Data source: Each square-footage figure is derived from Veridion’s business and location-based data. Veridion aggregates information from multiple sources (SEC 10-K filings, company websites, real estate disclosures, satellite imagery, government registries) and infers each facility’s footprint by cross-checking against related signals such as building outlines from satellite imagery, parcel records, industrial zoning, and operator disclosures. Cross-checked against SEC 10-K filings, Green Street Industrial Sector Update 2024, MWPVL, and Modern Materials Handling.
Methodology: Each company’s US warehouse footprint was assembled by resolving each industrial facility in Veridion’s location graph to its operating company, then summing per-facility square-footage estimates by operator. Entity resolution makes sure a distribution center owned by „Amazon Services LLC“ rolls up to the Amazon parent and doesn’t get double-counted with an adjacent fulfillment center. Where a company operates a clustered campus under multiple subsidiary entities (common with 3PLs and Amazon’s sortation + fulfillment + delivery station stack), the contiguous facilities are consolidated under the parent. Counts reflect active facilities as of May 2026; all figures are estimates with a margin of uncertainty.
Tools: Python for data processing, Figma for visualization
Mottledkarma517 on
It says „amazon added ~35M sq ft, more than most companies on this list have in total“, however according to your image, the lowest size on the list is 54M sq ft.
CrapDepot on
Did not know DHL (German Giant) is that big in the USA.
GiantPandammonia on
If those are drawn to scale, as a length scale on one edge or add a football field for the americans
xybrad on
> Amazon: 445M square feet, claimed to be equal to 5.5 million soccer fields.
445,000,000 sqft / 5,500,000 soccer fields = ~81 sqft per soccer field
So soccer fields are about the size of guest bedroom or a healthy walk-in closet now?
kilocharlie12 on
It’s strange to me that Home Depot is pretty high up on the list, but Lowes is nowhere to be found. I realize they could be #11, but it’s still weird that they’re not close to HD.
Ok-Pea3414 on
Walmart is actually false. Amazon only ships from warehouses, while Walmart ships from stores and allows pickups too.
If you’d do it by function, Walmart has something like 750M+ sqft of stores between Walmart and Sam’s Club square footage.
Yes, I understand this is warehouse space only, but warehouses here perform different functions for different companies.
TenderfootGungi on
Warehouses are expensive. I am sure Walmart is happy their footprint is much smaller than Amazons.
Independent-Cow-4070 on
Yeah so land value tax when????
Kootenay4 on
„5.5 million soccer fields“ is a pretty difficult to comprehend figure. That translates to 17,000 square miles or 44,000 km^(2); if Amazon warehouses were a US state it would rank in size between Maryland and West Virginia.
redsterXVI on
Square feet? Surely space should be measures in cubic feet
metadatame on
Well done on the creativity!
Cultural_Dust on
I feel like Iron Mountain should be shrinking fast because… why? Uhaul is just embarrassing. We own so much shit we have to store it in random metal rooms all over the country.
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Data source: Each square-footage figure is derived from Veridion’s business and location-based data. Veridion aggregates information from multiple sources (SEC 10-K filings, company websites, real estate disclosures, satellite imagery, government registries) and infers each facility’s footprint by cross-checking against related signals such as building outlines from satellite imagery, parcel records, industrial zoning, and operator disclosures. Cross-checked against SEC 10-K filings, Green Street Industrial Sector Update 2024, MWPVL, and Modern Materials Handling.
Methodology: Each company’s US warehouse footprint was assembled by resolving each industrial facility in Veridion’s location graph to its operating company, then summing per-facility square-footage estimates by operator. Entity resolution makes sure a distribution center owned by „Amazon Services LLC“ rolls up to the Amazon parent and doesn’t get double-counted with an adjacent fulfillment center. Where a company operates a clustered campus under multiple subsidiary entities (common with 3PLs and Amazon’s sortation + fulfillment + delivery station stack), the contiguous facilities are consolidated under the parent. Counts reflect active facilities as of May 2026; all figures are estimates with a margin of uncertainty.
Tools: Python for data processing, Figma for visualization
It says „amazon added ~35M sq ft, more than most companies on this list have in total“, however according to your image, the lowest size on the list is 54M sq ft.
Did not know DHL (German Giant) is that big in the USA.
If those are drawn to scale, as a length scale on one edge or add a football field for the americans
> Amazon: 445M square feet, claimed to be equal to 5.5 million soccer fields.
445,000,000 sqft / 5,500,000 soccer fields = ~81 sqft per soccer field
So soccer fields are about the size of guest bedroom or a healthy walk-in closet now?
It’s strange to me that Home Depot is pretty high up on the list, but Lowes is nowhere to be found. I realize they could be #11, but it’s still weird that they’re not close to HD.
Walmart is actually false. Amazon only ships from warehouses, while Walmart ships from stores and allows pickups too.
If you’d do it by function, Walmart has something like 750M+ sqft of stores between Walmart and Sam’s Club square footage.
Yes, I understand this is warehouse space only, but warehouses here perform different functions for different companies.
Warehouses are expensive. I am sure Walmart is happy their footprint is much smaller than Amazons.
Yeah so land value tax when????
„5.5 million soccer fields“ is a pretty difficult to comprehend figure. That translates to 17,000 square miles or 44,000 km^(2); if Amazon warehouses were a US state it would rank in size between Maryland and West Virginia.
Square feet? Surely space should be measures in cubic feet
Well done on the creativity!
I feel like Iron Mountain should be shrinking fast because… why? Uhaul is just embarrassing. We own so much shit we have to store it in random metal rooms all over the country.