Newspapers and magazines are declining. The shops growing anyway are doing this.

Every one of the 32 newsXpress member shops in our latest benchmark study saw newspaper and magazine volumes fall between January and May 2026. Newspaper units dropped 15% to 25% at most shops. Magazine units fell almost everywhere, with revenue holding slightly better only because cover prices rose.

We want to be straight about this, because plenty of people in our channel are not. This is not a store level problem you can merchandise your way out of. It is structural. Digital substitution is permanent. Print will keep declining, and pretending otherwise wastes time and capital.

The useful question is not how do we fix magazines. It is what do we do with the space, the supplier relationships and the customer traffic that print used to drive.

Here is what the data shows. The shops in our study that grew overall revenue did not do it through print. They offset print decline with growth in gifting, collectibles and premium stationery. Our stationery data tells the same story in miniature: unit sales across 12 reporting shops fell 8.2%, but average unit price rose 6.7% as shops shifted from commodity pens and pads toward quality journals, planners and gift stationery.

The advice we give members facing print decline is specific:

  • Measure print’s true contribution. Floor space, labour and capital against gross profit. Most shops are shocked by the answer.
  • Shrink print deliberately, not by neglect. Keep the titles that earn their space, return the rest, and reclaim the fixtures.
  • Reinvest the space in categories with proven network results: considered gifts, coins, trading cards, premium stationery.
  • Use the foot traffic print still brings. Every newspaper customer walks past whatever you put between the door and the counter. Choose well.

Helping members through this transition is core to what newsXpress does, and it is included in membership. We benchmark your data against peer shops, identify which categories should take the space, connect you with the suppliers, and support the change with marketing.

Print decline is the reality of our channel. Whether it sinks your business or funds its reinvention is a choice. Our members are choosing the second option, with evidence behind every step.

The Newsagency Is History. What Comes Next Is Up to You.

In this video, Mark Fletcher holds up a copy of A Companion to the Australian Media, published in 2014. He wrote several pages for it — a section on Australian newsagencies, capturing the channel as it stood just over a decade ago.

It’s worth reading now, because the gap between then and now is significant.

Visit ten newsagencies today and you’ll find ten different businesses. Gifts, toys, cards, collectibles, books, homewares — the format has fractured entirely. Newspower, Nextra, and newsXpress all carry the word “newsagency” in some form, but the stores operating under those banners look nothing alike. That’s not a problem. It’s proof that the generic model is gone.

The pressure points are not subtle. Newspapers and magazines are down in double digits and falling. Stationery is in trouble in stores that haven’t rethought it. Lotto is moving online faster than most operators would prefer. Greeting cards are still holding, but one category does not carry a business.

The newsXpress approach is to move toward what works locally — high-margin gifts, collectibles, boutique product ranges — rather than defend a format that the market has already left behind. Members who have made that shift are trading well. Waiting for conditions to improve is not a strategy.

The history is worth knowing. The book is worth owning. But the business decisions have to be about what comes next.

Not all newsagency businesses are the same, as we note above. Those with a future are those that are moving, outside what’s expected, beyond the traditional, and this is exciting for the owners, those who work in the shops and the communities in which they thrive.

While we 100% respect every newsagent, the truth of the data is undeniable – the future newsagency businesses will be those playing outside of history, and that matters plenty.

newsXpress works with newsagents of all sizes, shapes and situations. We help newsagents enjoy their businesses more and set themselves up for a brighter future as a result. It’s hard work, rewarding work.

Our focus is on local, independent and willing.

newsXpress supports small local independent retailers to thrive. Find out more at help@newsxpress.com.au.