Advertisement
Advertisement
Home Blog Page 96

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web For January 29, 2026

Canadian Retail News From Around The Web

News at a Glance

Retail Insider is streamlining its Canadian retail news from around the web to include a handful of top news stories that can be viewed quickly during the day. Here are the top stories from the past 48 hours.

Furniture sales continue to slump in tandem with real estate market (Globe & Mail)

Metro CEO says consumers still shopping at discount banners amid high food prices (Canadian Press)

Amazon employees in Canada told about layoffs through premature internal email (CBC)

Empire reshapes e-commerce strategy, closes Alberta facilities (Grocery Business)

Calgary gold retailers see ‘huge increase’ in business as precious metal prices soar (CBC)

Canadian PM Carney announces series of measures aimed at lowering food costs (Reuters)

Jim Pattison Developments says sale of warehouse to ICE ‘still subject to certain approvals’ (Vancouver Sun)

Healthy Planet to open new locations in Ontario, uses e-commerce to reach national customers (Grocery Business)

Sheena Rioux takes on director, retail sales role at Sofina Foods Canada (Grocery Business)

How the K-shaped economy is splitting B.C. retail (Business in Vancouver)

Edmonton’s retail market called resilient in new report (CBC)

Why convenience retail in Canada needs a food-led reset (Grocery Business)

5 charged in arson, extortion offences targeting Winnipeg convenience store owners, police say (CBC)

Japanese strawberries enter Canadian retail at $30 per pack (Hortidaily)

Opinion: Alberta can lower food prices by banning supermarket property controls (Edmonton Journal)

Rutland Home Hardware now a Rona location, ownership stays the same (Castanet)

Tim Hortons dismisses exit rumors, plans 50 new stores in Korea (Joonang)

AI-enabled fraud surges as most retailers remain unprepared, Deloitte warns

Photo: Nataliya Vaitkevich
Photo: Nataliya Vaitkevich

According to Deloitte’s latest report on AI enabled fraud in retail, only 3% of retailers feel well prepared to address AI-enabled fraud risks. 

As retailers embrace AI-driven innovation, fraudsters are using the same technology to launch more complex, scalable attacks. In just one quarter, retailers with high AI adoption saw a 37% spike in fraudulent traffic. Additionally, 69% of retailers experienced AI-enabled fraud in the past year, and 87% expect fraud to keep rising. 

Kevin Luh, a partner responsible for fraud strategy and transformation at Deloitte, explained that the problem isn’t about awareness, as most retail leaders do recognize the importance of AI-enabled fraud. 

The gaps are in the execution. The 97% of retailers struggle in three areas, he noted:

  • Funding Constraints – fraud initiatives are deprioritized over other growth initiatives
  • Resource Limitation – limited or no specialized fraud and AI skillsets to implement or operationalize the strategy to mitigate AI-enabled fraud
  • Technology Effectiveness – limitations of the legacy technology that wasn’t built for the new world of AI-enabled, high-velocity attacks
Kevin Luh
Kevin Luh

“In short, retailers aren’t ignoring the risk, but they face the agility challenges to implement changes,” said Luh.

He said the 37% spike isn’t about retailers adopting AI, but rather it is tied to LLM(Large Language Models)-referred shopping traffic. 

“When a consumer uses tools like ChatGPT to browse, compare, and make a payment, those transactions are 1.7 times more likely to be fraudulent than a consumer visiting the eCommerce site directly. The elevated fraud risk includes the use of stolen credit cards, abuse of customer-friendly return policies, and promotional loopholes,” said Luh.

“The blind spot is that LLM-referred traffic masks many signals that retailers rely on to identify fraud, such as device fingerprints, digital behavioural telemetry, and session patterns, making the fraudulent behaviours indistinguishable from legitimate consumers.”

Traditional fraud controls were implemented for a world where attack patterns change slowly and over time. In an AI-driven environment, he noted: 

  • Tuning cycles are too slow – Fraudsters can generate different sorts of attacks quickly and change their attack pattern to evade known detection, but retailers often need hours, days, or weeks to manually tune the systems to ensure limited or no disruption to legitimate consumers.
  • Limitation of detecting bot-like behaviours – Retailers rely on identifying bot-like behaviours as they are more prone to being fraudulent; however, with more consumers using LLM agents for online shopping, those digital telemetry and device fingerprint signals have become unreliable.

“Customer trust is foundational and difficult to rebuild once lost. As retailers pursue growth opportunities enabled by agentic AI, fraud and security needs should be treated as design inputs rather than an afterthought,” added Luh.

“For many leading organizations, security and fraud risk considerations are already embedded in the design rather than being retrofitted after incidents occur to achieve balanced growth, customer experience, and brand reputation”.

For retailers facing budget and talent constraints, what are the first two or three high-impact actions they should take now to modernize their fraud strategy and reduce risk within the next 12 months? Luh said there are two highest-impact actions that retailers can consider:

  1. Conduct a focused fraud-risk assessment to prioritize near-term investment areas – identify and estimate potential exposure to new and emerging fraud risks, evaluate existing capabilities, and highlight critical gaps to address. This ensures funding priority to focus on immediate-term initiatives.
  2. Expand external intelligence and partnership – acknowledge retailers cannot out-innovate the fraudster alone. In addition to upskilling the internal staff, augment defences with the expanded use of external consortium intelligence from solution providers, networks, and payment partners.

