This is a list of hypermarket chains sorted alphabetically by continent and country.
A hypermarket is a superstore carrying a wide range of products under one roof, and theoretically allows customers to satisfy all their shopping needs in one trip.
Africa
 Algeria
The Algerian chain Ardis (owned by Algerian group Arcofina) is currently operating one hypermarket in the country in Mohammadia, just outside of Algiers. In the future Ardis will open 19 hypermarkets in the country, the next hypermarket will open near Oran in Bir El Djir. Carrefour ended their partnership with the Algerian group Arcofina in February 19, 2009. "The concept of mass distribution does not work in Algeria," added Carrefour. Before that, Carrefour had still only 1 store opened as of 2009 of 18 hypermarkets planned by 2012. The private group Arcofina explained that there was delay because of difficulties in finding available land to open hypermarkets. Arcofina is now focusing on opening hypermarkets in the future under the Ardis brand.
- Ardis
- Carrefour (Defunct)
- Cevital
- Familishop
 Angola
- Continente (opening in 2014)
- Maxi
 Benin
- Erevan (Système U)
 Côte d'Ivoire
- Hypermarché SOCOCE
 Egypt
- Carrefour
- Hyper One
- Spinneys
 Gabon
- Géant Casino-Mbolo
 Ghana
- Palace Hypermarket
- SHOPRITE
- MAXMART
- MARINAMALL
- GAME
- MELKOM
- KOALA
 Kenya
- Uchumi
- Nakumatt
- Tuskeys
- Naivas
- Ukwala
- Mathai
- Gmatt
- Tumaini
 Mauritius
- Shoprite
- Hyper U
- Jumbo Score
 Mayotte
- Cora
- Jumbo Score
- Super U
 Morocco
There are several hypermarkets operating in the country, the biggest are: Marjane, Aswak Assalam and Carrefour. The Acima brand which belongs to the same retail group with Marjane are stores that cannot qualify to hypermarkets because they are smaller.
- Aswak Assalam
- Carrefour
- Marjane
 Réunion
- Carrefour
- Cora
- Géant Casino
- Hyper U
 South Africa
The Pick 'n Pay chain uses the term for 14 of their largest stores in South Africa. Checkers also runs 24 hypermarkets under the "Checkers Hyper" name.
- Checkers Hyper
- Pick 'n Pay Hypermarket
- ShopriteHyper
- USave Superstore
- Makro (Metro Cash & Carry)
 Tunisia
- Auchan (opening soon)
- Carrefour
- Géant
Asia
 Afghanistan
- Finest Superstore
 Bangladesh
Rahimafrooz Superstores Ltd. Opened their first hypermarket or superstore under the brand Agora Superstores in 2001. The under construction shopping mall Jamuna in Dhaka will contain a supermarket and the biggest hypermarket of Bangladesh.
- Agora
- Saad Musa City center
- Jamuna Future Park
 Bahrain
- Carrefour
- Al Muntazah
- Géant
- Lulu Hypermarket
 Cambodia
- Lucky Supermarket
- AEON
 China
In China, the largest hypermarket retailer is Shanghai-based Bailian (ç¾è"), followed by Beijing-based Hualian (åè").
- Auchan
- Bailian
- Carrefour
- Hualian
- JUSCO
- Lotus Supercenter
- Lulu Hypermarket
- Walmart
- Wumart
Defunct:
- Tesco
 Hong Kong
There were some hypermarkets owned by Carrefour, which were closed down by 2000.
As of July 2011, there are 5 Ãon (æ°¸æºç¾è²¨) JUSCO hypermarkets, 19 Wellcome Superstores (æ åº·è¶ ç´å»£å ´), and 43 PARKnSHOP Superstores (ç¾ä½³è¶ ç´å»£å ´) there.
