Square Report Finds Group of Loyal ‘Regulars’ Generates 6x More Revenue for Canada’s Small Businesses
The inaugural Square Local Economy Report combines anonymized transaction data from Canadian businesses with a national consumer survey. Findings reveal that “regulars” — defined as customers who visit four or more times within a year — are the backbone of Canada’s neighbourhood economies, generating significantly more annual value for local businesses.
In
“We love all of our customers, but our regulars are truly the foundation of our business,” said
Despite Financial Pressures, Canadians Want Local
While many Canadians anticipate tightening household budgets in 2026, local loyalty remains strong:
- 81% of Canadians plan to shop in their local neighbourhoods as much or more than last year
- 61% would continue supporting local businesses even if prices increase, provided value improves
- 74% visit multiple local businesses in a single trip at least occasionally
Proximity to home now ranks as the top driver of local spending decisions, ahead of price alone, followed by word-of-mouth recommendations and perceived value. Rather than retreating from local businesses, consumers are consolidating errands and favouring convenience, familiarity, and trusted experiences.
The Neighbourhood Network Effect
The report also shows that local success is increasingly driven by a “Neighbourhood Network Effect” created by shared customers and connections between nearby businesses.
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Coffee shops, in particular, act as neighbourhood anchors, frequently serving as the bridge between retail, food, and service businesses.
Although regular customers may spend slightly less per visit than one-time shoppers, their frequency and consistency have an outsized impact. The data found that 84% of regulars spend the same or more per visit once a relationship is established, helping businesses weather economic volatility.
“When Canadians build local routines — a coffee, a haircut, a quick stop at a shop — they’re doing more than running errands. They’re strengthening a connected network of neighbourhood businesses,” said
The Path Forward for Local Businesses
The path forward for local businesses is clear: loyalty doesn’t happen by accident. As local shopping habits continue to shape how Canadians spend, sellers who invest in turning customers into regulars — and in building intentional neighbourhood connections — will be best positioned to thrive. In today’s local economy, growth isn’t just about attracting customers. It’s about building the relationships and network effects that strengthen entire neighbourhoods.
For more information about The Square Local Economy Report and to read it in full, click here.
About the Square 2026 Local Economy Report Data Methodology
The Square Local Economy Report findings are derived from observed transaction-level data that is aggregated to protect confidentiality, along with nationally representative consumer research conducted in 2025. The report methodology is detailed below.
Transaction Data: Square analyzed all buyer-seller interactions from
Network Data: Square isolated all “regular” buyer-seller relationships in 2025 based on the methodology described above. Square constructed city-level networks by drawing a connection between two sellers if they share at least one regular buyer. Most analyses are based on each network’s largest connected component – i.e., the largest subgraph where there exists a path between every possible pair of nodes.
Network visualizations represent the subgraph of a given city by postcode. For each city, we select the postcode that produces a subgraph containing 10-100 sellers and the greatest number of connections to demonstrate local connectivity and ensure visualization clarity.
Marketing Data: Square analyzed statistics based on enrollment in any of the following marketing products: Email Marketing, Text Message Marketing (US only), and Loyalty Programs. We compared two groups of sellers: enrolled in a marketing product versus not. To quantify the effects of activating a marketing product, Square analyzed all sellers whose earliest activation occurred on or after
Consumer Survey Methodology: Square and Studio by Informa TechTarget conducted an independent survey of 1,010 consumers in
Cash App Data: Cash
About Square
Square helps businesses turn transactions into connections and businesses into neighborhood favorites.
In 2009, Square started with a simple invention – the first mobile card reader, which changed how the entire financial system thinks about small businesses. Square has since grown into a global business platform helping millions of sellers of all sizes participate and thrive in their communities.
Whether independently run or a global chain, Square understands that sellers succeed when they have the freedom to focus on the experiences that keep customers coming back. From point of sale and payments to online commerce, staff management, cash flow tools, and more, Square brings together the tools sellers need to run and grow on one intelligent platform. For more information, visit www.square.ca.
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