British supermarket Morrisons has recorded a rise in like-for-like (LFL) sales, supported by a strong online showing despite a “background of rising inflation and challenging macroeconomic conditions”.

In a trading update for the 13 weeks to 27 July 2025, the group reported a 3% uplift in group LFL sales. Overall sales climbed 3.5% to £4bn ($5.43bn). 

Discover B2B Marketing That Performs

Combine business intelligence and editorial excellence to reach engaged professionals across 36 leading media platforms.

Find out more

Online sales delivered particularly strong results, with double-digit LFL growth during the quarter.

Morrisons CEO Rami Baitiéh said: “Against a background of rising inflation and challenging macroeconomic conditions like-for-like sales grew by 3% in our third quarter, making it our eleventh consecutive quarter of like-for-like sales growth. Our market share was stable, as it has been since the start of the year.”

The retailer also secured an additional £63m in cost savings during the period and reiterated its plan to reach £1bn of savings by the end of the 2026 financial year.

Morrisons completed what it described as a “successful” refinancing and reduced gross debt by a further £261m.

GlobalData Strategic Intelligence

US Tariffs are shifting - will you react or anticipate?

Don’t let policy changes catch you off guard. Stay proactive with real-time data and expert analysis.

By GlobalData

Morrisons CFO Jo Goff said: “We delivered a resilient performance in Q3 in tough market conditions and with significant external cost headwinds. We also made further progress with our capital structure, completing a material refinancing, which further reduced gross debt, and proactively extended maturities to 2031.

“We have now repaid a total of £2.7bn of debt since the acquisition of the business by CD&R, bringing the current debt figure down by around 43% from £6.2bn to £3.5bn.

“As we continue to face into significant cost headwinds we are also making good progress with our cost reduction programme and remain confident of reaching our recently increased target of £1bn in total cost savings by the end of FY26.”