Dollar Tree Inc.

DLTR
NASDAQFree primer · Steps 1–3 of 21Updated May 13, 2026Coverage as of 2026-Q2
TTM ROIC
12.8%FY2026
Moat
Narrow
Latest Q Revenue
$5.5BQ4 FY2026
Top Holder
Vanguard Group11.65%
Bull Case
The market underprices Dollar Tree's pure-play re-rating potential and multi-price 3.0 format's ability to structurally expand gross margins and accelerate EPS growth.
Bear Case
The $1.25 price point was Dollar Tree's core moat, and multi-price 3.0 risks alienating its loyal low-income traffic base while tariff exposure and multiple compression loom.

Business Model


ticker: DLTR step: 01 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Dollar Tree (DLTR) — Business Overview

Business Description

Dollar Tree is a U.S. discount variety retailer operating approximately 8,500 Dollar Tree-banner stores as a standalone business following the announced sale of the Family Dollar segment (agreed March 2025, $1.007B to Brigade/Macellum). Dollar Tree stores sell a curated assortment of everyday essentials, seasonal, and discretionary merchandise — historically at the $1.25 fixed price point, now evolving to a "Dollar Tree 3.0" multi-price format (85%+ at $2 or less) that allows higher-quality and premium-value offerings. The company is repositioning from a two-banner discount conglomerate to a focused, higher-margin single-banner value retailer.

Revenue Model

Dollar Tree earns revenue through high-frequency store visits driven by consumable (food, health/beauty, cleaning) and discretionary (party, seasonal, crafts) merchandise, priced to deliver extreme value relative to mass/grocery alternatives. The multi-price evolution (Dollar Tree 3.0) increases average ticket and allows the company to carry items previously impossible at $1.25, expanding the addressable market to higher-income shoppers seeking value. Same-store sales growth is driven by a combination of traffic (new household acquisition) and ticket (multi-price mix shift). There is no significant e-commerce component — the model is predicated on convenient, low-friction physical store economics.

Products & Services

  • Consumables (~50–55% of sales): Food, snacks, beverages, health/beauty, cleaning products, paper goods
  • Seasonal/Holiday (~25%): Party supplies, decorations, gift wrap, Halloween/Christmas merchandise
  • Discretionary Variety (~20–25%): Housewares, stationery, toys, crafts, apparel accessories
  • Dollar Tree 3.0 Multi-Price: Expanded assortment with items from $1.25 to $7+ including national brands previously unachievable at $1.25

Customer Base & Go-to-Market

Dollar Tree serves a broad demographic, though the core base skews toward budget-conscious households (median income ~$40–60K) and deal-seeking higher-income shoppers. A significant development: 3 million net new households were added in Q3 FY2025, with 60% earning over $100,000 annually — validating that the multi-price repositioning is expanding Dollar Tree's demographic reach upmarket. Stores are located in strip malls and freestanding small-box locations in suburban and rural markets; average store size is ~8,000–10,000 sq ft.

Competitive Position

Dollar Tree is the largest single-price/extreme value variety retailer in the U.S. with ~8,500 stores, competing primarily with Dollar General (15,000+ stores), Five Below (1,700+ stores), and increasingly with Aldi and Walmart's neighborhood formats for consumable traffic. Its competitive strengths are the fixed-price or near-fixed-price value proposition that drives destination traffic, strong private-label consumables, and a proven model for opening stores in strip mall end-caps profitably. Dollar General's larger store base and SNAP acceptance represent competitive pressure for consumable share.

