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SHOPPING DAYS AND IMPACT OF HOLIDAYS


Some countries do not allow Sunday Shopping . In Islamic countries some shops are closed on Fridays during noon. In Israel many shops are closed on Friday evening and Saturday during daytime.

Each state in Australia sets its own standard trading hours, but in most of the country the shops are open seven days a week for at least part of the day.

For some shops and other businesses Christmas Day is the only day in the year that they are closed.

In the US a shop may often be open all days of the year except Thanksgiving Day , Christmas Day (most often - virtually everything closes on that day in virtually all communities), and Easter Sunday, although in smaller communities many stores will be closed on all Sundays.

In Islamic countries shops may have special opening hours during Ramadan .


AUSTRALIA


Supermarket trading hours in Australia are regulated by individual states and territories.

The states of New South Wales , ''' Victoria ''' and ''' Tasmania ''' are the only states in Australia to essentially deregulate laws on shopping hours. All retail businesses in the states, regardless of size or product offer are able to stipulate their trading hours to suite their individual customer demand (although they are required to remain closed on Christmas day, Good Friday, and on Easter Sunday ). The two main supermarket operaters Woolworths and Coles generally trade between 6am and 12 midnight 7 days a week, although some inner-city stores in Sydney & Melbourne operate 24 hours a day.

Shopping Hours in South Australia are still regulated. however the state government has passed numerous changes to relax the laws. Despite these changes retailers still face complicated and confusing trading laws, which stipulate trading hours based on size and product offer. Supermarkets, which trade with less than 7 workers and with a trading floor less than 500m&2 are exempt from the laws. Larger supermarkets are required by law to close at 9 p.m. on weekdays, 5 p.m. on Saturdays, and are only permitted to trade between 11 am and 5 p.m. on Sundays.

In all areas of Queensland , trading hours with major supermarkets are 8am-9pm mon-fri, 8am-5:30 on Saturdays and Sundays trade on 9-6. Most major shopping centres close at 5 every day, with the exception of one night a week with what is so named 'late night shopping.' If a supermarket is to be found in a major shopping centre, they will still cease trading at 9pm, with special access for just the supermarket.

In rural areas of Western Australia trading laws are governed by local district councils, and many have permitted Sunday trading in their districts. Shopping Hours in the states capital Perth are regulated by laws similar to South Australia. Trading hours are stipulated in law, and are based on size and product offer. As in South Australia, smaller supermarket retailers are exempted. Larger supermarkets are required to close at 6 p.m. on weekdays (9 p.m. on Thursdays for 'late night shopping' and on Fridays in the Perth CBD), 5 p.m. on Saturdays, and are forced to remain closed on Sundays (except in the Perth CBD and other tourist precincts such as Fremantle).


AUSTRIA


at a Vienna train station selling ''Reiseproviant'' (goods to be consumed during your rail journey), the usual code for expanded opening hours]]
With the exception of the country being predominantly Catholic rather than Protestant, the German situation very much applies for Austria , too. Until the 1990s , all shops closed on Saturday noon (mostly at 12) and only reopened on Monday morning. Entrepreneurs such as Richard Lugner lobbied for an expansion of shopping hours, and gradually laws are being changed and more and more exceptions granted. Meanwhile, as in Germany, outside regular shopping hours the train stations of big cities have taken on the role of ''Nahversorger'' (supplying the local population with Groceries ).


CANADA


Store hours in Canada are regulated by each province or territory, and in some provinces individual municipalities as well.

As a general rule, there is little regulation of shopping hours across the country. In the provinces of British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan as well as well as all three territories (Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut) there are no restrictions at all and stores can open 24/7 365 days a year. As well, Nova Scotia permits any store to open every day of the year except Remembrance Day (November 11).

The remaining provinces (Manitoba, Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Newfoundland and Labrador) require stores to close on most major holidays. Furthermore, four provinces have further restrictions on Sunday openings. In Manitoba, stores may only open on Sundays with Municipal approval and only then between 12pm-6pm. Prince Edward Island only permits Sunday openings after 12pm from Victoria Day to Christmas Day. New Brunswick only allows Sunday openings year round with both Municipal and Provincial approval, otherwise it is only permitted from August until the New Year. Some communities in New Brunswick (such as the cities of Fredericton and Saint John restrict Sunday openings to 12pm-5pm.