More from Retail Insider:

New Walmart Supercentre coming to Alberta in southwest Edmonton

Photo- Walmart
Photo- Walmart

To better serve its customers in Edmonton, Walmart Canada says a new Supercentre is expected to open in 2027 in Desrochers Village, on Heritage Valley Trail SW.

The retail said the approximately 140,000 square-foot southwest Edmonton Supercentre will feature:

  • A full grocery department with fresh produce, bakery, fresh protein assortment (including chicken, beef, pork and seafood) and deli
  • Its full general merchandise assortment, including home, electronics and apparel
  • A Pharmacy

It said customers will be able to access Walmart Canada’s full online order pickup and delivery options for grocery and general merchandise.

Kelly Voisin
Kelly Voisin

“We’ve been part of the Edmonton community since 1994 and can’t wait to bring a new Supercentre to the community, helping to make it even more convenient to shop with Walmart,” said Kelly Voisin, Director, Real Estate, Walmart Canada. “This new store is part of our $6.5 billion investment announced in 2025 that will bring even more Supercentres and our everyday low prices to customers across the country.”

In 2025, Walmart Canada said it announced a $6.5 billion investment over the next five years to expand its store and supply chain footprint. As part of this plan, in 2025 Walmart Canada opened new Supercentres in Port Credit and Oakville in Ontario and grand opened its Ambient Distribution Centre in Vaughan, ON. So far, six new Supercentres are slated to open over the next two years: Fort McMurray, AB, Sherbrooke, QC, Tsuut’ina Nation, AB, Hamilton, ON, London, ON, and Edmonton, AB. In addition, the Squamish, BC Walmart store will become a Supercentre, adding fresh grocery to our existing assortment to better serve itscustomers.

Walmart Canada operates 59 stores in Alberta, including 12 in Edmonton, and employs over 14,000 associates in the province. 

More from Retail Insider:

VIDEO: Canadian retailers face structural supply chain reckoning: Gary Newbury

Canadian retailers are confronting a fundamentally different supply chain environment where past operating models no longer work, according to Gary Newbury, an expert in end-to-end retail supply chain networks.

Newbury says many retailers are still relying on systems and processes designed for a far simpler, pre-2019 world. While global disruptions over the past few years exposed vulnerabilities, he argues that the real shift is the disappearance of any margin for error. Cost pressures from labour, transportation, inventory carrying and tariffs are now structural, not temporary, making it impossible to negotiate or spreadsheet costs away.

According to Newbury, supply chain cost should be treated as a design issue. Retailers that expect conditions to “return to normal” are already behind, as expenses continue to rise and flexibility continues to shrink. Sustainable cost control, he notes, requires re-engineering how goods flow through the network, not simply cutting headcount or squeezing vendors.

He also points to last-mile fulfillment as a growing challenge. E-commerce options such as same-day delivery, click-and-collect and free returns expanded rapidly, but often without sufficient operational control. Newbury says service promises are increasingly misaligned with economic reality, particularly as return volumes and reverse logistics costs climb.

On automation and artificial intelligence, Newbury urges pragmatism over hype. While he supports targeted automation, he cautions that most retailers are not ready for fully autonomous supply chains. The greatest value today comes from process clarity, reliable data and disciplined execution rather than ambitious, futuristic visions.

Cyber risk and AI governance are also rising concerns as retailers expose more systems to suppliers and partners. Newbury says control will matter more than novelty heading into 2026.

Finally, he describes sourcing volatility as a board-level risk. Tariffs, geopolitical uncertainty and foreign exchange fluctuations are forcing retailers to rethink global sourcing, with nearshoring emerging as a risk-management strategy rather than a cost play.

Overall, Newbury emphasizes that supply chain resilience is now a strategic imperative for Canadian retail.

More from Retail Insider:

Restaurants Canada encouraged by federal government’s announcement of new food affordability measures

Photo: Tima Miroshnichenko
Photo: Tima Miroshnichenko

Restaurants Canada says it is encouraged by this week’s announcement by the federal government of an enhanced GST credit to deal with food affordability, and new investments in Canada’s food production and supply chain infrastructure. 

“This announcement is a move in the right direction in taking action to address the real challenges that Canadians are facing with escalating food costs, an issue we have been actively discussing with the federal government and parliamentarians over the past year,” explained Kelly Higginson, President and CEO, Restaurants Canada.

“Millions of Canadians rely on restaurants daily for some of their meals, but restaurants are also one of the first discretionary spending categories that Canadians cut from their budgets when they are struggling. In a 2025 survey, 75% of Canadians told us they are reducing their restaurant visits due to cost-of-living increases. As a result, 41% of restaurants are operating at a loss or just breaking even, up from 12% in 2019.

“The foodservice industry is the fourth-largest private sector employer in the country, with nearly 1.2 million employees, including 500,000 youth. Addressing food affordability helps to strengthen restaurants’ ability to hire and train the next generation of workers and support the prosperity of every community across the country.