- Ãon
- JUSCO
- Wellcome Superstores
- PARKnSHOP
Defunct chains:
- Carrefour
 India
- Best Price
- D-Mart
- HyperCity
- Lulu Hypermarket
- Spencer's Hyper
- Star Bazaar
- Vishal Megamart
 Indonesia
- Giant Hypermarket
- Carrefour
- Hypermart Indonesia
- Lotte Mart
- ÃON(opening in 2015)
 Iran
- All In All Hypermarket (Tabriz Laleh Park)
- Najm Khavarmianeh
- Hyperstar (Carrefour)
- Proma Hypermarket
- Refah
- Shahrvand
- Padideh
 Iraq
- Carrefour
- City Centre
 Israel
The hypermarket format in Israel was not a success because retail chains abandoned hypermarkets and later converted them into smaller discount stores.
- Shufersal Big Not a hypermarket chain but has currently the largest stores.
 Japan
- ÃON
- Daiei
- Fuji
- Heiwado
- Ito-Yokado
- Izumi
- Nagasakiya
- Uny
- Sunlive
- SEIYU (Walmart)
Defunct:
- Carrefour
- Tesco
 Jordan
In Jordan, Carrefour has one branch in Amman (a joint venture between Majid Al Futtaim Group and Carrefour France) and has an area of 11,000 square meters.
- Carrefour
- C-Town
- Cozmo
- Safeway
- Spinneys
 Kazakhstan
- Kazmart DIY
- MEGA Astana
- Ramstore Hyper
 Kuwait
Biggest hypermarkets operating in Kuwait are Carrefour and City Centre. The Sultan Center has 11 locations in Kuwait that target expatriate shoppers. CityCentre has two hypermarkets in Kuwait, one in Shuwaikh and one in Salmiya. Carrefour has one hypermarket at The Avenues, located in Shuwaikh a few minutes out of downtown Kuwait City
- Carrefour
- City Centre
- Géant (360 mall)
- Lulu Hypermarket
 Laos
- Big C
 Lebanon
- Bou Khalil
- Carrefour (opening soon)
- Spinneys
Defunct brands:
- Géant
 Mongolia
- BOSA Hypermarket (coming soon)
 Malaysia
- AEON Big
- Boulevard Hypermarket (East Malaysia only)
- Cold Storage
- e-Mart (East Malaysia only)
- Giant Hypermarket
- AEON
- KK Supermart
- Lulu Hypermarket(Coming Soon)
- Mydin
- Pacific Hypermarket
- Pantai Timur Hypermarket
- Servay Hypermarket
- Tesco Extra
- TF Value-Mart
- Jaya Grocer
- TMG Mart
- Tesco
 Oman
- Carrefour
- Lulu Hypermarket
- Mars Hypermarket
 Pakistan
- Hyperstar (Carrefour)
- Metro
- Mackro
- Imtiyaz store
- Chase Up
- Alfatah
 Philippines
- SM Hypermarket
- Shopwise Supercenter
- Puregold
 Qatar
- Carrefour
- Géant Casino
- Lulu Hypermarket
- Masskar Hypermarket
 Saudi Arabia
- Bin Dawood hyper Market
- Manuel Super & Hypermarket
- Panda
- Al Othaim
- Al Sadhan
- Al Raya
- Al Danube
- Farm
- Carrefour
- Tamimi
- Lulu Hypermarket
- Nesto Hypermarket
- Bin Dawood Super Market
 Singapore
- NTUC Fairprice
- Giant Hypermarket
Defunct:
- Carrefour (Replaced by Cold Storage in late 2012)
- Shop n Save (Replaced by Giant in January 2013)
 South Korea
The largest hypermarket chains are E-Mart (Shinsegae Group), Lotte Mart (Lotte) & Home plus (Tesco).
