The Hidden Engine: How Cash-and-Carry is Quietly Rewriting South Africa’s FMCG Rules (2025–2026)
SOUTH AFRICA • JANUARY 2025 – JUNE 2026

The Hidden Engine:
How Cash-and-Carry is Quietly Rewriting
South Africa’s FMCG Rules

While corporate boards debate shelf fees and loyalty programmes, a parallel distribution system worth R268 billion is deciding who wins and who merely survives in groceries.

Evidence drawn from NIQ, Trade Intelligence, operator filings and on-the-ground patterns • Remote delivery available via RIDBS
TOTAL FMCG MARKET 2025
R683.3 billion
+5.7% value • +6.7% volume
INDEPENDENT WHOLESALE & RETAIL CHANNEL
R268 billion
Nearly one-third of all FMCG spend
TRADITIONAL TRADE (SPAZAS & INFORMAL)
R170.1 billion
Outperforming modern trade in growth
HOUSEHOLDS SHOPPING INDEPENDENTS
11%
Same reach as Clicks • 4× Woolworths
CHAPTER 1 • THE INVISIBLE INFRASTRUCTURE

Every time a spaza owner in Khayelitsha or a stokvel in Pietermaritzburg buys stock, they are voting with their rand on a system that corporate supermarkets still pretend doesn’t exist.

Picture this: It’s Tuesday morning in a township on the edge of Durban. A woman who runs a small spaza shop walks 800 metres to a cash-and-carry. She buys 12kg of maize meal, 6 litres of cooking oil, 48 cans of tinned pilchards, and two cases of 2-litre soft drinks. She pays cash. She loads it onto a bakkie that costs her R180 for the round trip. By 11 a.m. the stock is on her shelves and she has already sold half the pilchards to schoolchildren on their way home.

Three hundred kilometres away in a boardroom in Cape Town, a category manager at a major supermarket chain is looking at a spreadsheet showing declining volumes in value maize meal. He attributes it to “consumer trading down” and moves on to discuss the next promotion. He has no visibility into the real reason: the woman in the township just bought her stock 11% cheaper, in cash, with no loyalty card required, from a cash-and-carry that exists precisely because formal retail has left certain customers behind.

This is not a story about “the informal sector.” This is the story of a parallel, highly efficient, R268-billion formal independent wholesale and retail channel that is now large enough to influence pricing, supplier behaviour, and ultimately the margins of every major grocery player in South Africa.

CHAPTER 2

The R268 Billion Channel That 95% of Spaza Shops Depend On

According to Trade Intelligence’s 2025 Formal Independent Channel Report, South Africa’s formal independent retail and wholesale sector — the wholesalers, hybrids, hypermarkets and supermarkets that sit outside the JSE-listed corporate groups — is now worth R268 billion. That is almost exactly one-third of the entire FMCG market.

95%
of informal traders source their stock through independent wholesalers and cash-and-carry operations.
11%
of all South African households now regularly shop in the independent sector — matching Clicks and dwarfing Woolworths.
92%
of the wholesale and hypermarket footprint is now hybrid — deliberately serving both traders and cash-strapped households.

These are not fringe numbers. When 95% of the country’s spaza shops — the stores that provide daily bread, airtime, and paraffin to millions — buy their stock from cash-and-carry operators rather than from the big three or four, something fundamental has shifted in the route-to-market.

CHAPTER 3

How the Machine Actually Runs

Cash-and-carry is not one model. It is several overlapping models, each with different strengths, different customer promises, and different levels of threat to the corporate supermarket.

Devland Cash & Carry (and its affiliate Superland)
22+ stores nationwide, strong B-BBEE credentials, and a deliberate stokvel strategy.
Devland’s acquisition of former Masscash stores (Cambridge and Rhino banners) in 2021 gave it instant scale and saved hundreds of jobs. Today it operates from Johannesburg to Kokstad to Nelspruit. Superland in Springs (Gauteng) is frequently cited as serving more than 300 stokvel groups. The model is classic cash-and-carry: low prices, wide range of national brands, weekly specials published in “Citizen Weekly”, and a genuine understanding that many customers are not end consumers but small businesses that need to turn stock fast.
Shoprite Cash & Carry + Digital Platform
The most aggressive corporate incursion into the space.
In July 2024 Shoprite launched its first proper B2B e-commerce platform for spaza shops and small traders — fully automated ordering, login, saved carts, and free delivery within a 50 km radius of participating Cash & Carry stores. By March 2026 the group moved to acquire a majority stake in R&A Cellular to push its Money Market financial services directly into informal retailers. This is not defensive. This is Shoprite deciding that if it cannot beat the cash-and-carry model, it will become the dominant cash-and-carry player.
Kit Kat Cash & Carry & BiBi Cash and Carry
Family and black-owned operators with deep community roots.
Kit Kat (Gani family) runs a mix of large warehouses and Express formats, primarily in Gauteng, with a strong emphasis on fresh produce and community investment. BiBi, led by Tommy Makhatho, has grown to seven stores (six in the Free State plus one in Gauteng) with in-house bakery, butchery, fresh produce and a dedicated stokvel programme called Iketsetseng. Both are classic examples of the “agile independent” that Trade Intelligence says can change formats and promotions overnight — something no corporate can match.
The smaller but highly active operators — 1UP, Africa Cash & Carry, Advance Cash n Carry — continue to publish weekly catalogues and serve very specific regional trader communities. They keep the big players honest on price.
CHAPTER 4 • THE GEOGRAPHY OF POWER

The Rural-Urban Divide Is Real — and Cash-and-Carry Exposes It

Urban and Peri-Urban (Gauteng, Cape Town, Durban metros)

Here the cash-and-carry is a destination. Traders arrive in bakkies or taxis. Hybrids have added fresh departments, bakeries and butcheries. Household shoppers come for bulk toilet paper, rice, and cooking oil. The density of outlets (Devland alone has multiple Johannesburg and Springs locations, Kit Kat has Express stores in townships) means competition is fierce on price and service. E-procurement is beginning to appear.

Rural and Deep Peri-Urban (Eastern Cape, rural KZN, parts of Free State, Mpumalanga)

The picture is very different. Dedicated cash-and-carry outlets are sparse. Spaza shops and tuck shops become the true last mile. They are supplied by regional wholesalers or by networks that travel long distances to buy at the best price (Devland Kokstad, BiBi in the Free State, Africa Cash & Carry). Cold chain is patchy — industry estimates suggest 40% of rural areas lack adequate facilities. Transport costs are brutal. Smallholders struggle to get produce into the formal value chain.

The value chain reality: Rural production → peri-urban or urban processing and cash-and-carry consolidation → township and rural spaza distribution. Cash-and-carry operators sit at the critical middle node. When that node is weak, both small farmers and poor consumers lose.

Stokvels: The Buying Clubs That Corporate Retail Still Underestimates

South Africa has roughly 810,000 stokvels with 11.5 million members. The collective economy is conservatively estimated at over R50 billion. A large portion of that money is spent on December groceries — precisely the kind of bulk, planned purchase that cash-and-carry operators were built for.

Operators such as Superland, Devland (especially Kokstad), Kit Kat and BiBi have made stokvel relationships a deliberate part of their model. They understand that a stokvel group buying 40 cases of tinned goods in October is a different customer from a household buying one tin on a Tuesday. The cash-and-carry that treats stokvels as serious commercial accounts — with dedicated pricing, collection windows, and sometimes even credit-like arrangements through trusted leaders — wins year after year.

Supplier Relationships: Where B-BBEE Actually Matters

Black-owned operators (Devland, BiBi) have a structural advantage with suppliers who need to demonstrate transformation. They also tend to have more flexible payment terms for smaller traders and a deeper understanding of which brands actually move in LSM 1–6 environments. The corporate chains still extract the largest rebates, but the cash-and-carry channel is where many emerging and mid-tier suppliers find volume they cannot access through the big four.

The Corporate Counter-Move: Shoprite’s Cash-and-Carry Trojan Horse

Shoprite’s decision to build a proper trader platform on top of its existing Cash & Carry stores is the single most important development in this story for 2025–2026. By offering automated ordering, saved carts, competitive pricing, and free delivery within 50 km, Shoprite is solving three of the biggest pain points that have historically driven spaza owners to independent cash-and-carry: transport cost, time, and the risk of overstocking.

The 2026 move into R&A Cellular’s point-of-sale and payments infrastructure extends the play into the financial services that spaza owners actually use every day (airtime, electricity, card acceptance). This is not a side project. It is a deliberate attempt to own the interface between the formal wholesale system and the informal retail economy.

Other corporates are watching. Some are quietly exploring similar models. The days when a supermarket chain could ignore the cash-and-carry channel are over.

CHAPTER 5 • COMMERCIAL IMPLICATIONS

What This Actually Means for Supermarket and FMCG Operators

For Corporate Supermarket Groups
  • • Bulk household shopping is migrating. Your hypermarkets are competing with cash-and-carry on price for the monthly shop.
  • • Your franchisees and independent customers are being supplied by your competitors (or by your own wholesale arm if you have one).
  • • Shoprite’s move proves the channel is too big to ignore. Expect more corporate cash-and-carry plays or partnerships.
For FMCG Suppliers
  • • The “winner-takes-all” dynamic in traditional trade is real. If you are not one of the top 2–3 brands on the spaza shelf, you are invisible.
  • • Cash-and-carry operators give you access to volume that corporate chains will not list at the same price or terms.
  • • B-BBEE-compliant wholesalers (Devland, BiBi) are becoming strategically important partners for transformation scorecards.
For Independent Wholesalers & Hybrids
  • • Digital is no longer optional. Shoprite has raised the bar on trader experience.
  • • Stokvel relationships are a moat. The operators that treat them as serious accounts will keep winning December volume.
  • • Rural and peri-urban expansion remains wide open for those willing to solve last-mile logistics.

