National Retail Brands Keep Targeting Boise: What Salt & Straw’s Arrival Signals for The Village and Beyond

If you want to see where Boise commercial real estate is headed in retail, don’t just watch the big anchors.

Watch who’s filling the smaller spaces.

Because sometimes, a single tenant move tells you exactly how strong a market really is.

A new example just popped up in Meridian—and it says a lot.

According to reporting by Kelly Holm in the Idaho Press (read the original article here: https://www.idahopress.com/news/new-ice-cream-chain-coming-to-the-village-this-fall/article_b5376b46-5307-483b-86d6-6233e3e4dcc4.html), Portland-based ice cream brand Salt & Straw is planning its first Idaho location at The Village at Meridian, taking over a space currently occupied by Bodovino.

At first glance, it’s just another retail lease.

But there’s more going on here.


What’s Changing: National Brands Still Choosing Boise

Salt & Straw isn’t a random tenant.

It’s a well-known specialty brand with:

  • More than 50 locations nationwide
  • A reputation for unique, experiential flavors
  • A strong following in urban, high-traffic retail districts

And importantly—it’s coming from Portland, a market known for trend-forward food concepts.

Key facts from the deal:

  • First Idaho location for the brand
  • Planned opening later this year
  • Potential pop-up activity ahead of launch
  • Taking over an existing restaurant space

This isn’t ground-up development. It’s second-generation retail getting re-leased quickly.

That’s a strong signal.


Why This Matters for Boise Commercial Real Estate

From a retail leasing Boise perspective, this checks several important boxes.

1. The Village Still Wins for Experiential Retail

The Village continues to attract brands that rely on:

  • Foot traffic
  • Destination appeal
  • Social media visibility

Salt & