Market saturation in Nailly (89100)

Active business count by trade in Nailly, retail density, top concentrated businesses. To measure the market BEFORE launching — not validate it after.

Population (INSEE)

1 283 inhabitants
INSEE RP

Distinct active businesses

95 NAF codes represented
SIRENE
See all trades
TradeBusinesses
Activités immobilières (68.20B)43
Commerce de détail (47.99A)11
Agriculture, élevage (01.11Z)8
Activités immobilières (68.20A)7
Services aux bâtiments et paysagers (81.21Z)7
Activités associatives (94.99Z)6
Travaux de construction spécialisés (43.99C)5
Sport et loisirs (93.29Z)5
Autres services personnels (96.02B)5
Sièges sociaux, conseil de gestion (70.10Z)4
Sièges sociaux, conseil de gestion (70.22Z)4
Enseignement (85.51Z)4

Most represented business

Activités immobilières (68.20B) (43 establishments)
SIRENE

Global retail density

173.8 establishments per 1000 inhabitants
SIRENE × INSEE

"Business / inhabitant" ratio method

The pop/nb_etabs ratio per business is the most used saturation indicator. Common benchmarks: 1 bakery / 2 000 inhabitants (Observatoire Franchise), 1 pharmacy / 2 500 inhabitants (regulation for rural towns), 1 hairdresser / 750 inhabitants. Beyond the raw ratio, look at dynamics (creations / cessions BODACC).

Reading the ratios

Above the trade's benchmark: contested market. Below: room to take. Check the trend with openings and closures over the last 24 months.

Assess your place in the Nailly market?

We point you to an adviser who validates your positioning before you launch. Tell us about your project.

No commitment. Your details are never resold for advertising.

FAQ

How to read Nailly density?
High density reflects a mature commercial fabric, not necessarily saturated. Compare to national median (~50-80 etabs/1000 inhabitants urban) and look at creation dynamics (SIRENE 12m).
Why not indicate "saturated / not saturated"?
No universal ratio allows a verdict. Saturation depends on business, district, purchasing power (Filosofi income), and recent dynamics. NTYB gives the numbers, you keep the reading.
When does the per-inhabitant ratio not make sense?
For destination retail (car dealer, specialty store) which captures a catchment area larger than the town. Then catchment (vertical /chalandise/) is relevant.