Ross Stores, Inc.
CorpDigest
Ross Stores, Inc.
Annual Revenue
Last reviewed: 2025-07-15 · By Swet Parvadiya
FY2024 Revenue
$21.5B
▲ 5.4% vs FY2023 ($20.4B)
Net Income: $1.9B
Ross Stores, Inc. reported $21.5B in revenue for fiscal year 2024. This represents a growth of 5.4% compared to the 2023 figure of $20.4B.
Ross Stores' FY2024 net sales reached $21.5 billion — up from $20.4 billion in 2023 and $18.7 billion in 2022 — through a combination of new store openings and comparable-store sales growth that required no acquisition, no digital infrastructure investment, and no brand licensing deal. The entire revenue growth came from the same model in operation since 1982: buy distressed branded inventory cheaply and sell it quickly. Gross margin of approximately 28.5 percent in FY2024 — driven by favorable branded apparel product mix and aggressive direct factory sourcing — produces the economics that sustain $1.9 billion in net income. The gross margin is not fixed: it moves with the availability of branded closeout merchandise, which varies with broader retail health. A period of strong full-price retail sell-through reduces the supply of distressed inventory and tightens Ross's buying opportunities; a period of retail distress (pandemic-era cancelations, for instance) floods the market with exactly the branded inventory Ross's buying organization was built to absorb. The $48 billion market capitalization against $21.5 billion in annual revenue implies a price-to-sales multiple of roughly 2.2x — modest by technology company standards, reflective of the physical retail discount the market applies, but arguably underpriced for a business generating $1.9 billion in annual net income from a model with no technology disruption risk and significant competitive moat from the buying organization itself. Ross has grown entirely organically since founding — the one acquisition listed in the data is labeled "None (Organic Growth)" — which means every store, every buyer relationship, and every operational process was built from scratch rather than acquired. That organic growth history is unusual for a $48 billion company and suggests the model does not require external acquisition capital to sustain its competitive position.
Source: SEC EDGAR filings, annual earnings releases, and verified financial disclosures.