- Costco
- E-Mart
- GS Supermarket (GS Group)
- Home plus
- Lotte Mart
 Sri Lanka
- Arpico Supercentres
- Colombo
 Syria
- Grand Mart
 Taiwan
- Géant
- Carrefour
- Costco
- RT Mart
 Thailand
- Big C
- Makro
- Max Value
- Tesco Lotus
- Tops Supermarket
Defunct
- Carrefour (acquired by Big C in Jan 2011)
- Jusco (replaced by Max Value)
 Turkmenistan
The country's first hypermarket will be in a 100,000 square meters shopping center, which is currently being constructed in the capital Ashgabat to open its doors in 2014. The complex will include the hypermarket, offices, a cinema, boutiques and a parking lot that will accommodate around 1400 cars. It is yet unknown to which retailer Turkmenistan's first hypermarket will belong.
 United Arab Emirates
- Carrefour
- Lulu Hypermarket
- Geant
- Al Safeer
- Spinneys
 Vietnam
There are hypermarkets in the country and some supermarkets have been developed into hypermarkets. These include Me Linh Plaza furniture Hypermarket, Big C Thang Long and Metro Thang Long, all of which are in Hanoi.
- Big C
- Giant Hypermarket
- Lulu Hypermarket
- ÃON
 Yemen
- Lulu Hypermarket
Europe
 Albania
- Carrefour
- Mercator
- Conad
 Andorra
- Andorra 2000
- E.Leclerc
- Hiper Andorra
- Hiperpas
 Armenia
- Carrefour
 Austria
- Interspar
 Azerbaijan
- Bazar Store
- Bizim
 Belarus
- Euroopt
- Bigzz
- Gippo (Ð"иппо)
- Korona
- ProStore
 Belgium
In the early 1960s, the first Superbazar (later Maxi GB and Bigg's) hypermarkets were created in Belgium in Auderghem, Anderlecht and Bruges.
In 2000, the French Carrefour Group took over the Belgian GB Group, all hypermarket stores Maxi GB and Bigg's were then rebranded Carrefour hypermarkets.
In 2007, there were 63 hypermarkets in the country. In May 2013, there are in total 67 hypermarkets of which are 45 regular Carrefour hypermarkets and 15 new Carrefour Planet hypermarkets, the Louis Delhaize Group has 7 Cora throughout Wallonia and Brussels.
The largest hypermarket in Belgium is the Cora store in Anderlecht (Brussels) with a size of 15Â 000Â m2, the second largest is the Carrefour Planet store in the B-Park shopping center in Bruges (Flanders), which has a size of 14Â 000Â m2.
- Carrefour
- Carrefour Planet
- Cora
 Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Mercator
- Bingo
- Konzum
- Maxi
- Interex
- Robot
- Drvopromet DP
 Bulgaria
- Carrefour
- Kaufland
- Maxima
- Mercator
 Croatia
- B-Hyper
- CBA
- Billa
- Emmezeta
- Getro
- Interspar
- Kaufland
- Konzum
- Mercator
- Metro
- Plodine
- Tommy
- Ultra
Defunct
- Hipermarketi Coop, renamed Interspar in 2010
 Cyprus
- AlphaMega
- Carrefour
 Czech Republic
- Albert hypermarket (Ahold group)
- Globus
- Kaufland
- Interspar (Spar Group)
- Tesco
- Makro (Charoen Pokphand Group)
Former brands:
- Carrefour - stores taken over by Tesco
- Hypernova - renamed to Albert hypermarket
 Denmark
Currently, Bilka is the biggest chain of hypermarkets (operated by Dansk Supermarked); the 2nd biggest chain was Kvickly Xtra which were converted in 2009 to the regular Kvickly supermarkets. Opening of new hypermarkets have decreased, as of 2010, due to restrictions on store sizes to protect the stores in city centers.
- Bilka
 Estonia
- Maxima
- Selver
- Rimi
- Prisma
 Finland
- Euromarket
- K-citymarket
- Prisma
 France
In France, hypermarkets are a success, and there are today over 1000 hypermarkets in the country. Carrefour had opened the earliest French and European hypermarket in 1963, in Sainte-Geneviève-des-Bois near Paris, and has 222 hypermarkets, as of 2013. The largest hypermarket in France is the Carrefour store in Villiers-en-Bière, Seine-et-Marne (77) in the Ãle-de-France region, with an area of 25 000 m2.
