Entrepreneurship has no ZIP code: How rural merchants are building a billion-dollar global export economy
Every story about ambition used to have the same opening scene: A small-town dreamer leaves home, with suitcase in hand, for a place with a glittery skyline. But there's a new story now.
The things that once made cities the most viable launchpad are available to entrepreneurs anywhere. Last year, rural merchants in the U.S., Canada, the U.K., Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Australia, and Japan generated billions in sales, outpacing the growth rate of urban merchants in these countries.
Shopify explored how rural entrepreneurs are building a global export economy worth billions. On every measure tracked, the geographic barrier to commerce has collapsed. Location used to be a ceiling, but now it's just a pin on a map.
"The extent of the market"
There's a reason small towns couldn't sustain every type of business in the past.
In 1776, Adam Smith, the father of modern economics, named the problem in "The Wealth of Nations." Specialization is the engine of economic prosperity, but only when the market is big enough to support it. A village may keep a blacksmith in business, but not a bejeweled, small-batch, nickel-free, boutique swordsmith in business. The swordsmith's success is limited by what Smith called "the extent of the market." Some trades, Smith wrote, "can be carried on nowhere but in a great town."
For most of history, this meant the same thing for anyone with a specific, specialized ambition: Leave for the city. Cities had the population density to sustain a specialist butcher, a specialist tailor, or a specialist anything. The bigger your ambition, the bigger the market you needed to find.
The internet expanded who entrepreneurs could reach. And the commerce infrastructure to act on that has now caught up. Today, an entrepreneur making something specific, once limited to a hundred local customers, can sell to millions of them anywhere in the world.
More founders are starting outside cities
The popular narrative about rural towns is one of contraction, with residents leaving, opportunities thinning, and Main Streets fading from view.
But across major economies, major sellers are thriving outside of metropolitan areas. They defy the pull of cities and run competitive businesses from somewhere quieter. For them, being in a small town has changed from a constraint into an edge, with lower overhead, room to grow, and access to a worldwide market from anywhere.
And a growing share of the next generation is choosing rural locations. The proportion of shops that are run from rural areas is accelerating in every country. In the U.S., it rose from 25% in 2015 to 30% in 2025. In France, from 11% to 19%. In Canada, from 14% to 20.5%. COVID-19 accelerated e-commerce broadly, but it didn't create the structural shift this data describes. The trend predates the pandemic and has continued well past it. More founders are choosing to operate outside urban centers, and choosing it more often, year over year.
And European rural merchants are posting some of the steepest cross-border growth in the data.
In Germany, rural cross-border sales (rural merchants that sell to buyers in other countries) have grown 1,571% in five years. In Spain it's 1,844%, while in France it's 1,114%. The continent's rural economies-small towns in Bavaria, villages in Andalusia, towns in the French countryside-are exporting at an urban pace.
The infrastructure lives wherever the founder is
Founders in a rural town can operate with the same sophistication as someone in a sprawling metropolis-payments that clear in any currency, shipping that automates customs paperwork, and artificial intelligence tools that can draft product descriptions and translate them into six languages. Capital has caught up, too. A rural entrepreneur can access funding based on their sales velocity instead of their proximity to traditional lenders.
This didn't happen all at once. Easier online store creation arrived in the late 2000s, automated international shipping matured in the 2020s, and AI-powered tools became standard in the last two years. Each layer compressed what a rural founder required to succeed.
The result is a symmetry that didn't exist a decade ago. A founder in a small town can run a global business at a fraction of the operating cost of an urban one. The infrastructure lives wherever the founder does.
A new geography of building
For rural entrepreneurs, leaving home is no longer the prerequisite for creating something meaningful. The kid with a specific obsession, the maker with a niche craft, or the founder with a small market in mind can all build where they are and still reach the world. The extent of the market is now the extent of the internet.
Methodology
Merchants are classified as rural or urban using the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Degree of Urbanisation (DEGURBA) framework, applied via the Joint Research Centre (JRC) Global Human Settlement Model (GHS-SMOD R2023A, epoch 2025)-a 1-square-kilometer grid that classifies land as urban center, town/suburb, or rural based on population density and contiguity. Merchant locations are derived from business addresses provided during registration, validated against Who's on First geographic boundaries where possible. The gravity model measures the median gross merchandise value (GMV)-weighted great-circle distance from each merchant's business location to their order destinations, capturing how far each dollar of commerce travels.
This story was produced by Shopify and reviewed and distributed by Stacker.
Copyright 2026 Stacker Media, LLC
This story was originally published July 9, 2026 at 4:30 AM.