Few traditions spark both excitement and anxiety quite like back-to-school shopping. For students, it signals new opportunities; for parents, it’s a mix of nostalgia and logistical stress. As summer winds down, the signals of school’s return are everywhere: buses practicing routes, the heavy air of late August, and the smell of freshly waxed floors at “Meet the Teacher” nights. Somewhere in that mix, a supply list finds its way into parents’ hands, and the inevitable trip to the local big-box store begins.

Back-to-college season takes it up a notch. Beyond notebooks and calculators, it’s an entire dorm room or apartment that needs outfitting. Retailers now dedicate entire catalogs to dorm trends, making even the least style-savvy shopper an instant expert on what’s “in.”

Following the data trail

Consumer Corner is less interested in the shopping lists themselves and in what the data say about consumer decision making. Big data, which can be hard to interpret (or even identify), often exhibits signs of seasonality, or trends that vary by time of year. Over the years, we’ve tracked how online news and social media reflect trends, but recently, our team has added a new tool: location analytics and mobile data tracking through Placer.AI.

Placer AI’s platform is fairly straightforward. Many smartphone apps collect location data (with user consent – those “I agree” clicks you’ve probably made). These data, stripped of personally identifiable details, are aggregated and sold to firms that analyze movement patterns.

Placer.AI packages this data in a user-friendly way, while safeguarding individual privacy by excluding sensitive information like schools, private residences, and government buildings. The result is a large panel of anonymized visits that can be extrapolated to estimate population-level activity. You can find more about Placer.AI’s privacy policy here. Of course, not everybody in the U.S. allows location tracking (which can be disabled in your smartphone settings, including iPhone, as well as on other devices like smartwatches).

For this analysis, we didn’t look at schools themselves. Instead, we focused on one local and familiar destination: the Walmart in West Lafayette, Indiana. Using Placer.AI data from May 2018 through September 2025, we asked: can we detect a back-to-school shopping trend?

Annual and Monthly Patterns

The first chart (daily visits) is hard to read, but a pattern quickly emerges: visitor spikes appear every August. Thanksgiving and Christmas Day are the only times visits drop to zero, reflecting Walmart’s holiday closures. To simplify, we will aggregate the data into weekly counts.

Line chart showing daily visit counts to a local Walmart from May 2018 to September 2025, with recurring spikes each August and brief drops around major holidays.

Average weekly visits by year show the expected pandemic dip in 2020-21, with traffic returning to pre-2020 levels by 2023 and continuing to grow through 2025.

Year

Average of Visit Count at Walmart

2018

                    40,916.0

2019

                    41,288.7

2020

                    35,940.3

2021

                    37,478.8

2022

                    39,724.0

2023

                    42,859.9

2024

                    44,653.2

2025

                    46,460.5

Line chart showing weekly total visitor counts to a local Walmart from May 2018 to September 2025, with pronounced spikes each August and lower levels during the 2020–2021 period.

The previous table looked at trends between years. Monthly averages tell an even clearer story. August stands out with 55,395.9 average weekly visits to our local Walmart, 135% of the overall monthly average.

Month

Average of Weekly Visit Count at Walmart

January

39,688.7

February

38,913.3

March

36,931.5

April

38,380.6

May

39,047.8

June

40,634.9

July

41,216.1

August

55,395.9

September

39,418.5

October

40,403.9

November

38,950.5

December

40,219.6

Monthly Average

40,935.9

Over eight years, the second or third week of August consistently records the highest traffic. In 2025, for example, the week of August 18 saw more than 95,000 visits – nearly double the store’s quietest weeks.

Week Start

Week of the Month

Visit Count

8/6/2018

1

46,758

8/13/2018

2

84,501

8/20/2018

3

47,898

8/27/2018

4

38,415

8/5/2019

1

54,861

8/12/2019

2

85,655

8/19/2019

3

47,992

8/26/2019

4

40,998

8/3/2020

1

33,262

8/10/2020

2

46,807

8/17/2020

3

60,948

8/24/2020

4

35,453

8/31/2020

5

32,838

8/2/2021

1

39,948

8/9/2021

2

54,239

8/16/2021

3

67,419

8/23/2021

4

40,770

8/30/2021

5

38,962

8/1/2022

1

41,396

8/8/2022

2

56,387

8/15/2022

3

79,631

8/22/2022

4

48,909

8/29/2022

5

41,343

8/7/2023

1

61,157

8/14/2023

2

92,717

8/21/2023

3

52,316

8/28/2023

4

42,596

8/5/2024

1

60,403

8/12/2024

2

88,946

8/19/2024

3

52,712

8/26/2024

4

45,988

8/4/2025

1

52,173

8/11/2025

2

72,679

8/18/2025

3

95,146

8/25/2025

4

56,633

While we can’t claim causality from simple visit counts alone, the timing aligns neatly with the back-to-school and campus rush. Now, that isn’t to say that back to school is the driver, but the timing is too consistent to ignore.

Weekday insights

Now, let’s see how weekday visits vary.

Day of the Week

Average of Visit Count

Sunday

6,716.1

Monday

5,329.5

Tuesday

5,003.4

Wednesday

4,978.1

Thursday

5,147.6

Friday

6,386.3

Saturday

7,393.3

Daily Average

5,850.5

The data also reveal informative shopping habits:

  • Busiest days: Saturday (7,393), Sunday (6,716) and Friday (6,386). Together, they account for an average of 20.5 thousand visitors to our local Walmart, which is more than half of the visitors the store sees on a weekly average.
  • Quietest day: Wednesday (4,978), with just 12% of weekly traffic.

So if you’re local and want to avoid the crowds, Wednesday might be your best bet – at least until everyone else catches on.