Q: What should someone moving to Everett know about the retail and shopping environment in 2026?
A: Snohomish County has the tightest retail market in Puget Sound (3.4% vacancy, Q4 2025), which has two practical implications for new residents: good news (the city’s existing retail is stable and occupied, not full of empty storefronts) and realistic expectations (major new retail amenities are coming slowly — Waterfront Place is growing, Millwright Phase 2 is in pre-leasing, and the riverfront grocery anchor isn’t arriving until 2030). Here is the shopping landscape by neighborhood and what’s coming when.
What the Tight Retail Market Means for Your Daily Life in Everett
If you’re moving to Everett, the retail market data has two practical implications for your daily life — one reassuring and one requiring patience.
The reassuring part: 3.4% vacancy means that Everett’s existing retail is overwhelmingly occupied. The stores and restaurants that are here are here because they’re viable. You won’t find the endless empty storefronts that characterize struggling commercial districts in other cities. The businesses you discover in your first weeks will still be there in year two.
The patience part: that same tightness means the major new retail amenities that make urban neighborhoods feel complete — grocery options in new neighborhoods, a broader restaurant scene on the waterfront — are arriving on slow timelines. The riverfront grocery anchor doesn’t open until 2030. Waterfront Place is still building out its restaurant row. If you’re moving to a new Everett neighborhood expecting walkable urban retail from day one, you may need to adjust expectations based on where you land.
Grocery and Everyday Shopping by Area
North Everett and Downtown
The QFC on Colby Avenue is the primary grocery option for downtown and North Everett residents. Fred Meyer on Casino Road serves the broader South Everett corridor. Safeway on Broadway is another downtown-adjacent option. Whole Foods is not in Everett (the nearest is in Lynnwood or Redmond); Trader Joe’s is in Lynnwood. For everyday grocery needs, North Everett residents have workable but not walkable options — most require a short drive.
South Everett and Casino Road Corridor
The Casino Road corridor has significant retail density serving the area’s large residential population, including several ethnic grocery options (Vietnamese markets, Filipino stores, and international food retailers serving the area’s diverse communities). Fred Meyer is a major anchor. For families who cook internationally, South Everett’s food retail is actually more interesting than North Everett’s in terms of variety.
The Snohomish River Waterfront Neighborhood
If you’re moving to one of the Shelter Holdings residential buildings on the Snohomish River waterfront, be aware that the grocery anchor has been delayed to 2030. You’ll be relying on the QFC on Colby for grocery runs — about a mile from the waterfront site. The neighborhood has ground-floor commercial space that is being built out, but the full retail program is several years from completion. The Interurban Trail makes the neighborhood excellent for walking and cycling; the car remains necessary for grocery shopping for now.
What’s Coming: The Retail Development Pipeline
Waterfront Place at the Port of Everett
The most exciting new retail corridor in Everett is the Port of Everett’s restaurant and dining cluster. Jetty Bar & Grille, Marina Azul, Scuttlebutt Brewing, and others are building a genuine waterfront dining district along Port Gardner Bay. This is already partially open and worth exploring as a weekend destination. The Waterfront Place guide covers every tenant and what’s there now.
Millwright District Phase 2
The next major mixed-use development at the Port waterfront — adding residential units and ground-floor retail — is in pre-leasing. It’s the next-generation version of the Waterfront Place district, with higher residential density that will make the commercial program more sustainable. Timeline: several years out.
The Snohomish River Waterfront
Grocery store in 2030. Eclipse Mill Park by spring 2028. The full waterfront guide is the most complete picture of what’s coming and when on the riverfront site.
The Farmers Market and Seasonal Retail
The Everett Farmers Market opens Mother’s Day 2026 and runs through the summer on Wetmore Avenue in downtown Everett. It’s one of the city’s best weekly retail experiences — local produce, food vendors, crafts, and community. For new residents, it’s one of the first things to put on your calendar. It’s also where you’ll meet a cross-section of Everett’s community in a way that no strip mall can offer.
The Bigger Picture: Everett Is Under-Retailed, and That’s Changing
Snohomish County’s tight vacancy reflects a structural reality: the county has grown faster than its retail has. That gap is exactly why the waterfront projects are being built. The city’s population — 114,070 in Everett proper, with the county at over 800,000 — is large enough to support significantly more retail than currently exists. The development pipeline is beginning to fill that gap, slowly but genuinely.
For new residents, the practical advice is: get comfortable with a car for big-box and grocery runs, explore downtown Everett’s independent retail and dining for your everyday life, and watch the waterfront corridors over the next 3–5 years. The city’s retail story in 2030 will be substantially richer than it is in 2026. You’re arriving at the right time to be part of that change.
Frequently Asked Questions for New and Relocating Residents
Is Everett a walkable city for shopping and errands?
It depends heavily on your neighborhood. Downtown Everett has a walkable core with restaurants, cafes, specialty retail, and the farmers market. Most grocery shopping requires a short drive. The waterfront neighborhoods (Port and Snohomish River) are growing but not yet fully retail-complete. South Everett has good density on the Casino Road corridor but is car-dependent.
Where is the nearest Trader Joe’s or Whole Foods to Everett?
The nearest Trader Joe’s and Whole Foods are in Lynnwood, approximately 10–15 miles south of downtown Everett on I-5. Lynnwood’s Alderwood Mall and surrounding retail corridor is the nearest major shopping destination outside Everett itself.
What new retail is coming to Everett in the next few years?
Waterfront Place at the Port of Everett is already partially open and continuing to add tenants. Millwright Phase 2 (Port waterfront mixed-use) is in pre-leasing. The Snohomish River waterfront grocery anchor arrives in 2030 and Eclipse Mill Park opens spring 2028. Downtown’s Broadway and Hewitt corridors continue seeing independent retail turnover.
Is the Everett Farmers Market worth checking out?
Yes. The Everett Farmers Market opens Mother’s Day 2026 and runs through the summer season on Wetmore Avenue downtown. It’s one of the best weekly community experiences in the city for new residents trying to meet neighbors and explore local food.
How does Everett’s retail compare to Bellevue or Seattle?
Everett has significantly less retail density per capita than Bellevue or Seattle. It’s a working city with a strong employment base (Boeing, Navy, healthcare) that has historically prioritized industry over consumption. The city’s retail footprint is growing — the waterfront projects represent the biggest retail investment in Everett’s recent history — but the gap with Seattle’s retail depth will persist for years. Everett’s comparative advantage is affordability and community character, not retail variety.

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