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Big-box Chains Place Billion-Dollar Bets to Win Pro Construction Market

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Pro service counter in a big-box home improvement store with delivery trucks and stacked building materials

United States, September 13, 2025

News Summary

America’s largest home-improvement chains are shifting from a homeowner-focused model to an account-based strategy aimed at professional contractors. Retailers are investing billions in acquisitions, expanded distribution networks and enterprise-grade services and technology to capture a roughly $450 billion Pro construction market. Multibillion-dollar deals add hundreds of branches and thousands of professional customers, while chains roll out trade credit, dedicated account reps, priority fulfillment, bulk pricing and digital procurement tools. The shift promises deeper local inventory and faster delivery for contractors and signals competition for long-term, higher-margin Pro relationships rather than one-off DIY sales.

Big-box retailers place billion-dollar bets to win a $450 billion professional construction market

The largest home-improvement chains are reshaping their businesses to serve professional contractors, moving beyond the traditional homeowner customer. Recent deals and new service offerings show a clear strategy: capture more of the professional or Pro market, which industry estimates place at roughly $450 billion.

Top line: massive acquisitions and strategic shifts

Two major chains have made landmark distribution acquisitions and rolled out Pro-focused programs worth billions. One chain announced an acquisition worth $18.25 billion of a large building materials distributor and a separate deal of $4.3 billion to buy another distributor. Those moves folded in hundreds of branches and are estimated to expand that retailer’s addressable market by roughly $50 billion. Another chain agreed to buy a building-products distributor for about $8.8 billion, bringing in more than 370 distribution centers and access to about 40,000 new Pro customers.

Why Pros matter more than occasional DIY shoppers

Professional contractors buy more often, buy in bulk, and pay higher ticket prices than do-it-yourself shoppers. Even though Pro customers may make up a small share of total customer counts, they can account for a far larger portion of sales volume. One large chain’s Pro customers represent around 10% of customers but account for roughly half of total sales. Another chain has historically had a more DIY focus, with Pro sales estimated between 20–25% of revenue, though that share is growing and recently outpaced DIY sales in a key quarter.

Stability and margin benefits

Pro work tends to be steadier through market ups and downs. Contractors continue to work on repairs, insurance jobs, and larger renovations even when consumer DIY spending softens. Contractor purchases often favor reliability and service over the lowest possible price, which supports healthier margins for retailers. That predictability and higher lifetime value make Pro customers attractive in the same way large corporate accounts are valuable to software firms.

From consumer app to enterprise-style service — a retail analogy

Retailers are borrowing playbooks from enterprise software. The shift mirrors how software companies moved from chasing millions of casual users to signing larger, more predictable enterprise contracts. Serving Pros requires more hands-on service: dedicated account reps, trade credit, priority delivery, bulk pricing, and digital tools that manage complex procurement. Chains are now investing in loyalty programs, distribution networks, and enterprise-grade technology designed to automate vendor coordination, ensure just-in-time deliveries, and tie materials directly to project schedules.

What the technology does

New digital tools aim to cut friction in procurement by embedding intelligence into workflows — tracking orders, automating reorders, coordinating suppliers, and predicting delays. When these platforms work well, they can become indispensable to contractors who need materials on tight timelines. The goal is to move from a simple retail relationship to a hybrid retail-wholesale-distribution partnership that is central to a contractor’s day-to-day operations.

Market context and drivers

The pandemic sparked a surge in home improvements, but that DIY boom has cooled. High home prices and persistent mortgage rates mean many homeowners are staying put and choosing to renovate rather than move. These projects increasingly include major renovations, additions of living space, accessory dwelling units (ADUs), and full kitchen and bathroom overhauls — work that typically requires licensed contractors and professional crews.

What consolidation means

The large acquisitions and expanded distribution footprints signal a structural bet on Pro dominance. Consolidation in the pro supply chain is becoming a central battleground as chains seek recurring revenue, steadier margins, and deeper integration with contractor workflows. The competition is less about selling the most paint to a homeowner and more about becoming the go-to procurement platform for Pros.

What contractors can expect

Contractors should see more options geared to their needs: credit lines, prioritized deliveries, bulk pricing, dedicated support, and digital portals that track job-level spending. At the same time, contractors may face a tighter landscape as independent distributors consolidate under major retail banners, which could change pricing dynamics and supplier choices in some markets.

Other notes and event information

The article is published as Sponsored Content, a paid section where industry companies provide material for the construction audience. All sponsored content is supplied by the advertising partner, and opinions in such pieces may not reflect the views of the platform’s publisher. Readers interested in participating in sponsored sections are advised to contact their local advertising representative.

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Tools and job resources

For job listings and career resources related to the industry, a regional career center widget is included below.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the “Pro” market?

A: The Pro market refers to licensed contractors, builders, remodelers, and tradespeople who buy building materials and supplies for commercial and residential jobs. It’s measured by recurring, bulk purchases and is estimated to be about $450 billion.

Q: Why are big-box chains buying distributors?

A: Buying distributors expands a retailer’s distribution footprint, gives faster access to job sites, and brings in loyal Pro customers. These deals boost the buyer’s ability to serve contractors with bulk inventory, credit services, and faster delivery.

Q: How will these changes affect independent contractors?

A: Contractors may gain access to more tools, credit options, and streamlined delivery. They may also see shifts in local supplier options as distribution networks consolidate. The net effect will depend on local market competition and how retailers price services.

Q: Does this mean DIY shoppers will be left behind?

A: Not necessarily. Retailers will continue to serve DIY customers, but the business focus and investments appear to be tilting toward services and products that support Pro reliability and recurring revenue.

Q: What does the SaaS analogy mean for construction retail?

A: The analogy compares contractors to enterprise customers in software markets. Like enterprise accounts, Pros deliver larger, steadier revenue and require tailored, service-heavy solutions. Retailers are investing in tech and account services to lock in that higher lifetime value.


Key features at a glance

Feature Why it matters Example / Data
Pro market size Shows scale and revenue opportunity $450 billion
Major acquisitions Expand distribution and Pro customer base $18.25B, $4.3B, $8.8B deals
Distribution footprint Shorter delivery times and local market coverage 760 branches folded in; 370 centers added
Pro share of sales Higher revenue concentration from fewer customers 10% of customers ≈ 50% of sales at one chain; 20–25% at another
Service needs Account reps, credit, priority service, digital tools Dedicated accounts, bulk pricing, project portals
Technology focus Automation and predictability for projects Enterprise-grade procurement platforms and logistics tools

Deeper Dive: News & Info About This Topic

Additional Resources

Construction NY News
Author: Construction NY News

NEW YORK STAFF WRITER The NEW YORK STAFF WRITER represents the experienced team at constructionnynews.com, your go-to source for actionable local news and information in New York and beyond. Specializing in "news you can use," we cover essential topics like product reviews for personal and business needs, local business directories, politics, real estate trends, neighborhood insights, and state news affecting the area—with deep expertise drawn from years of dedicated reporting and strong community input, including local press releases and business updates. We deliver top reporting on high-value events such as the New York Build Expo, infrastructure breakthroughs, and cutting-edge construction technology showcases. Our coverage extends to key organizations like the Associated General Contractors of New York State and the Building Trades Employers' Association, plus leading businesses in construction and real estate that power the local economy such as Turner Construction Company and CMiC Global. As part of the broader network, including constructioncanews.com, constructiontxnews.com, and constructionflnews.com, we provide comprehensive, credible insights into the dynamic construction landscape across multiple states.

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