The province of Quebec is the only province in Canada that regulates shopping hours outside of Sundays and Holidays. As a general rule, stores are only permitted to open between 8am-9pm Weekdays and 8am-5pm Weekends, excluding holidays.

In practice, few stores in Canada (outside of a small number of grocery stores) remain open 24 hours. Most shopping centres open from 10am-9pm Monday thru Friday, 9:30am-6pm (or in some cases 9pm) on Saturday and 12pm-5pm or 6pm on Sunday. Many larger stores, such as Wal-Mart Canada and most major grocery stores remain open 8am-10pm Monday to Saturday and 10am-6pm (in some provinces 8am-10pm) on Sunday, except in provinces where further restrictions apply.


GERMANY


Shopping days and opening hours in and Catholic ) are not uniform across Germany but instead vary from state to state (depending on whether Protestants or Catholics are predominant), stores in one state may be closed while on the same day may be wide open in a neighboring state.

The shop-closing law has been the subject of controversy in recent years, as larger stores (and many of their customers) would prefer to have fewer restrictions on their hours of operation, while the trade unions, small shop owners and the church are opposed to a further loosening of the rules. On June 9 , 2004 , the German Supreme Court ''(Bundesverfassungsgericht)'' rejected a claim by the German department store chain ''Kaufhof AG'' that the shop-closing law was unconstitutional. Among other things, the court cited Article 140 of the German constitution ''( Grundgesetz )'' (which in turn invokes Article 139 of the 1919 Weimar Constitution ) protecting Sundays and public holidays as days of rest and recuperation. However, the court in effect invited the Federal parliament ''( Bundestag )'' to reconsider whether the states ''(Länder)'' and not the federal government should regulate shop-closing hours.

The federal government handed over the authority to regulate shopping hours to the sixteen states effectve 7 July 2006. Since states are allowed to pass their own law regulating opening hours. Should a state decide not to pass its own law, the federal ''Ladenschlussgesetz'' will continue to be valid in that state.

No state has so far passed regulation that allows for general store opening on Sundays.

Monday-Saturday: 0:00-24:00, regulation for Sunday varies in different states:


Monday-Friday: 0:00-24:00, regulation for Saturday, Sunday varies in different states:


Monday-Saturday: 6:00-22:00, regulation for Sunday varies in different states:


States with no significant liberalization of opening hours:


IRELAND


Standard opening hours are:

''Monday - Wednesday, Saturday'':
  • 08:00/09:00 - 17:30/18:30


''Thursday - Friday'':
  • 08:00/09:00 - 20:00/21:00/22:00


''Sunday'':
  • 10:00/11:00 - 17:00/18:00/19:00


Many supermarkets are open 24 hours, or have longer opening hours (eg. 08:00 - 22:00).

Large shopping centres are typically open longer hours everyday (eg. 09:00 - 21:00/22:00 weekdays, 09:00 - 19:00 Saturdays, 10:00 - 19:00 Sundays).

In the two weeks running up to Christmas, it is common for many shops to have extended opening hours; some may operate 24 hours a day right until midnight on Christmas Eve.

Most shops in smaller towns don't open at all on Sundays. Almost all shops are closed on Christmas Day, though most are open on other holidays. Off Licenses (liquor stores) are closed (by law) on Good Friday as well, though it is thought this law will change soon.

Convienience stores, petrol stations and some chemists (drugstores) are normally open from early morning (05:00/06:00/07:00) until late night (22:00/23:00/00:00), or often 24 hours, and New Year's Day is also Sunday hours.


NETHERLANDS


Regular opening hours: Monday 11 am-6 p.m.; Tuesday-Friday: 9:30 am-6 p.m.; Saturday: 9:30-5 p.m.; Sunday (Amsterdam, Rotterdam, The Hague and smaller tourist towns): 12-5 or 6 p.m.. In many other towns shops are open every first Sunday of the month (koopzondag).