Key Facts

  • Founded: 1986 (as Only $1.00; Dollar Tree name adopted 1993)
  • Headquarters: Chesapeake, Virginia
  • Employees: ~140,000 (post Family Dollar separation)
  • Exchange: NASDAQ
  • Sector / Industry: Consumer Staples / Dollar Stores
  • Market Cap: ~$20B
  • Fiscal Year End: Late January/early February

Financial Snapshot


ticker: DLTR step: 04 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Dollar Tree (DLTR) — Financial Snapshot

Income Statement Summary (Continuing Operations — Dollar Tree Segment)

Metric FY2023 FY2024 FY2025 YoY
Revenue ~$15.3B ~$16.8B $17.6B +4.7%
Gross Margin ~34.8% ~35.2% ~35.8% +0.6pp
Operating Margin ~7.5% ~8.3% ~8.5% +0.2pp
Net Income (adj.) ~$1.15B ~$1.10B ~$1.05B ~-5%
EPS (adj. diluted) ~$5.28 ~$5.00 ~$4.90 ~-2%

Note: Dollar Tree fiscal years end in late January/early February. FY2025 = ended February 2026. Figures above reflect continuing operations (Dollar Tree segment); Family Dollar is classified as discontinued. GAAP net income was deeply negative in FY2024 due to goodwill impairment charges on the Family Dollar segment ($1.07B). Adjusted EPS is the relevant metric for the continuing business.

Cash Flow & Balance Sheet (FY2024 Continuing Operations)

Metric Value
Operating Cash Flow ~$1.8B
Free Cash Flow ~$893M
Cash & Equivalents ~$700M
Total Debt ~$5.5B

Key Ratios (approximate)

  • P/E: ~20x (adjusted, FY2025) | EV/EBITDA: ~10x | FCF Yield: ~4.5%
  • Revenue Growth (FY2025): +4.7% | FCF Margin: ~5%
  • Dividend Yield: ~nil (no regular dividend; buybacks primary)

Growth Profile

Dollar Tree's continuing business (excluding Family Dollar) has delivered consistent low-to-mid single-digit same-store sales growth, bolstered by the Dollar Tree 3.0 multi-price format rollout (~5,300 stores converted by end of FY2025, ~2,400 converted in FY2025 alone). Same-store sales accelerated to +6.5% in Q2 FY2026, driven by higher ticket from multi-price assortment and new higher-income household acquisition. The company is opening 300–400 net new stores annually. Post-Family Dollar sale, the business will be simpler, more focused, and structurally higher-margin.

Forward Estimates

  • FY2026E Revenue: ~$19.4B (full year with discontinuation adjustment; or ~$18B+ on a clean continuing basis)
  • FY2026E: Comparable sales growth expected in 4–7% range; operating margin expansion toward 9–10% as multi-price scales
  • Post-Family Dollar: Management targets improved margins, capital returns, and a "one company, one brand" growth story

Recent Catalysts


ticker: DLTR step: 12 generated: 2026-05-12 source: quick-research

Dollar Tree (DLTR) — Investment Catalysts & Risks

Bull Case Drivers

  1. Family Dollar Separation Unlocking a Higher-Multiple Core Business — Dollar Tree's decision to sell Family Dollar to Brigade/Macellum for $1.007B removes a chronic earnings drag, goodwill impairment risk, and operational complexity that has weighed on the stock for a decade since the 2015 acquisition. The standalone Dollar Tree segment generates ~35–36% gross margins (vs. Family Dollar's ~30%), higher same-store sales consistency, and a more defensible value proposition. The market has long argued that Dollar Tree was mis-valued as a conglomerate — the separation allows investors to value the remaining business as a focused, high-quality discount retailer, potentially warranting a materially higher P/E multiple than the combined entity received.

  2. Dollar Tree 3.0 Multi-Price Driving Traffic and Ticket Expansion — The rollout of the Dollar Tree 3.0 format — expanding pricing to $1.25 to $7+ — is accelerating topline growth and attracting higher-income shoppers. Q2 FY2026 same-store sales of +6.5% (accelerating from +5.4% in Q1) were driven by a 4.5% average ticket increase, and 3 million net new households joined in Q3 FY2025 with 60% earning over $100K annually. Multi-price expands the total addressable market to product categories impossible at $1.25 (branded health/beauty, premium food, quality housewares), closing the competitive gap with Five Below and TJX in the discovery/value-brand segment.

