Grocery retail

What is Kroger?

U.S. grocery retailer operating supermarkets, pharmacies, fuel centers, private brands, digital grocery, retail media, and data analytics.

Category
Grocery retail
Headquarters
Cincinnati, OH
Founded
1883
Employees
About 410,000
Total funding
Public company; no current VC funding
Status
NYSE: KR

What is Kroger?

Kroger is a public grocery retail company headquartered in Cincinnati, OH. U.S. grocery retailer operating supermarkets, pharmacies, fuel centers, private brands, digital grocery, retail media, and data analytics.

Kroger operates at enterprise scale, with About $148B fiscal 2025 sales, About 410,000 employees, and a public-market profile of NYSE: KR. Its operating model is built around Supermarkets, Pharmacy, Fuel centers, Private brands, and adjacent growth areas such as Kroger Delivery, Boost membership, 84.51, Kroger Precision Marketing.

The company is important for sellers because it has national or global buying power, formal procurement, mature security and finance review, and large operational teams. The best entry points usually map to revenue growth, customer experience, labor productivity, supply-chain resilience, data, digital conversion, or cost reduction.

As of June 2026, the profile should be read as a current public-company account dossier rather than a startup funding page. Current leadership, recent revenue, public status, headquarters, office footprint, and technology signals are drawn from investor materials, official leadership pages, career pages, and public filings.

What does Kroger offer?

Kroger offers Supermarkets, Pharmacy, Fuel centers, Private brands, Kroger Delivery, and related services or platforms.

  • Supermarkets· Grocery
  • Pharmacy· Healthcare
  • Fuel centers· Fuel
  • Private brands· Private label
  • Kroger Delivery· Digital grocery
  • Boost membership· Loyalty/delivery
  • 84.51· Data analytics
  • Kroger Precision Marketing· Retail media

How does Kroger make money?

Kroger earns merchandise margin from grocery, pharmacy, fuel, and private brands, plus alternative profit from retail media, data analytics, loyalty, financial services, and vendor programs.

Kroger earns merchandise margin from grocery, pharmacy, fuel, and private brands, plus alternative profit from retail media, data analytics, loyalty, financial services, and vendor programs. The economic model is recurring or repeat-purchase in the areas where customers come back frequently, and project, event, campaign, or merchandise-margin driven in the areas where spending is more episodic.

Groceries are item-priced with weekly promotions and loyalty offers; Boost is subscription-based; retail media and data services are sold as campaign and enterprise agreements. Public filings and investor releases therefore describe revenue by segment, banner, product family, geography, or service type rather than a simple SaaS-style price sheet.

Growth depends on execution at scale: pricing, retention, traffic, digital conversion, supply, network or store productivity, vendor terms, brand strength, and capital allocation. For vendors, the strongest business case ties directly to measurable lift in revenue, margin, labor efficiency, asset utilization, customer satisfaction, compliance, or risk reduction.

Who leads Kroger?

Kroger is led by Greg Foran with senior executives responsible for finance, technology, operations, commercial strategy, and category or segment performance.

  • Greg ForanChief Executive OfficerCEO effective February 2026Former Walmart U.S. and Air New Zealand leader focused on store standards and value.
  • Todd FoleyChief Financial OfficerCFO in 2026Leads finance, investor relations, and capital allocation.
  • Yael CossetEVP and Chief Digital OfficerChief Digital Officer since March 2025Leads digital strategy, e-commerce, 84.51, and alternative profit businesses.
  • Ron SargentChairmanChairman and former interim CEOProvides board leadership after CEO transition.

How do you contact Kroger's leadership?

Kroger publishes official investor, media, or corporate contact routes, but this profile does not treat guessed personal executive addresses as verified. Use the public channel below or route through the relevant procurement, investor, media, or partner page.

Email formatir@kroger.com is public; personal executive email format not verified

How much funding has Kroger raised?

Kroger is a mature public company, not a current venture-backed private company: NYSE: KR.

Kroger's capital profile is best understood through public-market status, operating cash flow, debt capacity, dividends or repurchases where applicable, acquisitions and divestitures, and ongoing investment in the operating platform. The current status is NYSE: KR, with About $148B fiscal 2025 sales providing the scale context.

Unlike startup profiles, there is no meaningful current VC round table to enumerate. The relevant capital milestones are public listings, major mergers or acquisitions, portfolio changes, buybacks, dividends, debt financing, and strategic reinvestment.

Seller signal: Kroger can fund large programs when the business case is tied to current executive priorities. Expect mature procurement, legal, privacy, information security, finance, and business-unit review, and be ready to quantify impact on growth, retention, cost, productivity, customer experience, or risk.

How did Kroger get here?

Kroger reached its current scale through founding-era expansion, public-market access, operational execution, and major strategic milestones.

  1. 1883Kroger foundedBarney Kroger opens the first grocery store in Cincinnati.
  2. 1972Modern supermarket scaleKroger becomes one of the largest U.S. supermarket operators.
  3. 201584.51 formedKroger builds customer data and analytics capability after dunnhumbyUSA transition.
  4. 2022Albertsons merger announcedKroger announces a proposed merger with Albertsons.
  5. 2024Albertsons merger terminatedThe deal ends after regulatory challenges.
  6. 2026Greg Foran appointed CEOKroger names Foran CEO and reports Q1 2026 results in June.

Who are Kroger's competitors?

Kroger competes with large public and private companies across its core category, adjacent channels, and digital or platform substitutes.

  • WalmartLargest grocery competitor with price leadership, supercenters, and e-commerce scale.
  • Albertsons CompaniesTraditional supermarket competitor across many regional markets.
  • CostcoMembership warehouse competitor in grocery, fuel, and household essentials.
  • AmazonCompetes through Whole Foods, Amazon Fresh, delivery, marketplace, and ads.
  • AldiHard-discount grocery competitor with private-label value.

Kroger — frequently asked questions

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