Kelly Higginson
Kelly Higginson

“While the GST credit increase will help the hardest-hit Canadians afford daily essentials, including meals purchased from restaurants, we will continue to work with the government on broader affordability measures, including exempting all food from GST, as it did during the 2025 GST holiday.”

Earlier this week, the federal government said the global landscape is rapidly changing, leaving economies, businesses, and workers under a cloud of uncertainty. 

“In response, Canada’s new government is focused on what we can control: building a stronger economy to make life more affordable for Canadians. To that end, we are securing new trade and investment partnerships abroad and building our strength at home – to create good career opportunities with higher wages for Canadians,” it said. 

“Our plan is moving Canada’s economy from reliance to resilience, though some of the biggest long-term payoffs of this transformation will take time to be felt. To ensure Canadians have the support they need right now, the government has introduced a series of new measures to bring down costs – including cutting taxes for 22 million Canadians, supercharging homebuilding, and protecting and expanding vital social programs.”

Prime Minister Mark Carney introduced new measures to make groceries and other essentials more affordable:

1.    Putting more money back in Canadians’ pockets

  • The government is introducing the new Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit – formerly the Goods and Services Tax (GST) Credit. We are increasing its amount by 25% for five years beginning in July 2026.
  • In addition to that, we are providing a one-time payment, equivalent to a 50% increase this year.
    • Combined, this means that a family of four will receive up to $1,890 this year, and about $1,400 a year for the next four years; and a single person will receive up to $950 this year, and about $700 a year for the next four years.
    • The new Canada Groceries and Essentials Benefit will provide additional, significant support for more than 12 million Canadians.
Prime Minister Mark Carney
Prime Minister Mark Carney

2.    Tackling food insecurity, supporting producers, and strengthening supply chains

  • The government is setting aside $500 million from the Strategic Response Fund to help businesses address the costs of supply chain disruptions without passing those costs on to Canadians at the checkout line.
  • For the same purpose, the government will create a $150 million Food Security Fund under the existing Regional Tariff Response Initiative for small and medium enterprises and the organisations that support them.
  • To lower the cost of food production, we are introducing immediate expensing for greenhouse buildings. This allows producers to fully write off greenhouses acquired on or after November 4, 2025, and that become available for use before 2030. This measure supports increased domestic supply and investment in food production over the medium-term.
  • To ease immediate pressures with food banks, the government is providing $20 million to the Local Food Infrastructure Fund. This supports food banks and other national, regional, and local organisations to deliver more nutritious food to families in need.
  • To tackle the root causes of food insecurity, we are developing a National Food Security Strategy – one that strengthens domestic food production and improves access to affordable, nutritious food.
  • This strategy will also include measures to implement unit price labelling and support the work of the Competition Bureau in monitoring and enforcing competition in the market, including food supply chains.

“One of the best things about Canada is that you don’t have to be born rich to succeed. To protect that fundamental value, we are building a stronger economy that benefits everyone – creating thousands of new career opportunities with better wages. We’re also bringing in new measures to lower costs and make sure Canadians have the support they need now. We’re building Canada strong, because we’re strongest when we look after each other and when we ensure everyone has the chance to get ahead,” said Carney.

More from Retail Insider:

Canadians turn to AI for shopping, but trust remains the biggest barrier: IBM study

Photo: Andrea Piacquadio
Photo: Andrea Piacquadio

The annual global IBM consumer retail study, recently released in collaboration with National Retail Federation (NRF), indicates Canadians are moving from browsing to guided buying:

  • Nearly half of Canadians (45%) use AI in their shopping journey (research, reviews, deals)
  • AI app usage is up 82% in two years.
  • Conversational commerce (chat/voice/messaging) is becoming a primary interface for discovery and purchase.

But trust is the new battleground: 

  • only 19% trust AI recommendations outright
  • Canadians want AI agents that do the work like deal hunters, service agents, review guides, personal shoppers.
Jayme Johnson
Jayme Johnson

“Canadians aren’t just browsing. Nearly half now use AI during their shopping journey, and adoption of AI apps has surged 82% in two years. This isn’t just a tech trend. It’s a shift in how decisions are made. Retailers that embed trust and transparency into these experiences will turn convenience into confidence, and confidence into loyalty,” said Jayme Johnson, Partner & Industry Leader, IBM Consulting Canada.

Retailers and Brands quoted in the study: 

Matthieu Houle
Matthieu Houle

Matthieu Houle, CIO at ALDO Group: “AI is turning shopping into a trusted conversation, much more than a search. Consumers now rely on assistants that feel almost human, know their preferences, and offer neutral, best-for-me advice that reshapes how they validate and decide what to buy.”

Byron Ells
Byron Ells

Byron Ells, Vice President, Marketing Technology and Digital Experience, Sobeys: “How do you make sure an agent is choosing your brand over another? What’s the role of the brand or retailer? These are interesting questions that we need to answer.”  

