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Newsagent's shop

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(Redirected fromNewsstand)
Shop or person selling newspapers and magazines
"Newsstand" redirects here. For other uses, seeNewsstand (disambiguation).
"News agents" redirects here. For the British podcast, seeThe News Agents.
Not to be confused withNews agency.
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A newsstand inSalta,Argentina

Anewsagent's shop or simplynewsagent's orpaper shop[1] (British English),newsagency (Australian English) ornewsstand (American andCanadian English) is a business that sellsnewspapers,magazines,cigarettes,snacks and often items of local interest. In theUnited Kingdom,Ireland andAustralia, these businesses are termednewsagents (ornewsagency in Australia). Newsagents typically operate in busypublic places likecitystreets,railway stations andairports. Racks for newspapers and magazines can also be found inconvenience stores,bookstores andsupermarkets. The physical establishment can be either freestanding or part of a larger structure (e.g. ashopping mall or a railway station).

InCanada and theUnited States, newsstands are often open stalls in public locations such as streets, or in a transit terminal or station (subway,rail, orairport).

By country

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Australia

[edit]
The interior of a newsagency inCanberra during 2025

A newsagent is the manager of the newspaper department of the shop, often also the owner of a newsagency shop.

Newsagencies conduct either a retail business and/or a distribution business.

When they first appeared in Australia is unknown; the earliest reference known in Australia is an advertisement in 1855 in Melbourne.[2]

The number of newsagencies in Australia are falling in recent years and this decline is expected to continue. In 2000, there was estimated about 5,000,[3] by 2007/8 there were 4,635 newsagencies, and by 2016/7 there were just 3,150 newsagencies.[4]

Retail newsagencies

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Retail newsagencies[5] primarily offer a comprehensive range of newspapers and magazines, as well as stationery and greeting cards.

Distribution newsagencies

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Distribution newsagencies[5] offer home delivery of a comprehensive range of newspapers and magazines, These can be quite large and sophisticated businesses. If authorised, they are often fully computerized. They often have a territory, which is partly protected by contracts with most of the Australian Newsagents' Federation recognised publishers/distributors. These recognised publishers/distributors include ACP Publishing,News Limited, Fairfax Publications,Rural Press,The West Australian and Australian Provincial Newspapers. These monopolies have been a major source of contention between newsagents and the Australian Consumer Affairs.

Brazil

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InBrazil, newsagents' shops are known as "bancas de jornal" or "bancas de revistas" and are usually family-owned, free-standing kiosks that only deal in periodical publications, telephone cards, bus tickets and the occasional book and cut-priceDVD.In suburban areas and villages they are normally housed in a shop selling stationery, tobacco and sweets as well as periodicals.

Greece

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InGreece, newsagents' shops are called periptera (singular: periptero) and they sellnewspapers andmagazines, but also other goods like beverages (including alcoholic ones),snacks,tobacco; and other kinds of merchandise. Opening times vary. They are typically found on the side of the road in crowded public areas.[6][7]

A periptero inAthens,Greece

Italy

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InItaly, newsagents' shops are known as edicola and are usually family-owned, free-standing kiosks that only deal in periodical publications,stickers, bus tickets and the occasional book and cut-priceDVD.In suburban areas and villages they are normally housed in a shop selling stationery, tobacco and sweets as well as periodicals.

Japan

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In Japan, newsagents' shops are called kiosks, and are typically found in or around railway or subway stations. In addition to newspapers and magazines, they sell beverages, snack foods, postage stamps, cigarettes, and many other kinds of merchandise.Ekiben boxed lunches can be purchased at larger kiosks in inter-city rail stations.

United Kingdom

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In the United Kingdom, newsagents' shops are small shops selling newspapers as well as magazines, sweets and tobacco. In addition to counter sales, the shops traditionally also deliver newspapers to people's homes. The deliverers, usually children, are said to have a "paper round".[8] Some newsagents also sell provisions and alcoholic beverages. Opening times vary according to the owners' preferences.

Many shops are family-owned. These family-owned shops may carry the branding of a purchasing group or wholesaler group. Alternatively the private owner may chose to do his own purchasing (usually fromcash and carries) and carry advertising for a local paper, national news group or soft drink brand externally. Prior to the banning of advertising of tobacco products, this was the most common form of external advertising. The primary organisation looking after the interests of independent newsagents in the UK and Ireland is theNational Federation of Retail Newsagents.

Other newsagents are part of national chains such asThe Co-op andWHSmith. Mini-marts, off-licences and supermarkets may also act as newsagents.

