| Metric | Details |
|---|---|
| Parent Entity | SpartanNash Company |
| Grocery Banners | Family Fare, Martin’s Super Markets, D&W Fresh Market, VG’s Grocery, Dan’s Supermarkets |
| S&P / Moody’s Rating | B+ / B1 |
| Investment Grade Status | Non-Investment Grade / High Yield |
| Sector | Regional Supermarket / Grocery Distribution |
| Corporate Retail Store Count | ~150 (retail segment) |
| Distribution Network | Serves ~2,100 independent retail locations |
| Cap Rate Range | 7.0–8.5% |
| Typical Lease Term | 15–20 years (NNN) |
| Guarantee Type | Corporate (SpartanNash Company) |
| Stock Ticker | SPTN (NASDAQ) |
| Annual Revenue | ~$9.4B (FY2024) |
| Typical Building Size | 40,000–65,000 SF |
| Geographic Focus | Michigan, Minnesota, Indiana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota |
Family Fare / SpartanNash Business Overview
SpartanNash Company (NASDAQ: SPTN) is a Grand Rapids, Michigan-based grocery distribution and retail company that operates two distinct business segments: a retail grocery operation under multiple Midwest banners including Family Fare, Martin’s Super Markets, D&W Fresh Market, VG’s Grocery, and Dan’s Supermarkets; and a wholesale distribution operation serving approximately 2,100 independent retail locations across the country. SpartanNash is also a leading distributor to US military commissaries — one of the largest military grocery distributors in the nation — providing an unusual revenue diversification that distinguishes it from pure-play grocery retailers.
SpartanNash Credit Analysis
SpartanNash’s B+/B1 ratings reflect the structural challenges of operating as a mid-sized regional grocery retailer and food distributor competing against significantly larger national operators. The retail segment — approximately 150 corporate-owned stores — faces intense competition from Walmart supercenters, Meijer (a privately held Midwest giant), ALDI’s rapid Michigan and Midwest expansion, and Kroger’s strong regional presence. The distribution segment provides more predictable revenue through its 2,100 independent customer relationships and US military contracts, but operates at thin margins inherent to food distribution.
The company has been evaluating strategic options for its retail segment — including potential dispositions of underperforming locations — as it focuses capital allocation on the higher-return distribution business. NNN investors should assess whether specific SpartanNash banner locations are in the core retained footprint or potentially subject to divestiture.
SpartanNash NNN Lease Structure & Cap Rates
SpartanNash grocery NNN leases carry 15 to 20 year terms in 40,000 to 65,000 SF Midwest supermarket formats. The B+/B1 rating commands wider spreads than investment-grade grocery operators. Family Fare and Martin’s locations trade at cap rates between 7.0% and 8.5% as of Q1 2026. Michigan concentration — particularly West Michigan where SpartanNash has its strongest market share — supports the tighter end of this range. Secondary market locations in smaller Midwest cities price wider.
SpartanNash NNN Investment: Pros & Cons
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Military commissary distribution adds earnings stability | B+/B1 — non-investment grade, challenged retail segment |
| Strong West Michigan market share in core markets | ALDI expansion in Michigan directly competes with Family Fare |
| Grocery-anchored NNN format generates stable retail traffic | Mid-sized regional operator vs. national grocery giants |
| Essential grocery format recession-resistant | Strategic review of retail segment creates uncertainty |
What grocery stores does SpartanNash own?
SpartanNash operates retail grocery stores under multiple Midwest banners: Family Fare (largest banner, Michigan-focused), Martin’s Super Markets (Indiana/Michigan), D&W Fresh Market (West Michigan premium), VG’s Grocery (Michigan), and Dan’s Supermarkets (North/South Dakota). All carry the SpartanNash Company corporate guarantee for NNN lease purposes.
Is SpartanNash investment grade?
No. SpartanNash carries B+ from S&P and B1 from Moody’s — non-investment grade high yield. The ratings reflect leverage and competitive pressures on the retail segment, partially offset by the more stable military and wholesale distribution business.
The Only Family Fare / SpartanNash NNN Advisor Whose Fee Comes From the Deal, Not From You
In NNN buyer representation, the listing broker typically pays a cooperating commission to the buyer’s broker. On the majority of transactions, this means there is no separate fee to you as the buyer. Where a cooperating commission is not available, our compensation is agreed upon with you in advance so there are never surprises.
Find It — SpartanNash grocery NNN properties sourced with banner-specific market share and competitive positioning analysis.
Fund It — B+ regional grocery credit. We match lenders who price Midwest grocery NNN competitively.
Exit It / 1031 — Looking to exchange a SpartanNash property into investment-grade grocery credit? We source replacement assets across Kroger, Whole Foods, and ALDI.
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Related NNN Tenants
Own a Family Fare / SpartanNash Property? Capital Markets Strategies Beyond Selling
Maturing debt and considering refinancing? Our capital markets team maintains 150+ lender relationships underwriting NNN properties across investment-grade and non-investment-grade credit tiers. We structure rate-and-term refinancing, cash-out refis, and bridge-to-perm takeouts.
Evaluating a 1031 exchange or disposition? We represent both sides of Family Fare / SpartanNash NNN transactions — whether you are looking to exit at peak value, exchange into a higher-quality credit tenant, or reposition within the same sector.
Need a current valuation? We maintain live comps on Family Fare / SpartanNash NNN transactions and can produce a Broker Opinion of Value within 48 hours reflecting today’s cap rate market.
Own multiple Family Fare / SpartanNash properties? Considering an off-market sale?
Investment Grade represents owners on confidential disposition of Family Fare / SpartanNash portfolios and individual properties through off-market direct-to-principal distribution to specialty REITs, private equity funds, and family offices. Family Fare / SpartanNash buyer demand runs deep, and portfolio sales consistently produce stronger pricing than sequential individual sales because the institutional buyer pool is structured around portfolio acquisition.
For multi-property owners considering a portfolio disposition, see Selling Investment Grade NNN Off-Market: Tenant-by-Tenant Buyer Demand. For the full off-market framework covering individual property dispositions, sale-leasebacks, and 1031 coordination, see Off-Market CRE Sales: The Complete 2026 Guide.
The pre-listing conversation is at no cost and fully confidential. Email team@investmentgrade.com or see contact Investment Grade.


