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The biggest store chain in the country is making a small bet on something old.
Walmart wants its shelves to look different in every town. The retailer is pushing more local goods into its stores. The goal is to lift foot traffic and lift sales of items that pay better margins.
That's the opposite of what most chains are doing. Most are cutting costs by making every store look the same.
The bet has a clear logic. A shopper in Texas wants something different than a shopper in Florida. Bigger stores rarely pull that off.
Walmart has been quietly building this for years.
Its newer "Store of the Future" sites are leading the push. The Cypress, Texas store has a Spanish-language bakery. It also has an in-store tortilla maker.
Other markets are getting bigger deli counters. Some are getting fresh produce from local farms. Others are getting dairy from nearby ranches.
Each store is built to feel like its own town's version of Walmart.
The dairy push got bigger this week. Walmart opened its third milk plant on April 29.
The new plant sits in Robinson, Texas. It sources from Texas dairy farmers. It supplies more than 650 stores in the South Central U.S. The plant also adds 400 jobs.
Walmart has done the same with greens. The chain has a deal with Plenty, an indoor farm firm. Plenty supplies fresh greens to 250 California stores from a farm in Compton.
Local sourcing is part of a much bigger play.
Walmart has pledged to spend $350 billion on items made or grown in the U.S. by 2031. Two-thirds of its U.S. spend already meets that bar.
Over 60% of its U.S. suppliers are small firms. The chain runs a "Grow with US" program to help those firms scale up.
Walmart is also remodeling more than 650 of its stores this year. It plans about 20 new store openings by early 2027.
The new layouts come with wider aisles and bigger fresh sections. They also have more pickup areas, plus updated pharmacy and vision rooms. The goal is to make each store feel local while still moving online orders fast.
Around 280 million shoppers visit Walmart stores each week. The chain runs more than 10,900 stores in 19 countries. Even small shifts on the shelf show up fast in the numbers.
Walmart's U.S. comp sales rose 4.6% in its most recent quarter. Grocery did most of the heavy lifting. Online grocery sales grew at a double-digit rate.
Fresh and local items pay higher margins than canned goods. That means trading shoppers up at the produce aisle could lift profit faster than it lifts traffic.
The local push also helps with a softer trend. Foot traffic at big-box chains has been pressured by online shopping for years. Carts get bigger. Trips get fewer.
A custom mix on the shelf is one way to bring those trips back. It's hard for an online cart to replace a store that feels like home.
The chain pulled in $713 billion of revenue in fiscal 2026. A retailer this big rarely needs new tricks.
It has one anyway.