United States

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Alameda, California

In 1934, John J. Mulvany, Vice President of aBank of America branch, across the street, donated the materials and labor to build Paul’s Newsstand at the northwest corner of Santa Clara Avenue and Park Street inAlameda, California.[9][10]

Los Angeles, California

In the late 1940s, at the corner of 1st and Soto streets, inBoyle Heights a newsstand opened and survived.[11][12]

San Francisco

JCDecaux news kiosk, Market St. at Montgomery St., April 27, 2020

JCDecaux installed news kiosks[13] in downtown San Francisco, as part of a contract[14] for advertising displays,[15] toilets and otherstreet furniture, replacing steel beam andaluminium siding newsstands painted beige,[16]telephone pole displays,[17] and plywood shacks painted green.[18] They remain, without news vendors,[19] with a few repurposed[20][21] for "Free Bike Repair",[22] other printed sales,[23] and continue to display advertisements.[24]

New York City

An outdoor newsstand,New York City, October 2008

On street corners inNew York City, for instance, newsstands are often shacks constructed of steel beams andaluminium siding or roofing tin; and require a city permit to build and operate. Other New York newsstands are located inside airports, hotels and office buildings – and even beneath street level in underground concourses or on subway platforms.Hudson News, a newsstand brand created in New York City, is operated by retailer the Hudson Group, with more than 500 stores around the world. This brand was created in 1987, and became more popular in the 1990s, during a time when newsstands in commuter terminals were being re-evaluated and reopened to better serve customers and the spaces with the most commuter foot traffic. Prior to this, newsstands caused limited visibility for police officers patrolling the subway stations, as well as impeding crowd movement.[25]

References

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  1. ^"Paper shop".Cambridge Dictionary. Archived fromthe original on 16 April 2019. Retrieved19 April 2020.Paper shop [..] noun [..] UK [..] a shop that sells newspapers
  2. ^"The First Australian Newsagency?". POS Solutions. 20 January 2009. Archived fromthe original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved30 April 2015.
  3. ^"Application for Authorisation – Australian Newsagents' Federation Ltd. – to negotiate on behalf of newsagents with publishers"(PDF).Australian Competition and Consumer Commission. 16 March 2000.
  4. ^IBISWorld OD5495-Newsagencies-in-Australia-Industry-Report
  5. ^ab"Australian Newsagents Federation". LinkedIn. Retrieved3 March 2014.
  6. ^AthensFever (10 August 2015)."The Greek Kiosk "Periptero"".www.athensfever.gr. Retrieved6 April 2018.
  7. ^"A visit to a Greek kiosk (periptero)".transparent.com. 10 June 2015. Retrieved6 April 2018.
  8. ^Levy, Hermann (2013) [1948].The Shops of Britain: A Study of Retail Distribution. Routledge. p. 76.ISBN 9781136255403.
  9. ^"NW Santa Clara Avenue & Park Street".alameda-preservation.org – Alameda Architectural Preservation Society. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  10. ^Hussin, Tim (24 April 2016)."Vendor sticks by historic Alameda newsstand".San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  11. ^"Spanish-language newsstand, a 1940s Boyle Heights gem, braces for the end".Los Angeles Times. 22 February 2020. Archived fromthe original on 31 May 2020. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  12. ^1st street and Soto street
  13. ^Robertson, Michelle (6 October 2021)."You can rent an old newspaper kiosk in SF for free".SFGATE. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  14. ^Eskenazi, Joe (4 February 2019)."How San Francisco flushes away scores of millions of dollars on a stinker of a toilet contract".Mission Local. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  15. ^"These Streets are Made for Walking...and Driving".JCDecaux Digital Advertising Services. 11 March 2020. Archived fromthe original on 27 August 2025. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  16. ^Macor, Michael (11 November 2001)."The first JCDECAUX newsstand kiosk open for business on Market St. at Powell. The old newsstand, at left, being lifted onto a truck to be taken away".Getty Images.San Francisco Chronicle,Hearst Newspapers. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  17. ^"Newsboy holding San Francisco News with DeJohn murder case headline, California Labor School".digital-collections.library.sfsu.edu. 1949. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  18. ^Zhou, Yujie (8 December 2024)."Meet Jason Feng, perhaps San Francisco's last newsstand operator".Mission Local. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  19. ^"Long Time San Francisco Newsstand Falls Prey To Economic Hard Times".Getty Images. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  20. ^"Pop-Up Zine Shop in an old News Paper Stand".Doc Pop's Weblog. 31 May 2012. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  21. ^"Edicola + Gazzetta".www.colpapress.com. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  22. ^"Free Bike Repair Kiosk Pops Up in Newsstand at 7th and Market".SFist. 1 November 2011. Archived fromthe original on 17 July 2025. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  23. ^"Grand-plan-to-repurpose-a-newsstand".sfchronicle.com. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  24. ^"Doubling Down on Downloads".jcdecauxna.com. 17 December 2021. Archived fromthe original on 29 June 2022. Retrieved27 August 2025.
  25. ^"Subway Group Protests Removal of Newsstands".The New York Times. 13 February 1988. Retrieved18 December 2011.

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