Key Insights – Canadian data 

  1. AI Adoption & Shopping Behaviors
    • AI adoption in Canada is accelerating, with nearly half (45%) of consumers using AI in their shopping journey from researching products (42%) to finding deals (28%).
    • Canadian use of AI apps surged 82% in two years, outpacing global growth (62%), signaling a rapid shift toward conversational commerce.
    •  Despite this digital shift, 82% of Canadians still shop in-store, highlighting a hybrid shopping model.
    • Bottomline: AI is reshaping the shopping journey, guiding consumers as they research, discover and decide what to buy.
  2. Digital Retail Preferences
    • Consumers want convenience and integration: 28% seek super apps combining commerce and services, 24% want smart-home shopping with AI personal shoppers and autonomous delivery, and 27% look for effortless social platform purchasing.
    • While 40% value beautiful stores with no wait times, AI-powered solutions are nearly as important for Canadian shoppers.
  3. Trust & Data Sharing
    • Trust remains critical: 52% of Canadians are comfortable sharing data, but concerns about privacy (45%), misuse (39%), and data resale (34%) persist.
    • Only 19% trust AI recommendations outright, while 22% cross-reference sources and 14% validate social media content before making decisions.
  4. AI Agents Desired by Canadians
    • AI agents are moving from concept to reality: Canadians want practical helpers—39% want a deal hunter, 33% a customer service agent, 27% a product review agent, and 23% a personal shopper.

The interesting thing I’m seeing is consumer preferences of where they want AI to help them in the shopping journey. There are some obvious ones that we probably know and maybe even use ourselves around researching products, finding reviews, and finding a good deal,” explained Johnson.

“What’s interesting is some of the other areas that are lower in terms of a percentage right now, but I think show us where AI is going in terms of what customers want, and therefore what retailers are going to have to do to be able to interact not just with us as human consumers, but even to interact with AI as a shopping agent working on our behalf and maybe shopping without us intervening to make a decision, as long as it falls within the parameters we set out.”

Sharing data a key part of AI experience

Johnson said consumers must be okay to share their data which is a key part of the AI experience.

Many Canadian consumers are comfortable sharing their data, but brands have to earn and keep our trust with that data. Many consumers are still worried about data privacy, security, that the data’s going to be misused or sold without their consent, or that they’re going to get unwanted ads or messages,” she said.

“So when organizations and retailers think about data and how to build that trust, there are elements of security and transparency. They need to look within their organization. They’ve got vast and varied data, often scattered across the enterprise, and they need to figure out how best to bring that together in a secure, compliant way where it’s governed across the enterprise—especially where you have sensitive customer information.

“Then, if you’re using AI and building and scaling AI that’s using that data, you and I as consumers need to have transparency into what was used and how it was used to generate the feedback, insight, or decision coming out of those AI models.”

Photo: Kampus Production
Photo: Kampus Production

Grocery sector leveraging digital channels

Johnson said she’s seeing differences across segments. 

“Grocery, especially where you’ve got home delivery and capabilities through a mobile app or website, is leveraging digital channels that already exist to infuse AI, not only for the retailer, but for the shopper in that digital channel.

“But we see it across the spectrum . . . They’re all using it in different ways. I think it also comes down to brand authenticity. The experience of grocery is different than, say, a Canada Goose or a lululemon, or someone in apparel or fitness, or buying a car or appliances.

“They’re all leveraging it. Many are still experimenting, and I think that’s where we’re going to start to see more of a pivot to more robust, enterprise-wide, AI-first digital channels and AI models, versus experimenting here and there.

“At the end of the day, you can think of it like agents talking to agents. My personal shopping AI is going to work with my deal-hunter AI agent, which is connected into my purchasing agent, and all of these come together to orchestrate everything. This is where experimenting needs to evolve into more of an enterprise AI-first operating model. Part of that is starting to think about AI as a consumer segment. Just like they target you and me as humans, as AI agents start making decisions for us, retailers need to get product data, store data, and promotion data out to agents in a way that’s readable, understandable, digestible, and actionable so those agents can make decisions on our behalf.

“I think the trend we’re starting to see is more focus on a unique consumer segment and a unique entry point for commerce that’s machine and AI, not just the human side.”

More from Retail Insider:

Food waste cuts that protect margins witha shelf-life strategy

Food waste is one of those problems that hides in plain sight. It’s easy to talk about “shrink” like it’s a fixed cost of doing business, but most waste comes from a few preventable breakdowns: unclear dating rules, inconsistent rotation, small cold-chain misses, and waiting too long to act.

The good news is you don’t need a big program to see results. A shelf-life strategy is mostly about removing guesswork and making earlier, smaller decisions—while product still has value. For US retail teams, that can mean fewer write-offs, calmer markdowning, and a fresher-looking department that customers trust.

Why shelf life is a margin lever, not just a quality issue

Shelf life is the time you can sell at full value. When that window shrinks—because of heat
exposure, rough handling, poor rotation, or confusion about dates—your options narrow fast. You end up chasing product with last-minute markdowns, pulling items too early “just in case,” or throwing away sellable inventory because nobody is sure what the rule is.

This hurts more when food costs rise. Every case costs more, so every unit wasted hurts more. And when shoppers are more value-focused, late discounting can train people to wait for stickers. The goal isn’t to stretch product past its best days. It’s to manage time intentionally so sell-through happens earlier and more predictably.

Shelf-life strategy: where margin is won or lost

A shelf-life strategy works when it’s operational, not theoretical. It should tell store teams what to do at receiving, on the shelf, and during the last third of a product’s life—without turning every decision into a debate.