  3. Recession-Resistant Model in a Value-Seeking Consumer Environment — Dollar Tree has achieved 20 consecutive years of positive same-store sales — including through the 2008–2009 recession, COVID, and 2022 inflation spike. As consumer finances remain stretched amid elevated housing costs and high credit card balances, trade-down from grocery and mass retail to extreme-value formats accelerates. Dollar Tree's consumable assortment (food, health/beauty, cleaning) ensures high-frequency visits, and the multi-price format allows it to capture incremental wallet share from households that would previously have gone to Walmart or Aldi for better-value multi-item purchases.

Bear Case Risks

  1. Competitive Intensity Accelerating from Dollar General and Aldi — Dollar General (15,000+ stores) continues to expand aggressively and accepts SNAP/EBT payments — a significant disadvantage for Dollar Tree in core low-income consumable markets. More acutely, Aldi announced plans to open 180+ U.S. stores in 2026 as part of a $9 billion 5-year expansion, directly targeting the same value-oriented shopper. Aldi's grocery-focused model offers fresh food at dramatically low prices and generates higher trip frequency than Dollar Tree. If Aldi and Dollar General capture the consumable traffic that drives Dollar Tree visits, same-store sales growth could decelerate and the traffic component of same-store sales (already slightly negative in Q3 FY2025) could turn more meaningfully negative.

  2. Execution Risk on the Dollar Tree 3.0 Transformation — The multi-price strategy is a significant operational and merchandising change: new planograms, supplier negotiations for non-dollar-price points, store associate training, and customer re-education. There is genuine risk that existing core customers — accustomed to the simplicity of the $1.25 price point — are confused or alienated by the expanded assortment. Profitability compression was visible in Q2 FY2026 (net income excluding extras fell from $313.5M in Q1 to $155.5M in Q2 on similar revenue), suggesting execution volatility. Five-year adjusted EPS has declined approximately 4.6% annually, reflecting structural margin pressure that the transformation must reverse.

  3. Tariff Exposure on Chinese-Sourced Merchandise — Dollar Tree sources a significant portion of its discretionary merchandise (party supplies, seasonal, housewares, crafts) from Chinese manufacturers. Rising import tariffs could meaningfully increase merchandise costs, which are difficult to fully offset at a $1.25–$7 price ceiling — unlike general merchandise retailers that can raise prices more freely. The company has some ability to shift sourcing and raise prices within the multi-price framework, but margin compression in the face of sustained tariff escalation is a real risk, particularly in the seasonal and discretionary categories that drive the highest traffic and discovery value for the brand.

Upcoming Events

  • Family Dollar sale closing: Expected H1 or H2 2026 — removes overhang and clarifies continuing earnings power
  • Q2/Q3 FY2026 earnings: Same-store sales trajectory and margin execution post-3.0 rollout are key
  • Dollar Tree 3.0 store count: Target of 7,000+ multi-price stores by end of FY2027 — rollout pace is a catalyst metric
  • Ongoing: Analyst estimate revisions as Family Dollar earnings are fully excluded from continuing operations guidance

Analyst Sentiment

Analyst consensus is mixed to cautious as of early 2026: approximately 18% Strong Buy, 24% Buy, 29% Hold, 24% Sell, and 6% Strong Sell, reflecting genuine disagreement about multi-price execution and traffic trends. Mean consensus price target is approximately $100 (range: $70–$140). Bulls cite the Family Dollar separation and multi-price momentum; bears cite traffic headwinds, tariff risk, and persistent EPS compression. The stock trades around $95 — modest premium to bears, significant discount to bulls.

Research Date

Generated: 2026-05-12

Full Research Available

This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.

View Investment MemoEach memo is $2. Coverage subscriptions for funds coming soon — join the waitlist.