There was a time when going to the mall was an actual event. You didn’t just run in for one thing and leave. You made a whole day out of it. Teenagers practically lived there on weekends, families wandered around for hours, and food courts stayed packed from lunch until closing time. The mall was where you hung out, people-watched, grabbed snacks, and somehow always ended up buying something you didn’t even go there for in the first place.
Now? Half the malls across America feel like ghost towns.
I can’t even pretend I’m not part of the reason for it either. I absolutely played my role in the downfall of in-person shopping. At this point, I do not go into a store unless I absolutely have to. I haven’t stepped foot inside Walmart or HEB in probably two or three years unless we were traveling and needed something while out of town. I do curbside pickup, order from Amazon, and have pretty much everything delivered straight to my house. Honestly, people are exhausting to me and I am not doing all that unless necessary.
And the mall? I genuinely cannot remember the last time I went to our local mall.
Malls Used To Be the Place To Be
Back in the day, malls were more than stores. They were social hubs. If you grew up in the ’80s, ’90s, or even early 2000s, you probably have memories tied to a shopping mall somewhere.
You met friends there after school. You walked around with no real plan. You spent twenty dollars and somehow stayed entertained for five hours. The mall had its own smell, its own energy, and its own little ecosystem.
Every mall had:
- The candle store you could smell from halfway down the hall
- The CD store blasting music
- The arcade filled with loud games and flashing lights
- A crowded food court
- That one kiosk employee aggressively trying to straighten your hair or sell lotion
During the holidays, malls felt magical. Christmas decorations hung from every ceiling, kids lined up for Santa pictures, and parking lots looked like complete chaos from Thanksgiving through December.
Now, many malls feel quiet, empty, and honestly kinda sad.
Online Shopping Changed Everything
Convenience won. Simple as that.
Why fight traffic, hunt for parking, walk through packed stores, and stand in long checkout lines when you can order what you need from your couch in under five minutes?
That’s exactly what happened for a lot of us.
Online shopping slowly turned into the easier option, then eventually became the preferred option. Stores started offering faster shipping, better return policies, and curbside pickup. Once people realized they could avoid the crowds entirely, there was really no going back.
And if we are being honest, the pandemic sped the whole thing up even more. A lot of people got used to having groceries delivered, placing pickup orders, and avoiding stores altogether. Some never returned to old shopping habits after that.
I know I didn’t.
People Just Shop Differently Now
The younger generation shops completely differently than we did growing up. They discover products through social media, buy directly from apps, and often skip traditional retail stores altogether.
Instead of spending Saturday at the mall, people scroll online while sitting on the couch watching TV. Retail therapy became tapping “add to cart” at midnight.
Even clothing shopping has changed. Years ago, people wanted to walk through department stores trying things on. Now, many shoppers order multiple sizes online, keep what fits, and send the rest back.
Technology made shopping easier, but it also made it a lot less personal.
Some Malls Never Adapted
Not every mall failed because of online shopping alone. Some just never evolved.
A lot of malls stayed exactly the same while shopping habits changed around them. Empty anchor stores started appearing, maintenance slipped, and fewer desirable stores moved in. Once enough stores closed, fewer shoppers came. Then, even more stores left.
It became a cycle that was hard to stop.
Meanwhile, newer shopping centers focused on restaurants, entertainment, outdoor spaces, and experiences instead of traditional department store shopping. People still like going out, but they want more than wandering through endless retail stores now.
There Is Still Something Nostalgic About It
Even though I barely shop in person anymore, there’s still a weird sadness seeing malls disappear.
They hold memories for a lot of people. First dates, back-to-school shopping, prom dresses, holiday traditions, and just aimlessly roaming around with friends are tied to those places.
You can almost hear the echoes of what they used to be.
Sometimes I think that’s why dead mall videos and abandoned mall photos are so popular online now. People miss the feeling more than the actual shopping itself.
Because honestly, none of us really miss fighting for parking spots during the Christmas shopping season.
But we do miss what malls represented.
Related: Thanksgiving Traditions I’ll Always Hold On To
The Era Probably Isn’t Coming Back
There will always be some successful malls, especially large upscale ones in major cities. But the golden era of the American shopping mall is probably over.
Life is faster now. Convenience matters more. People are tired, overworked, overstimulated, and looking for easier ways to get things done. Clicking a button from home usually wins over wandering through crowded stores for hours.
And for some of us, avoiding people entirely is a pretty solid bonus too.
I never thought I’d become someone who avoids stores at all costs, but here we are. These days, if I can order it online or pull into a curbside pickup spot without leaving my vehicle, that’s exactly what I’m doing.
The mall experience may be fading away, but honestly? A lot of us helped make it happen.
Lisa Crow contributed to this article. She is a true crime junkie and lifestyle blogger based in Waco, Texas. Lisa is the Head of Content at Gigi’s Ramblings and Southern Bred True Crime Junkie. She spends her free time traveling when she can and making memories with her large family which consists of six children and sixteen grandchildren.