How Spirit Halloween takes over retail space this time of year



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Children’s Halloween costumes hang on a wall at Spirit Halloween costume store in Easton, Maryland, in October 2013. The stores offer seasonal Halloween supplies for a limited time during the season.

Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images




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Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Children’s Halloween costumes hang on a wall at Spirit Halloween costume store in Easton, Maryland, in October 2013. The stores offer seasonal Halloween supplies for a limited time during the season.

Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

Spooky season has arrived, which means a few things: cooler weather, seasonal lattes and Spirit Halloween — the seasonal retailer that specializes in Halloween costumes and decorations.

Every fall, around 1,400 locations pop up in the United States and Canada. The retail chain is so ubiquitous, it’s even become a meme:

woah that was quick pic.twitter.com/xt9IWCip5j

— Joe Groff (@jckarter) October 4, 2021

Rachel Quednau is the program director for Strong Towns, an urban planning think tank focused on incremental development. She writes that Spirit Halloween’s business model is based on utilizing otherwise unusable retail space.

«Today’s Spirit is pretty much a bottom-feeder business that works only at the expense of other stores,» Quednau writes. «If there weren’t vacant storefronts, this business wouldn’t exist.»

When massive retail stores go out of business, it’s not easy to find tenants to replace them.

The result: Those old Kmart and Toys R Us buildings can sit empty for a long time. This works in favor of Spirit Halloween, which looks for sites with anywhere from 5,000 to 50,000 square feet of space.

The company signs short term leases, sells its Halloween gear and crawls back into its coffin for next year.

This story originally appeared on the Morning Edition live blog.

  • pop ups
  • Halloween
  • halloween costumes



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