E.Leclerc opened its first hypermarket store in 1964 in Landerneau, near Brest, and is now the dominant hypermarket chain in France with 489 hypermarkets. Internationally, the French Carrefour is still the largest hypermarket chain in terms of size, and second-largest (after Walmart) in terms of revenue.
The other chains with the most hypermarkets in France are : Géant (120 hypermarkets), Auchan (134 hypermarkets) and Hyper U (61 hypermarkets). The following first 5 French hypermarket chains in this list are sorted by revenue, the other hypermarkets are sorted alphabetically.
In Corsica hypermarkets are not so successful like in France: the only hypermarkets available in Corsica are Carrefour, Hyper U, Géant and Casino.
- E.Leclerc
- Carrefour
- Auchan
- Cora
- Géant Casino
- Géant Discount
- Hyper U
- HyperCasino
- Intermarché Hyper
- Migros MMM
- Match
- Maxi Coop
- Record (Grosbliederstroff)
Defunct hypermarkets in France
- Continent, all became Carrefour in 2000.
- Eroski
- Euromarché
- Hyper Cedico
- HyperChampion
- L'Univers
- Mammouth
- First Mammouth store opened in 1969 near Troyes, and the last Mammouth store closed in Lacroix-Saint-Ouen at 20:00 on 3 October 2009 after a 10 year delay to close the last store, as it was considered too small for an Auchan hypermarket, but too large for an ATAC supermarket.
- Rallye, first store opened in Brest in 1968, the last Rallye closed in 2002
- Record, operated from 1967-2008, however there's a Record store still operating in Grosbliederstroff
- Rond Point
- Super Suma, became ATAC
 Georgia
- Goodwill Hypermarket
- Carrefour
 Germany
In Germany, the biggest hypermarket brands are Real (METRO AG), Kaufland (which belongs to Lidl) and Marktkauf (which is a brand of AVA, which in turn belongs to EDEKA). However, for various reasons, such as the strong competition by more focused discounters such as Aldi and Lidl, as well as legal restrictions on store size, pricing policy, and opening times, the hypermarket concept is not as widespread in Germany as in other countries.
- Real
- Kaufland
- Marktkauf
- E-Center
- Famila
- HIT
- Plaza
- Globus
- Toom
Defunct German hypermarkets
- Extra Future Store - first store opened in 2003 in Rheinberg and were taken over by Real in 2008 which converted it to new Real Future Store hypermarkets
- Interspar - all stores were taken over by Wal-Mart in 1998
- Wal-Mart - moved in Germany in 1998 by taking over Interspar stores, but failed to use its American approach in Germany, in 2006 the remaining 85 hypermarkets were changed to Real hypermarkets
 Greece
- Carrefour
 Hungary
The biggest hypermarket presence is that of Tesco. Other hypermarkets include: Auchan, Metro (Cash & Carry) and InterSpar which operate several hypermarkets in the country.
- Tesco
- Interspar
- Auchan
- Metro AG (Warehouse club)
 Iceland
- Hagkaup
 Ireland
- Dunnes Stores
- Tesco Ireland (Tesco Extra stores)
 Italy
In Italy and Italian-speaking parts of Switzerland, the term is ipermercati.
