Newsagent's shop

A newsagent's shop (British English), newsagency (Australian English) or newsstand (American and Canadian English) is a business that sells newspapers, magazines, cigarettes, snacks and often items of local interest. In Britain, Ireland and Australia, these businesses are termed newsagents. Newsagents typically operate in busy public places like city streets, railway stations and airports. Racks for newspapers and magazines can also be found in convenience stores, bookstores and supermarkets. The physical establishment can be either freestanding or part of a larger structure (e.g. a shopping mall or a railway station).

In Canada and the United States, newsstands are often open stalls in public locations such as streets, or in a transit terminal or station (subway, rail, or airport).

By country

Brazil

In Brazil, newsagents' shops are known as "bancas de jornal" or "bancas de revistas" and are usually family-owned free standing kiosks that only deal in periodical publications, telephone cards, bus tickets and the occasional book and cut-price DVD. In suburban areas and villages they are normally housed in a shop selling stationery, tobacco and sweets as well as periodicals.

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Latest News for: newsstands

British newsstand retailer WH Smith changes hands

The Beat 31 Mar 2025
British newsstand retailer WH Smith, the primary access point for newsstand comics in the UK, changes hands .

The hidden street in Mayfair where the first WH Smith newsstand opened in 1792 before ...

The Daily Mail 28 Mar 2025
For it was here that Henry Walton Smith and his wife Anna opened their first newsstand in 1792 as part a business that would become WH Smith ... Henry Walton and his wife Anna open their first newsstand on Little Grosvenor Street in London.

Petersen’s HUNTING Highly Anticipated ‘Guns & Gear’ April Issue Hits Newsstands (Outdoor Sportsman Inc)

Public Technologies 12 Mar 2025
Packed with exclusive content, this 112-page edition - the magazine's largest and most-anticipated issue of the year - is now available on newsstands or by subscription for just $12 per year.
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