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Tuesday, July 29, 2025

Which Discount Stock Wins the Value Game?


  • Dollar General struggled with macro headwinds over the past few years.

  • Dollar Tree’s divestment of Family Dollar could represent a fresh start.

  • The pricier stock could actually be the better value.

  • 10 stocks we like better than Dollar General ›

Dollar General (NYSE: DG) and Dollar Tree (NASDAQ: DLTR), the two largest dollar stores in America, both survived the retail apocalypse which wiped out many other retailers over the past decade. They kept opening new stores even as other retailers pulled back, and they countered Amazon and Walmart by selling cheaper products.

That resilience made them reliable recession-resistant investments. But over the past three years, Dollar General’s stock plunged more than 50% as Dollar Tree’s stock dropped over 30%. Let’s see why these two stocks sank — and if either one is a better value play right now.

A shopper in a supermarket aisle.
Image source: Getty Images.

Dollar General mainly opens its stores in rural areas which haven’t been saturated by superstores. It doesn’t actually sell everything for a dollar, but it tries to sell its products at much lower prices than its competitors. It generates most of its revenue in the U.S., but it expanded into Mexico with its Mi Súper Dollar General stores in 2022.

From fiscal 2021 and fiscal 2024 (which ended Jan. 31, 2025), Dollar General’s number of year-end stores increased from 18,130 to 20,594. For fiscal 2025, it plans to open approximately 575 new stores in the U.S. and up to 15 new stores in Mexico.

Dollar Tree focuses on urban and suburban markets, and it tries to wedge its stores between lower income neighborhoods and superstores like Walmart. It originally sold all of its products for $1, but it raised its prices over the past four years to counter inflation and sell a broader range of products. It acquired its chief competitor Family Dollar in 2015, but it finally sold the struggling banner after a decade of sluggish sales this year.

From fiscal 2021 to fiscal 2024 (which ended Feb. 1, 2025), Dollar Tree’s number of year-end stores (including Family Dollar) grew from 15,115 to 16,774. But in fiscal 2025, its store count will decline as it divests its Family Dollar stores. At the end of the first quarter of 2025, its Dollar Tree segment operated 9,016 stores.

Dollar General and Dollar Tree both grew their same-store sales over the past three years.

Same-Store Sales Growth

FY 2022

FY 2023

FY 2024

Dollar General

4.3%

0.2%

1.4%

Dollar Tree*

9%

5.8%

2%

Data source: Company earnings reports. *Excluding Family Dollar.

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