- Auchan
- Bennet
- Carrefour
- E.Leclerc-Conad
- Esselunga Superstore
- Il Gigante ipermercati
- Interspar and Iperspar (Spar)
- Ipercoop (Coop)
- Iperfamila, Galassia, Emisfero, Famila Superstore, Alìper, Mega, Emi Superstore, IperZerbimark, Big Store, IperDì and IperPan (Gruppo Selex)
- Ipersidis, Sidis Superstore, Megasidis, Oasi, IperLeDune, Migross Superstore, La Girandola and IperTe (Interdis)
- IperSimply (Auchan)
- IperSigma / Sigma Superstore and Ipersì Sigma
- IperSisa / Sisa Superstore
- Panorama, Pam Superstore and Supéral (Gruppo PAM)
Defunct:
- Billa Superstore
- Città Mercato
- Cityper
- Euromercato
- Iperstore GS
- IperStanda
 Kosovo
- Interex
- Maxi
- ETC
- VIVA
 Latvia
- Aibe
- Beta
- Elvi
- IKI
- LaTS
- Maxima (Maxima X, XX and XXX)
- Mego
- Prisma
- Rimi (Rimi Hypermarket, Rimi Supermarket and Supernetto)
- Sky
- top!
 Lithuania
There are several hypermarkets, like the homegrown chain of Maxima supermarkets in Lithuania, which range in sizes from neighborhood convenience stores to giant supercenters or hypermarkets that stock over 65,000 different brands. The chain has 499 (as of 2013) stores open throughout Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Bulgaria (branded as T-Market) and Poland (branded as Aldik Nova).
- IKI
- Norfa
- Prisma
- Rimi
- Maxima
 Luxembourg
- Auchan
- Cora
- Cactus
 Macedonia
- Carrefour
- Ramstore
 Malta
- GS Superstore (Carrefour)
 Moldova
- Metro
- Mall
- Hypermarket N1
- Fidesco
 Monaco
- Carrefour
 Netherlands
In the Netherlands hypermarkets were not a success, there were several attempts of retailers like Ahold and SHV but they all eventually failed.
In 1971, Schuitema opened their first Dutch hypermarket Famila and Ahold with Miro in Flushing. In 1973, SHV Holdings opened Trefcenter and shortly after, Maxis was created by De Bijenkorf, all these hypermarkets failed and all closed in the 1980s.
In the late-1990s the American chain A&P started operating supermarkets and several hypermarkets by taking over old Maxis stores, the A&P chain wasn't very successful, C1000 took over the stores in 2000-2003, the hypermarkets also converted to C1000 supermarkets.
Since 2006, the German chain Famila (currently operating hypermarkets in the north of Germany and Italy) tries to return in the Netherlands, by opening a Dutch hypermarket in Emmen (near Leeuwarden) to then expand to about 25 hypermarkets between 4,500 and 7,000 square meters in a few years. J. Bünting Beteiligungs AG from Leer (Germany) had therefore opened an office in Drachten. However as of 2013 there are still no Famila stores in the country.
On March 27, 2013, the largest supermarket of The Netherlands is opened by Jumbo in the city of Breda, called Jumbo Foodmarkt, with around 6,000 square meters the store can be considered an hypermarket, but does not offer non-food products, which is unlike most of the hypermarkets. The second Jumbo Foodmarkt will open with a size of 7,000 square meters in the unfinished Focus-U-Park shopping center of 30,000 square meters in Steenwijk, this store will sell non-food products, and will be the first real hypermarket in the Netherlands since 2000.
- Albert Heijn XL (2,800m2 - 4,500m2)
- Makro (warehouse club)
- Jumbo Foodmarkt (6,000 m2 - 8,000 m2)
Defunct brands:
- A&P Hypermarkt
- Famila
- Trefcenter
- Maxis
- Miro
 Norway
There are Coop Obs! owned by Coop Norge which operates 24 hypermarkets through the country, Coop Norge also owns three Smart Club outlets (Warehouse club). Other hypermarkets include : EuroSpar a hypermarket brand of Spar, and ICA AB with ICA Maxi stores.
- Coop Obs!
- Eurospar
- ICA Maxi
- Smart Club
Defunct brands
- Kvickly Xtra (defunct since 2010; earlier known as Obs!)
 Poland
- Auchan
- Carrefour
- E.Leclerc
- Kaufland
- Real
- Tesco
 Portugal
In Portugal, there are a considerable number of hypermarket chains in operation, including Continente (the biggest and the first Portuguese chain to go international), Jumbo/Pão de Açúcar, Pingo Doce, Lidl and Intermarché. Most of these chains also operate supermarkets and smaller stores.
- Auchan ("Jumbo" and "Pão de Açúcar")
- Continente (Sonae group)
- E.Leclerc
- Intermarché Hyper
- Pingo Doce (Jerónimo Martins group)
 Romania
- Carrefour
- Auchan
- Cora
- Real
- Kaufland
- Billa
- Penny Market
- Lidl
 Russia
- Auchan (ÐÑан)
- Real
- Globus
- Karusel (ÐаÑÑÑелÑ)
- Lenta (ÐенÑа)
- OK (Ð'Ðей)
- Nash Hypermarket (ÐÐ°Ñ Ð"ипеÑмаÑкеÑ)
- Metro
- Vester (Ð'еÑÑеÑ)
- Liniya (ÐиниÑ)
 Serbia
- TEMPO (Delhaize)
- IDEA (Konzum)
- InterEx (Intermarché)
- Mercator
- M-RodiÄ (Mercator)
- SuperVero (Veropoulos)
- HiperCORT
- Tuš
- DIS
 Slovakia
- Billa (supermarket)
- Carrefour
- Coop Jednota
- Hypernova (hypermarket)
- Kaufland
- Merkury Market
- Tesco
 Slovenia
- E.Leclerc
- Mercator
- Tuš
- Spar
 Spain
- Auchan (France)
- Carrefour (France)
- Eroski
- Hipercor
- Mercadona
 Sweden
- Coop Forum
- ICA Maxi
- City Gross
  Switzerland
There are currently two chains operating hypermarkets in the country, Coop Switzerland owns 13 Hypermarkets throughout the West, with the biggest stores situated in Geneva and Fribourg. The Migros chain has 11 MMM hypermarkets including in Lausanne, Basel and two in France which are both near Geneva, one in Thoiry and Ãtrembières.
Until 22 March 2013, Casino-Magro had several HyperCasino hypermarkets in Switzerland until the bankruptcy of the Magro group.
- Coop
- Migros (MMM)
Defunct:
- Carrefour
- HyperCasino
 Turkey
- Bim
- CarrefourSA
- Kiler
- Migros Turk
- Real
- Åok
- Kipa
- Diasa
- TansaÅ
 Ukraine
- Auchan
- Mega Market
- ECO Market
- FoxMart
- Epicentr K
 United Kingdom
The largest chains in the U.K. are Tesco, Asda and Sainsbury's, which all operate hypermarkets in the country.
- Asda (Walmart)
- Sainsbury's
- Tesco Extra
Defunct U.K. hypermarkets
- Carrefour - first Carrefour store opened in the 1970s, UK business was sold to Gateway/Somerfield in 1990 and later became Asda
- Sainsbury's Savacentre - rebranded Sainsbury's Superstores
North America
 Canada
- Loblaw Companies owns and operates:
- Atlantic Superstore
- Real Canadian Superstore and in Quebec Maxi & Cie.
- Walmart Supercentre
 Costa Rica
- Walmart
 Dominican Republic
- Jumbo
- Carrefour
- La Sirena
 El Salvador
- Price Mart
- Hiper Europa
- Hiper PaÃz
 Guatemala
- Hiperpaiz
 Honduras
- Walmart
 Mexico
- Casa Ley
- Chedraui
- Comercial Mexicana
- Soriana
- Walmex (Walmart)
 Panama
- Metro Express (Rey Group)
- Metro Plus (Rey Group)
- Mr Precio (Rey Group)
- PriceSmart
- Supermarket Riba Smith
- Romero (Rey Group)
- Super 99
- Super Mercado Rey (Rey Group)
 United States
Stores in the United States tend to be single-level enterprises with long operating hours; many of them, especially Walmart, are open 24 hours a day (except on certain holidays). The term "hypermarket" is not in general use in the United States.
- Fred Meyer
- Kmart Super Center
- Kroger
- Meijer
- Remke Bigg's
- SuperTarget
- Walmart Supercenter
Defunct U.S. hypermarkets
- Fedco - a membership department store chain that operated in Southern California from 1948 to 1999.
- bigg's - merged with Remke Markets and lost general merchandise section (see Remke Markets bigg's)
- Twin Valu - division of ShopKo/SuperValu
- Harts Stores / Big Bear Plus - division of Big Bear Stores
- Hypermart USA - division of Wal-Mart
- American Fare - division of Kmart/Bruno's
- Auchan (France) - Tested in the Houston and Chicago areas. Houston stores closed in 2003.
- Leedmark, a joint-venture involving E.Leclerc of France, operated a single 306,000-square-foot (28,400Â m2) store in Glen Burnie, Maryland, from 1991 until 1994
- The Treasury
- The Real Superstore- a division of the defunct National Tea Company, the former US subsidiary of the Canadian Loblaws chain, which runs The Real Canadian Superstore (see listings for Canada in the Canadian section).
- Carrefour opened hypermarkets in Philadelphia and Voorhees Township, New Jersey, in 1988 and 1992 respectively. Both stores closed in 1993. Some associates wore roller skates to facilitate moving about the large building. The Voorhees location now houses a Kohl's department store, a Raymour & Flanigan furniture store, and a Marshalls discount clothing store. The Philadelphia location (an outparcel of the Philadelphia Mills mall) houses a Walmart and a few other stores.
- Gemco - division of Lucky Stores
Oceania
 Australia
- Pick 'n Pay Hypermarket (Changed to a separate Coles and a Kmart supermarket. In the Aspley Hypermarket Shopping Centre)
The hypermarket concept was not a success in Australia, Coles had their own hypermarkets in the country with the introduction of Super Kmarts in the 1980s until the results were not really positive. The concept was eventually being shelved in the 1990s to then divide all their Super Kmart stores to have a separate Coles and a separate Kmart.
Costco have stores in Melbourne, Sydney and Canberra and are planning for one in every capital city.
 New Zealand
In New Zealand, The Warehouse operated three hypermarkets in the North Island between 2006 and 2009 under the "Extra" banner. These stores were closed due to poor performance.
 Papua New Guinea
- RH Hypermarket
South America
 Argentina
- Carrefour
- COTO
- Hipermercados Jumbo
- Walmart
- Norte (Bought out by Carrefour)
 Bolivia
- Hipermaxi
- IC Norte
- Sas
 Brazil
- Extra Hipermercados
- Carrefour
- Bompreço
- Supermercados Condor
- Hipermercado Big
- Sendas
- Pão de açúcar
- CompreBem
- Sonda
- Wal-Mart
 Chile
- LÃder
- Jumbo
- Tottus
 Colombia
- Ãxito
- Jumbo
- Alkosto
 Cuba
- Plaza Carlos III
- Mall Habana
- Supermercado 3ra Y 70
 Ecuador
- Megamaxi (Corporación Favorita)
 French Guiana
- Carrefour
- Géant Casino
 Nicaragua
- La Colonia
 Paraguay
- Extra Hipermercados
- Hiper Luisito
 Peru
The Wong and its sister hypermarket Hipermercados Metro are the biggest chain in Peru. Their main competitor is Tottus which has the largest stores in South America.
- Hipermercados Metro
- Tottus (Falabella)
- Wong (supermarket) (Metro)
 Uruguay
- Géant
 Venezuela
- Ãxito
- Hipermercado Bicentenario
See also
- Big-box store
- Carrefour
- Hypermarket
- List of superstores
- List of supermarket chains
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