The World of Wicked Across Universal Studios Singapore and Resorts World Sentosa

This holiday season, Resorts World Sentosa (RWS), in partnership with Universal Pictures, Sentosa ...

Mineral vs chemical sunscreens? Science shows the difference is smaller than you think

“Mineral-only” sunscreens are making huge inroads[1] into the sunscreen market, driven by fears of “...

Here’s what new debt-to-income home loan caps mean for banks and borrowers

For the first time ever, the Australian banking regulator has announced it will impose new debt-...

Why the Mortgage Industry Needs More Women (And What We're Actually Doing About It)

I've been in fintech and the mortgage industry for about a year and a half now. My background is i...

Inflation jumps in October, adding to pressure on government to make budget savings

Annual inflation rose[1] to a 16-month high of 3.8% in October, adding to pressure on the govern...