List Of Department Stores

This is a list of department stores. Most of these stores have many branches. The location of the flagship store is given. This list does not include large specialist stores, which sometimes resemble department stores.

Australia

  • Anthony Hordern's (long defunct)
  • Daimaru (Australian branches now closed)
  • David Jones
  • Farmers (New Zealand owned, since withdrawn from Australia)
  • Mark Foy's (long defunct)
  • Myer
  • Grace Bros. (name no longer used) - since the 1980s, Both Myer and Grace Bros. were owned by the same corporation, Coles Myer Pty. Ltd. Eventually Coles Myer renamed Grace Bros. to Myer to save money on advertising and bags etc.
  • K-mart, operated by Coles Myer
  • Big W
  • Target (just like the American Target, Target stores in Australia are called "Tar-zhay" by the clever), the chain is operated by Coles Myer

Brazil

Canada

Denmark

Finland

France

Germany

Hong Kong

Indonesia

Ireland

Japan

Netherlands

Philippines

Puerto Rico

Saudi Arabia

Singapore

South Korea

Spain

Sweden

Switzerland

United Kingdom

United States of America

  • Federated Department Stores.
    • Abraham & Straus on level with Macy's and Sterns. FDS closed both A&S and Sterns within the last few years. Both were mainly New York Stores
    • Bloomingdale's High-end department store, owned by Federated Department Stores, caters to wealthy and super-wealthy.
    • Macy's - probably the strongest nationwide middle class department store brand. In recent years this store was acquired by Federated Department Stores, caters mostly to middle and upper middle class, as well as some of the upper class. Rumors though say Bloomingdales will become even more high end and Macy's will become a lower end store, closer to the J.C. Penney level. All the names hyphenated with Macy's below will be merged directly into Macy's by the end of 2005.
  • JC Penney national department store that caters to the middle class.
  • Kohl's originally Midwest, but now national department store that caters to the lower and middle class
  • Meijer, Michigan, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky
  • Neiman Marcus, Dallas very high end department store catering to wealthy upper classes, owns Bergdorf Goodman as well competes Saks and Bloomingdales.
    • Bergdorf Goodman, currently owned by Neiman Marcus Group. This is one of Saks' competitors on 5th Avenue. The store caters to the opulent clients in New York, Long Island as well as aristocracy domestic and aboard.
  • Nordstrom national department stores competes for upper class with Lord & Taylor and Bloomingdales, but some consumers consider "Bloomies" to be even higher than Nordstrom or Lord & Taylor
  • Sears, Roebuck and Company, later Sears, originally of Chicago, its first mail order catalogs caused prices to drop all over the country, leading to their being called "the great price maker." Known better for electronics and appliances, clothing is lower end.
  • Spiegel, mostly a catalog company
  • ShopKo, regional, West/Midwest
  • Target, national, renowned as the "hip" mass-market discounter, called "Tar-zhay" by the clever
  • TJ Maxx and the TJX Companies, national off-price chain which also operates Marshalls and A.J. Wright

Defunct U.S. chains not acquired by extant chains or liquidated

See also

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