Reduce date-label confusion so teams don’t over-trash inventory

In the US, date labels can be messy: “sell by,” “best by,” and “use by” can mean different things depending on the product and manufacturer. That confusion drives waste in stores and at home. A useful reference point is the FDA and USDA update on food date labeling, which explains why clearer, more consistent quality-based labeling can reduce unnecessary waste.

In practice, stores need one clear internal interpretation per category, tied to your food safety program. What triggers a markdown? What triggers a quality check? What triggers removal? When the rules are consistent, teams stop defaulting to “throw it out” just to be safe.

Make rotation a process, not a reminder

Rotation fails when it depends on memory. People get busy, deliveries land at bad times, and the fastest path becomes “put it wherever it fits.” That’s how older product gets buried and quietly expires.

Design for FEFO (first-expire, first-out) in a way that’s hard to skip. Receiving should naturally place new stock behind existing stock. Shelf tags and case labeling should make short-dated product obvious. If the only way to do it right is extra effort, it won’t stick across dozens of stores.

Treat temperature discipline like a margin control

Cold-chain misses don’t always look dramatic. Sometimes it’s a back-room cooler running a bit warm during peak traffic, a pallet sitting too long before being worked, or a display case
struggling when doors open nonstop.

Those misses shorten shelf life, which forces more markdowning and more pulls. A shelf-life strategy should include repeatable temperature checks and clear accountability—not a one-time audit. If you only look at temperature when there’s an incident, you’ll keep paying for it in shrink.

Packaging, formulation, and supplier reality: shelf life starts upstream

Retailers often talk about shelf life like it’s purely a store execution issue, but upstream choices matter. Packaging performance, formulation stability, and how a product tolerates real handling conditions all shape the true quality window.

If you work with private label or supplier partners, ask questions that connect directly to waste. How stable is the product under expected store conditions? How sensitive is it to small temperature swings? What are the earliest signs of quality decline that store teams can recognize?

Some suppliers operate across ingredients, agriculture, and specialty materials that intersect with shelf-life outcomes. ICL Group is one example, with businesses spanning inputs and specialty categories connected to food supply chains. Shelf life is influenced by upstream decisions, so it helps when retailers understand what’s driving product stability and variability.

The “sell it earlier” moves that reduce waste without training customers to wait

Waste prevention isn’t only about pulling less. It’s about selling more of what you already
brought in—earlier, and with less drama.

A common mistake is waiting until the last day to act. By then, the markdown has to be steep to move units, and the product is less appealing. Earlier, smaller markdowns can protect margin better than late, aggressive discounts.

Define a simple glide path: full price in the prime window, modest markdown in the risk window, and removal only when quality warrants it. That keeps the department looking fresh while still capturing value.

This is also where customer price sensitivity matters. When budgets tighten, shoppers watch deals more closely, but that doesn’t automatically mean “discount harder.” It means your timing needs to be cleaner so you’re not forced into end-of-life clearance. Retail Insider’s reporting on Black Friday 2024 value focus is Canada-specific, but the behavior shift is familiar in the US too: people compare more, and they notice inconsistency faster.

Date labels and customer trust

Customer trust is part of shelf-life performance. When shoppers don’t understand dates, they either hesitate to buy or they return product they believe is expired. When staff aren’t confident, they pull too early and waste climbs.

A helpful baseline is the USDA FSIS guidance on food product dating, which explains common date phrases and reinforces that many dates are about quality while emphasizing safe handling. You don’t need to turn stores into classrooms. You just need consistency.

Conclusion: earlier action is what protects margin

Food waste cuts that protect margins don’t come from one big initiative. They come from doing the basics with less uncertainty and earlier action: clearer dating rules, rotation that’s built into the workflow, temperature discipline that’s repeatable, and markdown timing that keeps value in the product instead of waiting until it’s too late.

Retailers are already feeling how supply and pricing shocks amplify the cost of waste. Retail
Insider’s coverage of chicken shortages pushing retail prices higher is a reminder that when
input costs climb, shrink becomes a louder margin problem—fast. A shelf-life strategy is one of the most practical ways to respond, because it’s built for day-to-day execution, not a one-time reset.

Affordable Glasses That Match Your Business Wardrobe – Where to Shop Smart

In This Article:

Eyeglasses are a fundamental part of a professional’s daily wardrobe. The right pair can help convey confidence, intelligence and attention to detail in a business environment. More importantly, it can affect how others perceive you. Discover the top stores that offer affordable, stylish glasses.

1.   Eyemart Express

Eyemart Express is where you can find the best value glasses for business attire. It operates as a hybrid retailer with a strong online presence and over 250 stores nationwide. The brand delivers stylish, high-end quality glasses with exceptional speed. Around 80% of glasses are finished in under an hour, making the shop ideal for busy professionals who need reliable eyeglasses without a long wait.

Eyemart Express carries sophisticated designer brands like Michael Kors and Halston, which offer stylish frames perfect for the boardroom. The brand also offers a range of classic, versatile frame shapes, such as ovals and rectangles, in neutral tones that complement any business attire. Its standout feature is having labs in most stores. Unlike online-only stores, you can receive expert, hands-on service, ensuring a perfect fit and on-the-spot adjustments.

