Norwalk Mayor Tom Phillips near where the city hopes to build a Buc-ee's gas station on Interstate 35.
Norwalk Mayor Tom Phillips near where the city hopes to build a Buc-ee's gas station on Interstate 35.
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Want an Ikea in Des Moines? Here's why you may be in for a long wait

Will some of America’s most beloved retail brands ever open Des Moines metro locations?

When it comes to retailers like Ikea, Buc-ee’s and Total Wine & More, it’s easier to come up with reasons they won’t than reasons they will. Whether its population ― at 765,000, the Des Moines metro, though growing fast, may just be too small ― distance from distribution centers, existing competition or restrictive laws, the region is likely to remain far off some companies’ maps for years to come.

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Here are some of the retailers Des Moines Register readers said in a recent survey they want, and the reason they appear unlikely to make themselves an Iowa home.

No Ikeas in metros the size of Des Moines

Ikea has topped lists of the most-sought-after store for metro residents for decades. As long ago as 2010, a spokesperson for the Sweden-founded chain told the Des Moines Register that despite rumors, it had no plan to open a store in central Iowa.

In an emailed statement responding to the Register’s latest survey, Ikea left all its options open ― perhaps frustratingly so for its local fans, given its lack of specificity.

“At IKEA, we are always looking at new opportunities for expansion and growth,” the statement said. “As we continue to transform our business, we are considering new ways to meet our customers’ needs across the U.S. When searching for new areas to open, we want to reach our customers where they live, work, socialize and shop — bringing the IKEA experience closer to as many people as possible. We look for areas that have a strong retail presence, available space, and are well connected to the broader region.”

Ikea’s closest location is in Merriam, Kansas, part of the Kansas City metro, population 2.2 million. And it has only a few locations in metros smaller than that ― most notably, Memphis, Tennessee, at 1.3 million, which beat out faster-growing and larger Nashville with an $11 million incentive package, according to the Memphis Commercial Appeal.

Stores the chain has opened in 2025 are all in much larger metros, including Austin, Texas, population 2.5 million; Phoenix, population 5.2 million; and New York, at 24 million.

Still, Des Moines metro residents have eternal optimism that Ikea, which has experimented with smaller-format stores, will eventually build a central Iowa store. Bethany Tarbox, 30, of Ankeny, said the area often is told it is too small before chains arrive.

“Maybe it could be 10 years down the line,” Tarbox said. “I live in Ankeny, and it just keeps growing and growing and growing.”

If it’s any consolation, Ikea does have a metro-area representative right in Tarbox’s hometown: A location for third-party delivery service RXO, where online Ikea orders can be picked up, opened in an Ankeny industrial park last year. To use the service, choose the “Picking with Delivery” option when placing an IKEA order. Prices for furniture delivery start at $69.

But for Ikea fan Zachary Givens, 36, of Ankeny, shopping online is not the same as being able to look an item over in person before making a purchase. And other Midwestern Ikea stores, he said, are just too far away.

“To get to Kansas City, Minneapolis or Chicago isn’t always feasible for everybody,” Givens said.

Buc-ee’s would face a crowded market

Norwalk Mayor Tom Phillips is bidding to get Buc-ee’s to build its first Iowa location in his town. But will it?

Among states with smaller populations than Iowa’s, only three ― Idaho, Arkansas and Kansas (on the Kansas side of the 2.2-million Kansas City metro) ― have Buc-ee’s locations, and all but a handful of Texas-based Buc-ee’s stores are in the Sunbelt.

Phillips’ plan is elaborate. First, the city would annex almost 3,000 acres abutting Interstate 35 southwest of the city. Then it would bid to get a new interchange there. And then, maybe, Buc-ee’s could be persuaded to build.

Buc-ee’s would be a tourist attraction and would generate property, sales and gas tax revenues, Phillips said.

“People will go like a half-hour out of their way just to go to Buc-ee’s while traveling,” he said. “There’s a lot of traffic already on I-35. There’s even more on I-80 that probably would take a 10- or 15-minute drive south just to go to Buc-ee’s.”

Buc-ee’s did not respond to a request for comment.

Bondurant has direct frontage on Interstate 80, and that city’s economic development coordinator, Tiffany Luing, could see the chain setting down stakes there.

“We’re in a great position for a road trip,” Luing said. “We have several things that would be appealing to people.”

But any convenience store chain locating in the Des Moines metro, at the nexus of the busy transcontinental highways, faces intense competition. Ankeny-based Casey’s General Stores, ranked the third-largest convenience store chain nationally by industry news site cspdailynews, has more than 50 metro locations. Kum & Go was based in Des Moines until 2023, and new owner Maverik has dozens of metro stores. A third local chain, Git-N-Go, lists 36 in the metro, and there are nearly 30 metro locations of West Des Moines-based Hy-Vee’s Fast & Fresh chain.

