United States

Retail sales

Total receipts of retail and food-services establishments.

Frequencymonthly · +2Transformlevel

Source: OECD · MEI/US.SLRTTO01.IXOBSA.M

Stored official data
LatestN/A
MoMN/A
YoYN/A
10Y AvgN/A
Latest observationN/A
Observation load pendingThis series has a mapped provider path, but Macro by Mark has not verified chartable observations for this country, frequency, and unit yet.
  • Browse the catalogUse the Explore page to filter by readiness, recency, and rights to find a chart-ready series.
  • Try a peer countryUse the country switcher to pick a country we have hydrated for this concept. The U.S. is usually the safest first try for FRED/BLS/BEA-backed series.

Timeframe

Value transform

Version overlay

Chart appearance

Overlays & outputNBER bandsAuto Y
Axis & export

Observation load pending

This series has a mapped provider path, but Macro by Mark has not verified chartable observations for this country, frequency, and unit yet.

Source evidence

Tier 1 - critical
Source
OECD
Native key
MEI/US.SLRTTO01.IXOBSA.M
Freshness
Stored official data
History
Current only
Reuse
Dataset exceptions

Research notes

69 · Caution
Comparability
3 notes
Quality
3/6 strong
Citation
Retrieved Jun 19, 2026

Continue browsing

Series details, provenance, and revision toolsMetadata, release notes, revision history, and related series.

Series details

SourceOECD
CategoryConsumer
FrequencyMonthly
Unitcurrency
Transformslevel, mom, yoy, index 100
About this series

Total receipts of retail and food-services establishments.

About this indicator

About

Retail sales is the dollar value of merchandise sold by U.S. retail and food-service businesses, published monthly by the Census Bureau as the Monthly Retail Trade Survey. The advance estimate appears roughly two weeks after the reference month ends, with revised figures arriving the following month. The survey covers about 5,500 retail businesses, sampled to represent the universe of about 3 million retailers nationwide.

Why it matters

Consumer spending is about 70% of U.S. GDP, and retail sales is the highest-frequency look at it. The headline number drives the consumption component of nowcasting models like the Atlanta Fed's GDPNow. A surprise in the control group (retail sales excluding autos, gas, food services, and building materials) is what most economists actually watch, because it maps directly into the personal consumption expenditures category of national accounts.

How it's computed

Census collects sales totals from sampled retailers, then weights and seasonally adjusts the data. The control group strips out four volatile categories that don't map cleanly into the GDP consumption series. The series is reported in nominal dollars; analysts who want real retail sales divide by the corresponding CPI component themselves, since BEA doesn't publish a deflated headline.

Pitfalls

The advance estimate is the most-watched release but also the most revised. Holiday timing distortions (the position of Easter, the number of weekends in a month) regularly produce headline noise that the seasonal adjustment can't fully handle. E-commerce reporting was historically late and incomplete; Census now reports it separately, but cross-channel substitution still shows up in volatility. Reading the change in the control group rather than the headline avoids most of the false-signal risk during big-box sales cycles.