SHOPPERS turned away from UK high streets in droves last month as footfall plummeted to its worst June figures for seven years.

Footfall at UK shopping hubs dived as they failed to attract visitors amid gloomy June weather, according to the BRC-Springboard footfall monitor.

Footfall across shopping areas fell by 2.9% for the month, as the retail downturn accelerated from 0.9% decline in the same month last year.

The high street was particularly badly affected, with visits sliding by 4.5% compared to a 0.1% increase in June 2018, which had benefited from the Men’s World Cup and sunny summer weather.

But high streets weren’t the only areas affected, as shopping centres also saw significantly fewer visits with footfall falling 2.4% for the month.

As expected, the most stable shopping hubs were retail parks which saw 0.1% more visitors compared to the previous month.

Helen Dickinson, chief executive of the BRC, said: “Poor footfall this June led to a significant fall in the sales figures for the month.

“Last year’s World Cup and glorious sunshine set a high bar, which 2019’s slow consumer spending and Brexit uncertainty failed to live up to.

“High streets and shopping centres across the country need to invest in improving their consumer experience if they wish to see these footfall numbers reverse.”

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The latest figures also showed that footfall for the past three months to June decreased by 2.4%, while the average footfall for the past 12 months was down 1.7%.

However, June’s decline represented a month-on-month improvement on May’s figures, which had seen footfall down by 3.5% on the same month in 2018.

The BRC revealed last week that high street sales in June fell by their biggest margin on record as shoppers sat on their hands over Brexit uncertainty.

Total sales fell by 1.3% in June – the worst June since records began in 1995, or 1.6% on a like-for-like basis according to the BRC and KPMG’s monthly retail sales update.

Diane Wehrle, Springboard marketing and insights director, said: “Given the exceptional and ongoing disruptive political and economic period we are facing coupled with unprecedented structural changes in the retail sector, we might actually expect consumer activity to have taken an even greater hit.

“It was clearly high streets and shopping centres that bore the brunt of consumers railing back on their shopping trips, whilst retail parks maintained their customer base.”

Earlier this year, a study published by PwC found the number of stores in eight Scottish cities and towns had fallen by 119 in 2018. Some 265 closures were recorded, offset by 146 new store openings.

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And across Britain, there was a record net loss of 2481 stores disappearing from the biggest 500 high streets during the same period – an increase of 709 net closures than in 2017 – with 3372 new shops opening and 5853 shutting.

Lisa Hooker, PwC consumer markets leader, said that 2018 had been “turbulent” due to a variety of factors.

She said “online shopping, increasing costs and subdued consumer spending” were key to the trend, and added “Brexit is affecting how we spend”.

An array of major stores have also had to shut branches over the last year, with Debenhams, Marks & Spencer, House of Fraser and more all announcing closures.