EuroShop has always been a place to spot what’s next. But in 2026, the most important signals weren’t about spectacle or novelty, they were about infrastructure, behaviour and intent.

Our team spent time on the ground in Düsseldorf capturing what mattered beneath the surface: how brands are responding to collapsing dwell time, how experience is being re‑engineered to earn attention, how displays are becoming media channels, and why sustainability is no longer optional or cosmetic.

Read more in our EuroShop 2026 Retail Insights Report, a practical, unfiltered view of the forces shaping retail right now, and what they mean for brands designing environments for the next cycle.

Below is a snapshot of the core trends explored in the report.

AI is not a trend. It’s the infrastructure.

At EuroShop 2026, AI wasn’t confined to one hall or category. It sat underneath everything, accelerating creative production, analysing shopper behaviour, logging interactions, and turning experience into a data advantage.

What stood out wasn’t blind enthusiasm for AI, but a far more mature question: Who can help us use it responsibly, without damaging brand trust?

Retailers are looking for automation that delivers measurable impact, efficiency that genuinely improves operations, and innovation that comes with clear guardrails. In the report, we explore how this shift is widening the gap between partners who have built AI capability properly — and those still treating it as a bolt‑on.

Trend 1: You have two seconds. Maybe less.

One of the most consistent themes at EuroShop was just how dramatically dwell time has collapsed.

Across categories, brands are no longer designing for browsers, they’re designing for deciders. In some formats, the shopper now has seconds, not minutes, to understand what a product is, why it matters and how it should make them feel.

This compression has led to the Two‑Second Story Rule, a simple but unforgiving creative test that is reshaping briefs, display hierarchy and in‑store storytelling. Crucially, this isn’t being driven by instinct alone. In‑store analytics and behavioural data are now informing what earns space, what disappears and what must land instantly.

The report unpacks how brands are responding and why many current display programmes are already out of date.

Trend 2: Retail as a destination. Experience is no longer optional.

The transactional store isn’t dead, but wherever a brand has something worth visiting for, experience is now the differentiator.

From category‑defining flagships to immersive beauty and wellness environments, the strongest examples at EuroShop showed that physical retail must earn its place in a world where anything can be bought anywhere.

What’s changed underneath is just as important: experience is no longer only about brand equity. It has become a data collection mechanism. Stores that give people a reason to stay longer capture behavioural signals that transactional environments never will.

In the report, we look at why destination retail is creating both emotional connection and information advantage, and why brands that answer one key question clearly are pulling ahead.

Trend 3: The display is now a media channel.

Digital integration at EuroShop wasn’t about adding screens for effect. The work that stood out made displays smarter without making them noisier, and crucially, they were collecting data while they ran.

From fixtures that log interaction, to screens that know when someone stops, the most effective displays treated technology as a working component, not decoration. In this model, the display isn’t just a moment, it’s a channel, with purpose, measurement and feedback built in.

Trend 4: Sustainability is now load‑bearing.

At EuroShop 2026, sustainability was no longer presented as a compliance exercise or a marketing story. It was built directly into design, materials and production logic.

What stood out was how often sustainability and commercial performance were aligned. Lower‑energy screens weren’t framed as greener; they were framed as better ROI. Circular materials weren’t alternatives; they were superior systems.

As retailer requirements tighten, brands that own their material and data decisions will be better positioned than those relying on third‑party specifications. The report looks at why sustainability is becoming structurally non‑negotiable and what brands need to be thinking about now for future rollouts.

If these themes resonate, the full report explores each trend in more depth. And if you’re already thinking about how this plays out in your own retail environments, get in touch with the team to see how we’re already helping brands navigate these shifts or take a look at our services overview for more information.