The high street giant faces £15m in costs from the Middle East conflict and warns prices may rise if disruption continues, as it announces Yorkshire warehouse expansion
High street giant Next has revealed it will absorb a £15m blow from the surging air freight and fuel costs triggered by the Iran conflict, as it scrambles to identify savings elsewhere to counterbalance the expenses.
The FTSE 100 retailer said it anticipates the conflict will restrict its expansion in the Middle East, which represents six per cent of its turnover, and will affect costs, pricing and consumer demand throughout the entire business.
Next recorded £1.2bn in pre-tax profit for the year to January 2026, an increase of 15 per cent from the previous year, as sales climbed 11 per cent to £7bn.
The retailer stated it has factored in £15m – offset by savings elsewhere – on the assumption that disruption from the Middle East conflict continues for three months. However, it cautioned that prices would need to rise if the hostilities persisted any longer, as reported by City AM.
The firm stated: “At this point, the longer term implications of the conflict are uncertain, and NEXT is not well placed to make predictions. “
“Much will depend on how long the conflict persists, and how much permanent damage is done to the world’s energy infrastructure.”
The company reports the conflict is already damaging its sales, attributing its shortfall against its 16.5 per cent international sales growth guidance to disruption in the Middle East.
Sales in the Middle East will remain below projections for at least the remainder of the first half of the year, Next indicated.
The retailer experienced £75m in cost increases over the past year, with national insurance and wage rises, higher interest costs and an increased marketing spend contributing to the £15m impact from the Middle East conflict.
Next said it achieved £57m in savings last year, including £39m from returning employee bonuses to standard levels.
The firm’s profit from its retail stores fell five per cent to £193m despite rising sales (up 2.4 per cent), which the company attributed to increased employment costs.
Retail leaders have warned the rise in national insurance contributions and minimum wage levels is placing pressure on recruitment, as bosses prepare for additional costs when Labour’s workers’ rights reforms take effect this year.
Next said its overall profit growth was partly driven by expansion of its international business, with global sales increasing 35 per cent – significantly faster than the UK’s seven per cent.
While many retail giants rush to incorporate AI-powered shopping into their systems, Next has said it will not develop a central artificial intelligence function.
The firm said: “The benefits AI can bring to software development, range development, customer service and warehouse operations are so varied, and their challenges so different, that generic advice from a central function would be little more use than a central Spreadsheet Department.”
The retailer stated that its investment in fresh and recently-acquired brands is fuelling growth, and announced it has received planning permission for a 1.2m sq foot warehouse in Elmsall, Wakefield, which it believes could contribute £2.5bn to UK sales.
In January, Next acquired high-street footwear retailer Russell & Bromley, adding to recent purchases including vintage-inspired retailer Cath Kidston and clothing brand Joules.
Next’s chairman, Michael Roney, revealed his contract has been extended by the board, as he announced the departure of two board members: Jane Shields and Jonathan Bewes.






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