2.   Zenni Optical

Zenni Optical is a massive online marketplace with an enormous collection of affordable eyewear. In 2025, the brand has made over 70 million pairs and donated over 2 million pairs of glasses to charities and communities. The collection is regularly updated to feature modern and fashionable designs. Find quality and stylish glasses under $30 and receive your pair in as fast as two business days.

The catalog has thousands of classic and conservative styles suitable for any professional environment. You can easily find minimalist metal frames, traditional rectangular styles and subtle tortoiseshell patterns. Affordability lets you purchase several pairs for less than the price of one elsewhere.

3.   Target Optical

Target Optical offers best-value glasses that match several business attire styles. Whether you’re a corporate executive or stylish employee, the shop has versatile options. The catalog features various brands, separated into five starting price points to help you shop within your budget. Choose from affordable lens packages with add-ons, such as lens thickness and treatments.

Target Optical accepts most insurance plans, including UnitedHealthcare Vision and Humana. It allows you to save on popular brands known for their professional appeal, such as Coach, Oakley and Ray-Ban. Shops offer eye exams by an on-site optometrist, so you can shop for stylish frames immediately. Enjoy free returns and refunds within 90 days of purchase.

4.   Zeelol

Zeelol is an online marketplace ideal for people who value style and affordability. The brand has a dedicated “Professional Life” category that offers sleek and sophisticated designs. Find various shapes, including squares, rectangles, butterflies, cat-eyes and more. You can also shop by material, featuring metal, titanium, plastic, wood and acetate.

While known for bold styles, Zeelol has a category for glasses under $20, featuring geometric clear, cat-eye, tortoise and oval-shaped glasses. The website also offers valuable resources to help you choose the right frame for your face shape and preferences. You can try the virtual try-on to see if your chosen pair fits your style.

5.   Eyebuydirect

Eyebuydirect is an online-only eyewear store that offers affordable products. It is where you can find classic styles and trendy products, making it ideal for professionals who enjoy making a statement at the office. Choose from various frame shapes, sizes and colors. Customize your pair based on your unique specifications and preferences, including coatings.

Eyebuydirect is an excellent choice for professionals, offering its own line of sophisticated options and a collection of premium brands like Armani Exchange and Ray-Ban. It also launches frequent promotions featuring discounts of up to 50%. Expect to receive your custom pair within seven to 14 business days. However, if you wish to receive it instantly, the shop charges a small fee for two-day delivery.

Methodology for Selecting the Brands Offering the Best Value Glasses

The criteria for choosing the suppliers were based on a specific set of factors:

  • Price and overall value: The retailers offer competitive pricing and exceptional value. The best value is not automatically the shop that offers the lowest prices — it is also the one that provides features like frequent promotions, inclusion of basic lenses and transparent costs.
  • Professional styles: All brands feature a strong collection of frames suitable for a professional environment. This includes classic rectangles and ovals, sophisticated metal materials and neutral-colored frames.
  • Quality customer service: These brands offer excellent service and features, such as rush shipping, return policies, insurance options, and expert assistance.
  • Shopping experience: The suppliers provide a seamless shopping experience, whether in-store or online. Features like virtual try-on tools, categories, search filters, and the convenience of physical locations for exams and fittings.

Frequently Asked Questions About Professional Glasses

Learn more about professional-looking eyewear before investing in a pair.

What Frame Styles Are Best for a Professional Setting?

Traditional shapes, such as rectangles and ovals, are your safest options. These offer a timeless appearance suitable for a variety of business events and corporate settings. Metal frames in gold, silver or black make you look sharp. For plastics, oval and semi-rimless shapes are solid choices. Neutral colors are the most versatile. Consider brown, black, gray and tortoiseshell patterns, as they complement most business wardrobes.

How Often Should You Replace Your Professional Eyewear?

It depends on your prescription and the frame’s condition. Have a comprehensive eye exam at least once in your 20s and twice in your 30s. If you experience headaches or eye fatigue, your current prescription may be outdated. As for the frames, you should replace them when they show signs of wear and tear, such as discoloration, loose hinges or a poor fit that can’t be adjusted.

Are Blue-Light-Filtering Lenses Worth It?

Yes, especially if you spend several hours daily in front of a computer screen. Blue light glasses can help reduce digital eyestrain, with many users reporting improved visual performance and better sleep quality. Eyemart Express offers blue-light glasses, such as the scratch-resistant UltraXHD lenses, that help block ultraviolet light. You could also check lenses with anti-reflective and anti-glare coatings that help improve comfort.

Knowing Where to Find the Best Value Glasses for Business Attire

Finding high-value, professional glasses requires proper research. These suppliers offer excellent options for every budget and style preference, from classic to trendy pairs. Explore these shops, find the pair that can help sharpen your professional image and make your purchase.

The Growing Popularity of Functional Training Machines in Canada: Budget-Friendly Shopping Guide

Finding the right functional training machine in Canada can transform your workouts. The right equipment improves performance, supports proper form, reduces injury risk, and keeps your workouts efficient and effective. With so many options available, it’s essential to focus on quality, versatility and durability. Whether you’re lifting, doing HIIT circuits or full-body conditioning, the right machine helps you reach your goals.