Three Possible Futures (2026–2029)

Scenario A — The Hybrid Wins (Most Probable)

Cash-and-carry operators accelerate digital tools and delivery. Hybrids become the default shopping mission for value-seeking households and traders. Corporate supermarkets focus on convenience and fresh while ceding more of the bulk and trader channel. Independent channel grows at 8–12% CAGR in value.

Scenario B — Corporate Consolidation

Shoprite and one or two others scale their wholesale arms aggressively. Smaller cash-and-carry operators are either acquired or squeezed on margin. The channel becomes more formal but less diverse.

Scenario C — Platform Disintermediation

Technology platforms (local or international) connect suppliers directly to spaza networks, bypassing traditional cash-and-carry. The winners are the operators who control data, last-mile, or financing rather than physical warehouses.

The Choice Facing Every FMCG Leader

You can continue to treat cash-and-carry as a “lower channel” that exists somewhere outside your core strategy. Or you can recognise that it is now a R268-billion parallel system that controls access to the fastest-growing and most resilient part of South African grocery demand.

The operators who understand the real flows — who know which stokvels buy what, which spaza clusters are supplied by which cash-and-carry, where the margin is leaking, and where the next 50 km of delivery will be built — will have a structural advantage for the rest of this decade.

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Verifiable Sources (January 2025 – June 2026)

  • NIQ South Africa – State of the Retail Nation analysis for calendar year 2025 (published March 2026 via Zawya & African Marketing Confederation). Total FMCG R683.3 billion (+5.7% value, +6.7% volume); modern trade R513.2bn; traditional trade R170.1bn.
  • Trade Intelligence – Formal Independent Channel Report 2025 (cited in Zawya, September 2025; Wikipedia Retailing in South Africa update April 2026). R268 billion independent wholesale & retail sector (~33% of FMCG); 95% of informal traders source via independents; 11% household reach; 92% hybrid footprint.
  • Shoprite Holdings – Cash & Carry B2B e-commerce platform launch (July 2024, active/expanded 2025); March 2026 majority stake in R&A Cellular for informal retailer payments (Africa Business Insider, March 2026).
  • Devland Cash & Carry – Official site (devland.co.za, active 2025–2026); monthly specials, “Citizen Weekly”, stokvel page, 22+ store listings (including Kokstad & Springs/Superland affiliate).
  • Superland Cash and Carry – superlandcashandcarry.co.za (2025 site updates); Springs location, supplier partnerships (Bokomo, Coca-Cola, Simba etc.), stokvel focus, trading hours.
  • Kit Kat Cash & Carry (Kit Kat Group) – kitkatgroup.com; active catalogues on Latestspecials.co.za & Cataloguespecials.co.za (August 2025, April–June 2026); Gauteng footprint, fresh offerings.
  • BiBi Cash and Carry – bibicc.co.za (2024–2026 updates); 7 stores (6 Free State + Gauteng), in-house bakery/butchery/fresh/stokvel (Iketsetseng), NEF-backed expansion (Bizcommunity May 2024).
  • Other active operators – 1UP, Africa Cash & Carry, Advance Cash n Carry weekly catalogues (Latestspecials.co.za & Cataloguespecials.co.za, 2025–2026).
  • Competition Commission of South Africa – Fresh Produce Market Inquiry Final Report (January 2025, via Daily Maverick). Pricing transparency remedies; R53 billion sector context.
  • Additional cross-referenced reports – Trade Intelligence “SA FMCG Retail in 2025: The Year in Review” (December 2025); Maersk Southern Africa FMCG insights (October 2025); Zawya real-time data & traditional trade updates (May 2026).

Pre-2025 data (e.g. 2019 Grocery Retail Market Inquiry) used only for historical baseline. All quantitative claims triangulated across at least three sources where possible.

Disclaimer
This report is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is based on publicly available sources as of June 2026 and reflects the best efforts of RIDBS to compile and analyse data from NIQ, Trade Intelligence, company websites, industry publications, and regulatory reports.

While every effort has been made to ensure accuracy, RIDBS makes no warranties or representations regarding the completeness, reliability, or suitability of the information contained herein. Data, statistics, and forward-looking statements are subject to change and should be independently verified by the reader before any commercial or investment decisions are made.

This document does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or professional advice. RIDBS, its principals, and affiliates shall not be liable for any loss or damage arising from the use of or reliance on the information presented. Readers are encouraged to consult qualified professionals and conduct their own due diligence.

© 2026 RIDBS Retail Intelligence. All rights reserved. For strategic retail intelligence support across Africa and emerging markets, visit ridbs.com/contact_us/.
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