Spain’s grocery market is led by one dominant national operator and a strong layer of regional cooperatives and purchasing alliances. Revenue scale determines supplier leverage, private label development, packaging negotiations and logistics investment.

The top 10 supermarkets in Spain by revenue in 2025 are Mercadona, Grupo IFA, El Corte Inglés, Eroski, Grupo DIA, Consum, Ahorramas, Bon Preu, Covirán and Uvesco.

This ranking is based on the latest publicly available FY2024 financial disclosures and includes Spain-headquartered operators only. Foreign-headquartered retailers such as Carrefour and Lidl are excluded.

Ranking Table (FY2024 Data)

Rank Company FY2024 Revenue Founded Business Model Employees
1 Mercadona €38.8B+ 1977 Integrated national chain 100,000+
2 Grupo IFA €16B+ (combined) 1967 Purchasing alliance Alliance structure
3 El Corte Inglés €13B+ (group) 1940 Department store + food retail 80,000+
4 Eroski €5.7B+ 1969 Cooperative retail group 27,000+
5 Grupo DIA ~€6B (Spain) 1979 Proximity discount chain 20,000+
6 Consum €4.3B+ 1975 Cooperative supermarket chain 19,000+
7 Ahorramas €2.4B+ 1979 Regional supermarket operator 12,000+
8 Bon Preu €2.1B+ 1974 Catalan regional chain 10,000+
9 Covirán €1.7B+ 1961 Retail cooperative network 14,000+
10 Uvesco €1.5B+ 1993 Regional supermarket operator 6,000+

Revenue figures reflect publicly reported fiscal data. Grupo IFA represents aggregated member turnover.

Ranking Criteria

This ranking evaluates:

  • Spain-headquartered supermarket operators

  • Latest available FY2024 revenue disclosures

  • Grocery-focused revenue where reported

  • Public financial statements and corporate reports

Grupo IFA is included due to its combined turnover exceeding multiple standalone operators, despite operating as a purchasing alliance.

No estimates or unofficial projections are used.

1. Mercadona

Founded in 1977 in Valencia, Mercadona is Spain’s largest supermarket operator by revenue and market share.

Core categories:

  • Fresh produce

  • Meat and seafood

  • Dairy

  • Private label packaged grocery

  • Household and personal care

Revenue reached approximately €38.8 billion in FY2024.

Mercadona operates a vertically integrated supplier model known for long-term production partnerships. It maintains centralised logistics hubs and automated distribution centres.

Its scale gives it significant influence over packaging formats, supplier negotiations and national FMCG pricing structures.

2. Grupo IFA

Founded in 1967 in Madrid, Grupo IFA is Spain’s largest supermarket purchasing alliance.

Core functions:

  • Centralised procurement

  • Private label sourcing

  • Negotiated supplier contracts

  • Distribution coordination across members

Combined turnover exceeds €16 billion based on aggregated member revenue.

Grupo IFA does not operate retail stores directly. Instead, it consolidates purchasing for more than 30 independent supermarket groups across Spain.

Its scale strengthens national negotiating leverage with FMCG manufacturers and packaging suppliers. The alliance model allows regional chains to compete with larger national operators while maintaining local branding and operational autonomy.

Within Spain’s grocery structure, Grupo IFA functions as a volume aggregation platform rather than a unified retail banner.

3. El Corte Inglés (Supercor & Hipercor)

Founded in 1940, El Corte Inglés operates supermarkets and hypermarkets through its food division.

Food retail is a major component of its overall €13B+ group revenue.

Strength areas:

  • Urban supermarket presence

  • Hypermarket format

  • Premium private label categories

Its integrated retail model connects grocery with broader non-food retail operations.

4. Eroski

Founded in 1969 in the Basque Country, Eroski operates as one of Spain’s largest cooperative supermarket groups.

Core categories:

  • Fresh produce

  • Bakery and meat counters

  • Private label grocery

  • Hypermarket and supermarket formats

Revenue exceeded €5.7 billion in FY2024.

Eroski maintains strong regional leadership in the Basque Country, Galicia and parts of northern Spain. Its cooperative ownership structure shapes pricing discipline and long-term supplier relationships differently from investor-led retail groups.

The company operates a consolidated logistics network supporting fresh category differentiation and regional sourcing strategies. Its private label development remains central to margin stability within its core territories.

5. Grupo DIA

Founded in 1979 in Madrid, Grupo DIA operates one of Spain’s largest proximity-focused discount supermarket networks.

Core categories:

  • Discount grocery

  • Private label packaged goods

  • Neighbourhood supermarket formats

  • Convenience and urban retail

Spain revenue remains near €6 billion following restructuring and selective store disposals.

DIA’s model is built around smaller store footprints located in residential and urban areas. This format strengthens local accessibility and high-frequency shopping patterns.

Private label penetration is central to its commercial positioning, supporting price competitiveness and margin control. The company’s streamlined logistics network supports rapid replenishment and cost discipline within dense metropolitan zones.

6. Consum

Founded in 1975 in Valencia, Consum is one of Spain’s largest cooperative supermarket operators.