In this Article

Choose the Best Functional Training Machines in Canada

Top Budget-Friendly Functional Training Machines in Canada

Functional Trainer and All-in-One Gym Comparative Table

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Wrapping up Your Functional Trainer Decision

Choose the Best Functional Training Machines in Canada

Consider key factors before buying the perfect machine, such as:

  • Versatility and functionality: It supports multiple exercises and training styles, from strength to functional movements.
  • Build quality and durability: Sturdy construction and high-quality materials ensure long-term use.
  • Adjustability and progression: Adjustable resistance or attachments allow gradual strength gains.
  • Space and footprint: Fits your available space without compromising movement or safety.
  • Warranty and customer support: Reliable coverage and accessible support ensure peace of mind and long-term satisfaction.

Top Budget-Friendly Functional Training Machines in Canada

These top budget-friendly functional training machines deliver versatility, quality and performance without breaking the bank, making them ideal for home gyms across Canada.

1. The Treadmill Factory IRONAX XFT — Best Functional Trainer Overall

The Treadmill Factory is a proudly Canadian fitness equipment retailer that has supported Canadians’ health and performance goals for over 35 years. With physical locations across Ontario and Alberta and nationwide shipping, the company makes premium fitness equipment accessible to both home and commercial buyers. The IRONAX XFT Functional Trainer delivers a full-body training experience that supports strength, mobility and confidence-building in one compact footprint.

The IRONAX XFT lets you transition smoothly between upper- and lower-body exercises, keeping workouts efficient without multiple machines. Dual 200-pound weight stacks and adjustable pulleys provide scalable resistance and hundreds of movement options, supporting functional strength for daily life or sport. Its sturdy steel frame ensures stable, repeatable workouts, making it a smart, long-term investment at a competitive Canadian price.

Key features:

  • Smooth aluminum pulleys for fluid motion and consistent workout rhythm
  • Integrated storage to keep attachments organized and workouts focused
  • Optional add-ons like landmine, dip station and half rack kit to expand training options

2. Northern Fitness GRID All-In-One Packages — Best for Versatility

Northern Fitness is a Canadian-owned company that puts customer experience at the center of every purchase. The team curates top-quality equipment and offers expert guidance, while the GRID All-In-One Packages combine popular training systems into a single setup. Choose a Functional Trainer + Half Rack or upgrade with a Smith Machine, featuring an all-in-one compact footprint.

This modular design supports strength, hypertrophy and functional movement without cluttering your space. Built from 3-by-3-inch 11-gauge steel, the rack delivers the stability and confidence that severe training demands. Dual 200-pound weight stacks allow smooth, progressive resistance for cable-based workouts that adapt as goals evolve. Laser-cut numbering speeds up adjustments, keeping sessions focused and efficient.

Key features:

  • Integrated half rack for smooth transitions between free weights and cables
  • Optional attachments like a bench, dip station and footplate to increase exercise variety
  • Premium matte black finish for a polished, professional look

3. Fitness Experience Body-Solid GS348Q Series 7 Smith Machine — Best for Natural Movements

Fitness Experience is a Canadian fitness equipment specialist known for high-quality products, expert guidance, and tailored solutions for home and commercial spaces. The Body-Solid GS348Q Series 7 Smith Machine features a seven-degree reversed-pitch design. This angle follows natural movement patterns instead of a fixed vertical path.

This angled design boosts muscle engagement while reducing joint strain during presses, squats and pulls. A linear ball-bearing system delivers smooth, controlled reps, while 20 lock-out points activate with a simple bar rotation for safe solo training. The integrated 14-position gun rack follows the same seven-degree angle, ensuring consistent lift-off and racking for free-weight movements.

Key features:

  • Centralized weight stack for quick, efficient load changes
  • Premium pulleys and enclosed cables for quiet, smooth motion
  • Precision, versatility and a polished, long-lasting training experience

4. MAXUM X2 Functional Trainer Power Rack Home Gym — Best Compact Machine

MAXUM Fitness is a Canada-based brand founded by fitness enthusiasts that creates high-quality home gym equipment at accessible prices. The MAXUM X2 Functional Trainer Power Rack Home Gym offers commercial-level versatility in a compact footprint. It combines a functional trainer, power rack and optional Smith Machine into a single, streamlined system that replaces an entire gym.

Patented articulating arms allow wide flys and crossovers, then move inward for rows and pulldowns. Dual 220-pound stacks provide smooth, scalable resistance, while 3-by-3-inch stainless steel uprights ensure durability. MAXUM delivers reliable, high-quality strength equipment with full design control and strong warranties.

 Key features:

  • Compact layout maximizes training options in limited spaces, perfect for home gyms and garages
  • High-quality pulleys and aircraft-grade cables ensure smooth, consistent reps
  • Space-smart design delivers uncompromised performance for home lifters

Functional Trainer and All-In-One Gym Comparative Table

This table compares featured functional trainers and all-in-one systems by versatility, footprint and ideal use. Use it to find the option that best fits your goals, space and budget.