Each shop is allowed to stay open until 10 p.m. Monday through Saturday. Some DIY-stores and IKEA stay open until 9 p.m.. Most towns have their weekly shopping evening (koopavond), when shops stay open until 9 p.m., either on Thursday or Friday. Supermarkets usually remain open until 8, 9 or 10 p.m. on weekdays and until 6 or 8 p.m. on Saturdays. In some towns supermarkets are open Sundays between 10 am-6 p.m. Many towns have one or more little supermarkets (avondwinkels) that are open until later in the evening, occasionally all night. Convenience Store s also have longer shopping hours; they are at many larger railway stations (" Albert Heijn to go") and some busy streets.

A regular size supermarket that is open until midnight seven days a week is the ''Food Village'' at Schiphol Airport near Amsterdam (located in the area of the airport before Ticket checks, hence not only for air travellers).


UNITED KINGDOM


In Britain, most retail shops are generally open 6 or 7 days a week.

Typical opening times are:

Mondays - '''Saturdays''' 9am to 5:30pm
Some shopping centres stay open until 8pm or later

Sunday- 10am to 4pm (or 11am to 5pm)
Sunday shopping has become popular in recent years and most large shops in towns are open for business. Shops in England and Wales are only allowed to trade for 6 hours on Sundays, shops in Northern Ireland may open 1pm-6pm. In Scotland, in theory, Sunday is the same as any other day although in practice many shops do not open at all or just open for four hours in smaller towns.

Large supermarkets are open for 24 hours except for Sundays. Again Scottish legislation allows true 24-7 trading and the large chains do not close at all.

Many supermarkets and superstores otherwise open from 8am until 10pm from Mondays to Saturdays and 10am to 4pm (or 11am to 5pm) on Sundays.


UNITED STATES


In the U.S. , the various levels of government generally do not regulate the hours of the vast majority of retailers (though there are exceptions), with the main exception being shops licensed to sell spirits and other alcoholic beverages (for shopping hours, see Alcohol Sale Hours By State .) Shopping hours vary widely based on management considerations and customer needs. Key variables are the size of the metropolitan area, the type of store, and the size of the store. In major metropolitan areas like New York and Los Angeles , many Drugstore s and Supermarket s are routinely open 24 hours per day, 7 days per week, while Department Store s, Shopping Center s and most other large retailers are typically open from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday to Saturday, and often with shorter hours on Sundays — generally 11 a.m. or noon to 5 or 6 p.m. On Holiday s, the tendency is to remain open (with the exception of the most important holidays like Thanksgiving Day and Christmas Day where stores are generally closed), sometimes reducing hours or occasionally maintaining normal hours for that day unless local or regional laws dictate otherwise.

Most locations of the country's largest retailer, Wal-Mart (especially its ''Supercenter'' Hypermarket s), are open continuously except on Christmas Day, unless local laws dictate otherwise. Many stores in the U.S., such as the Meijer hypermarket chain, will in fact advertise "Open 24/7 364 days a year," implying that the store is open at all times except Christmas Day. Other hypermarket chains tend to follow Wal-Mart's lead, although not always remaining open around the clock (hours such as 7 a.m. to 11 p.m. are common). Boutiques and smaller shops often close early at 5 or 6 p.m. (occasionally with one late evening, usually Thursday or Friday), and may be closed one or two days per week (most often Sunday).

In many smaller cities and rural towns, there are strong religious traditions that cause most local retailers to stay closed on Sunday, and the few that are open may have reduced hours. However, many of the same communities will have at least one Wal-Mart that is open around the clock.

Las Vegas, Nevada is the notable exception to all the traditions just described. Las Vegas is world-famous for its 24-hour local culture, since it is a city with large gaming and tourism industries that operate 24 hours a day, 365 days a year. Since most of the employees in the city's primary industries work overnight shifts — and because Nevada has absolutely no laws in regards to operating hours for any type of commercial activity — many businesses cater to such workers. Thus, Las Vegas is home to many 24-hour Car Dealership s, Dental Clinic s, Auto Mechanic s, Computer Shop s, and even some smaller clothing stores.


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