Core categories:

  • Fresh produce

  • Meat and seafood counters

  • Private label grocery

  • Regional sourcing partnerships

Revenue exceeded €4.3 billion in FY2024.

Consum continues expanding across eastern and Mediterranean Spain, strengthening its regional footprint through both new store openings and network modernisation.

The cooperative ownership structure supports long-term supplier relationships and operational stability. The company invests significantly in automated logistics platforms and cold-chain infrastructure, reinforcing efficiency in fresh and perishable categories.

Consum’s scale positions it as one of the most structurally resilient regional operators in Spain’s grocery market.

7. Ahorramas

Founded in 1979 in Madrid, Ahorramas operates a regional supermarket network concentrated in the Madrid metropolitan area.

Core categories:

  • Fresh produce

  • Meat and fish counters

  • Private label grocery

  • Supermarket-format retail

Revenue exceeds €2.4 billion in FY2024.

Despite its limited geographic footprint, Ahorramas achieves high sales per square metre and maintains strong performance in fresh categories.

Its concentrated logistics structure supports operational efficiency within a tightly defined regional market, reinforcing competitiveness against national chains operating in the capital region.

8. Bon Preu Group

Founded in 1974 in Catalonia, Bon Preu operates the Bonpreu and Esclat supermarket banners across the region.

Core categories:

  • Supermarket and large-format retail

  • Fresh produce and meat counters

  • Private label grocery

  • Fuel retail integration

Revenue exceeds €2.1 billion in FY2024.

Bon Preu is one of the dominant regional operators in Catalonia, maintaining strong brand loyalty and local sourcing partnerships. The company continues investing in store modernisation, energy efficiency and logistics optimisation to strengthen operational control within its core territory.

Its regional scale allows it to balance local differentiation with structured procurement leverage.

9. Covirán

Established in 1961 in Granada, Covirán operates as a cooperative network of independent neighbourhood supermarkets across Spain.

Core functions:

  • Centralised procurement

  • Private label sourcing

  • Distribution and logistics support

  • Retail services for independent operators

Revenue approaches €1.7 billion in FY2024.

Covirán enables small and medium-sized retailers to access national purchasing scale while maintaining independent ownership and local branding. Its cooperative structure strengthens supply chain coordination for rural and small-town grocery markets.

The model reinforces competitive positioning for independent stores within an increasingly consolidated retail environment.

10. Uvesco (BM Supermercados)

Founded in 1993 in the Basque Country, Uvesco operates BM Supermercados across northern Spain.

Core categories:

  • Fresh produce

  • Meat and fish counters

  • Private label grocery

  • Supermarket-format retail

Revenue exceeds €1.5 billion in FY2024.

Uvesco maintains a strong regional presence in the Basque Country, Navarra and surrounding northern territories. Its operating model emphasises fresh category differentiation and local supplier integration.

The company competes closely with other regional operators for final top-10 positioning, depending on fiscal year performance and comparative revenue disclosures.

Market Structure Analysis

Spain’s grocery market shows a dual structure:

  • One dominant national leader

  • Strong regional operators

  • A powerful purchasing alliance model

Private label penetration remains structurally high, often exceeding 40% of FMCG value sales.

Revenue scale directly influences packaging decisions, supplier cost negotiations and logistics automation investment.

Regional chains maintain resilience through proximity formats and strong local sourcing strategies.

Industry Direction

Spain’s supermarket sector is entering a phase defined by operational discipline and infrastructure investment. Distribution automation continues expanding as leading operators modernise logistics hubs to improve efficiency, reduce labour intensity and strengthen replenishment speed across fresh and ambient categories. At the same time, energy efficiency investment is accelerating, with retailers upgrading refrigeration systems, warehouse insulation and store energy management platforms to manage rising utility costs and regulatory pressure.

Fresh categories remain central to traffic generation and competitive differentiation, particularly meat, produce and bakery counters, which continue to anchor store visits in both national and regional chains. Meanwhile, revenue concentration among the largest operators is reinforcing negotiating leverage across the FMCG supply chain, particularly in private label production and packaging procurement. Although competition remains intense across formats and regions, the Spanish supermarket market is becoming increasingly consolidated at the top, with scale playing a decisive role in supplier negotiations and long-term logistics planning.

Conclusion

The ranking of the top supermarkets in Spain by revenue reflects a market shaped by national scale and regional resilience within the broader Spain FMCG landscape.

Mercadona remains structurally dominant, while cooperative and regional chains continue reinforcing local market strength across Spain. Purchasing alliances aggregate significant negotiating power without unified branding, creating layered competition inside the Spanish grocery system.

Revenue concentration at the top will continue shaping supplier relationships and Spain packaging procurement dynamics through 2026, particularly in private label production and fresh category sourcing. Scale, logistics control and operational efficiency will remain decisive factors in how the Spain retail market evolves over the coming year.

Editor’s Note: All revenue figures are based on publicly available FY2024–FY2025 corporate financial disclosures and annual reports. No currency conversions were required. Grupo IFA figures reflect combined member turnover as publicly reported.