ProductTraining ConfigurationFootprint/Space UseResistance System
The Treadmill Factory IRONAX XFT Functional TrainerFunctional trainer with dual stacks and modular add-onsCompact, vertical design ideal for home gymsDual 200-pound weight stacks
Northern Fitness GRID All-In-One PackagesFunctional trainer, half rack, optional Smith machineMedium footprint with rack-integrated layoutDual 200-pound stacks plus free-weight loading
Fitness Experience Body-Solid GS348Q Series 7 Smith MachineSmith machine with free-weight gunrack and optional cable attachmentMedium footprint suited for home and commercial spacesPlate-loaded Smith bar with linear bearings
MAXUM X2 Functional Trainer Power Rack Home GymPower rack, functional trainer, optional Smith machineSpace-efficient for its multisystem capabilityDual 220-pound stacks, plate-load expandable

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Here are answers to some common questions about fitness trainers.

1. Who Sells Functional Trainers in Canada at an Affordable Price?

Canadian buyers can find functional trainers at competitive prices through retailers like The Treadmill Factory, Northern Fitness and Fitness Avenue. Consider weighing affordability alongside durability, warranty and Canada-wide shipping options.

2. Are Functional Training Machines Worth the Investment for Home Gyms?

A functional trainer can replace multiple single-purpose machines, saving space and money in the long term. Its versatility may support strength, mobility and sport-specific exercises all in one compact unit. Many offer financing plans and nationwide shipping to make high-quality equipment accessible.

3. Are Functional Trainers Suitable for Beginners as Well as Advanced Users?

Yes. They scale with experience, offering adjustable resistance and guided movements for beginners. Advanced users can increase load and complexity to match their fitness goals.

Make Your Functional Trainer Choice Today

Choosing a functional trainer in Canada is easier when you consider your goals, space and preferred exercises. Compare features, attachments and modular options, while factoring in financing, delivery and support. Top retailers provide quality machines for home or commercial use. The right trainer can elevate your workouts, build confidence and deliver measurable results.

Canadians spending intentions cool off in January but remain positive: Stifel

Photo: Arina Krasnikova
Photo: Arina Krasnikova

A quarterly consumer survey just released by financial services company Stifel suggests that spending intentions are moderating sequentially versus October 2025, with six categories down sequentially, out of the eight categories monitored.

“In almost all categories we monitor, female and low income respondents, as well as young shoppers (18-34yrs) show declining spending intentions. Overall, this survey paints a less exuberant picture of the Canadian consumer than in October 2025, perhaps due to (1) sustained trade tensions, (2) geopolitical tensions, (3) high food inflation and (4) slightly rising unemployment,” said the Stifel report. 

“Nonetheless, 54% of respondents expect to increase their spending on discretionary items in the next twelve months, which is higher than the 51% average of the last 11 surveys.”

Here are the key findings of the Stifel report:

Consumer confidence dips slightly in January but remains healthy

 Respondents to our survey may not be as enthusiastic as in October 2025 but nonetheless they do exhibit signs of confidence. For one, we are still in an expansionary mode with 54% of respondents expecting to increase their spending, and secondly January 2026 saw the second-largest differential between very likely respondents and very unlikely respondents. Hence, in our view, Canadian consumer confidence is still healthy but showing some signs of fatigue particularly with females and young shoppers.

Spending intentions for pet food and pet accessories remains healthy 

73% of respondents expect to increase their spending on pet food and pet accessories in the coming year, higher than the average of 71% for the last 11 quarters, and firmly in an expansionary mode. According to our survey, spending intentions for pet food and pet accessories peaked in April 2025 at 76% and have been on a slight decline since.

Spending intentions at dollar stores decline. 

70% of the respondents to our survey expect to increase their spending intentions at dollar stores in the next twelve months, slightly lower than the 72% average reading of the last 10 surveys. The decline appears broad based across several demographics categories such as male, female, young shoppers (18-34yrs). The dollar store category has been a very strong category for the last 3 years but seemed to have peaked in January 2025.

Powersports spending intentions remain strong 

9% of our respondents are very likely to purchase or upgrade a powersports vehicle in the next 12 months, higher than the 7.8% average of the last four years. We saw strength in the high income consumer demographic as well as with young shoppers.

Spending intentions for furniture remains strong

58% of respondents expect to increase their spending on furniture in the next 12 months, down 70bps sequentially, but slightly higher than the 57% average of the last five quarters. Spending intentions for male respondents increased sequentially while they decreased for female respondents.

Photo: cottonbro studio
Photo: cottonbro studio

Spending intentions for toys reach new highs 

64% of respondents expect to increase their spending on children toys in the next twelve months. This is a significant increase from the 55% average of the last 10 quarters. The significant rise in spending intentions is difficult to explain as it seems like an outlier vs the previous surveys. The increase comes from all demographics, but more importantly from females and low income consumers, both demographics showing much higher readings than historical levels.

Consumer air travel demand appears to be stable

According to our survey results, the appetite for air travel remains relatively stable, with the survey reporting a ~100bps decrease in the number of respondents indicating that they are ‘likely’ or ‘very likely’ to fly in the next 12-months for their next vacation. Within the proportion that are choosing to fly, however, there was an increase in price sensitivity, with a 4 point drop of those saying price had ‘no impact on their decision to travel’, and a three point increase in the share saying they would ‘downsize/decide not to travel’ due to rising airfares.

More from Retail Insider: