Spudshed

Supermarket chain in Western Australia From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Spudshed is an independent supermarket chain in Western Australia.[a] The store was founded by Tony and Vince Galati, and forms part of the family-owned Galati Group.

Company typePrivate
Industry
  • Agribusiness
  • Retail
Founded1998 (1998) in Baldivis, Western Australia
FounderTony and Vince Galati
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Spudshed
Company typePrivate
Industry
  • Agribusiness
  • Retail
Founded1998 (1998) in Baldivis, Western Australia
FounderTony and Vince Galati
Headquarters10 Clarke Street,
O'Connor, Western Australia
,
Australia
Number of locations
19 stores (2025)
Area served
Western Australia
ProductsFruit and vegetables, groceries, meat
Revenue$404 million (2020[1])
$7.6 million (2020)
Number of employees
1154 (estimated) (June 2020)
Websitewww.spudshed.com.au Edit this at Wikidata
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As of November 2025, the chain comprises a total of 19 stores across Western Australia.[2] Its main competitors are Woolworths, Coles, Aldi and IGA. Spudshed differentiates itself by operating most stores 24 hours a day,[3][4] and retailing low-cost produce grown on Galati family farms throughout the state.

History

The first Spudshed was opened in Baldivis in November 1998, originally as a farmers market in a shed on Galati's Baldivis property.

In September 2009, the Baldivis store burned down after an electrical fault started a fire.[5] The store was subsequently rebuilt.[6]

Tony Galati became a household name in Western Australia for his protracted legal battles against the Potato Marketing Corporation of Western Australia (PMC). In 2015, the PMC launched legal action against Galati, alleging that he had planted more than his allocated quota of potatoes.[7] Prohibited from selling excess potatoes due to legal quotas, Galati used free potato giveaways at his Spudshed stores to protest against what he considered to be unfair and excessive control by the board.[8] Galati ultimately prevailed when the state government deregulated the industry, with the PMC becoming defunct in December 2016.[9][10]

In 2018, Spudshed reported profit growth of 76%, or $4 million.[11] The battle between Tony Galati and the PMC was celebrated in a Fringe World musical in 2019, returning again in 2020.[12]

See also

Notes

  1. Spud is a colloquial term for potato in English.

References

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