QuikTrip and Kwik Star also have numerous metro locations, with the latter rapidly expanding, and Omaha-based Mega Saver has acquired several former metro Kum & Go stores from Maverik. That’s not to mention Sinclair, Conoco, Flying J and other national chains with locations in town.

Analysts told the Des Moines Register in March that the crowded gas station landscape likely is why Buc-ee’s is staying away from Iowa, despite its Midwest expansion into states including Ohio and Wisconsin.

Total Wine & More in few alcohol control states

Total Wine & More has stores in every Iowa neighbor state but South Dakota. The closest is in Omaha, 140 miles away. So why isn’t the chain in the Des Moines metro?

One reason could be Iowa’s laws about liquor. It’s one of 17 so-called “control” states (plus one Maryland county) in which the government plays a leading role in the market for alcoholic beverages. In Iowa, the state is the wholesaler of spirits and sells them to private retailers at a uniform price from a giant warehouse in Ankeny. That precludes any so-called “category-killer” retailer from relying on its own centralized supply and acquisition chain for products like whiskey and rum.

Total Wine did not respond to a request for comment. John Fuller, a spokesperson for the Iowa Department of Revenue, said it, like any other retailer, is welcome to apply for a license to sell its products in Iowa and participate in the system.

“As far as I know, there is nothing prohibiting Total Wines and More from doing business in Iowa,” Fuller said in an email.

But in practice, there is a pattern when it comes to where Total Wine has stores. It operates in 30 states, but only two of those are control states: Michigan and Virginia, both with much larger populations than Iowa’s. And in Virginia, Total Wine is barred by law from selling spirits.

Ben Jung, owner of Ingersoll Wine & Spirits, said there may be another factor at work. He said Hy-Vee’s Wall-to-Wall Wine and Spirits in West Des Moines mirrors Total Wine’s format. He said the Des Moines metro likely is too small to support two alcohol and spirits retailers of that size ― especially at a time when younger people are drinking less alcohol, limiting the growth of the market.

Bloomingdale’s and Macy’s are in contraction mode

When it comes to their full-size department stores, Macy’s and its luxury line, Bloomingdale’s, are contracting. Macy’s has never had Iowa stores, and Bloomingdale’s closest store, at the Mall of America in Minneapolis, closed in 2012. Last year, Bloomingdale’s closed stores in California, Hawaii, Virginia and Florida. And this year, it closed its flagship Union Square location in San Francisco in what city Supervisor Matt Dorsey on social media called a “gut punch” to the city.

Now most of its stores are in larger metro areas on the East Coast, with a handful left in California and Texas and an Illinois location on Chicago’s Magnificent Mile. Macy’s, though more widespread, with locations in the Kansas City and St. Louis metros, in January announced it planned to close 150 stores by 2026.

But there is a faint ray of hope. In 2024, Bloomingdale’s and Macy’s have opened more than three dozen small-format stores across the country. Ted Rossman, a senior industry analyst for consumer finance company Bankrate, wouldn’t comment on whether a metro like Des Moines could be in line for one of those stores, but so far the smaller stores have opened in cities that already had a full-scale Macy’s or Bloomingdale’s.

Rossman said the new stores are an effort to combat online shopping.

“There is still a time and a place for in-person” shopping, Rossman said. “Sometimes it’s the immediacy, it’s the ability to touch it and feel it and take it home today. Some of it is the demise of malls and in-person retail has probably been overstated.”

Never say never

While their past practices, business limitations and other considerations make it appear some retailers are unlikely to open Des Moines metro locations, those factors can change.

One example is Lego, which for many years had a limited number of retail locations in highly selective places like Walt Disney World’s Downtown Disney Marketplace.

Lego fan Zachary Givens of Ankeny said that in 2019, he reached out to a Lego marketing rep and asked the company to bring a store to the metro.

“Their response was ‘Des Moines is not big enough. We require at least 2 million people,'” Givens said.

But in 2020 Lego changed gears. It announced at the grand opening of a new kind of store in New York that it would lean into “experiential retail,” packing its locations with entertainment options, museum-like displays of Lego creations and opportunities for customers to use the bricks themselves. Its plan to open 150 new stores has since grown to more than 1,000 locations worldwide.

Among them: Jordan Creek Town Center in West Des Moines, where it opened in 2024.

Now, “they’re here, and they’re thriving,” Givens said.

Philip Joens covers retail and real estate for the Des Moines Register. He can be reached at 515-284-8184 or pjoens@registermedia.com.

This article originally appeared on Des Moines Register: Want an Ikea in Des Moines? Here’s why you may be in for a long wait

Reporting by Philip Joens, Des Moines Register / Des Moines Register

USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

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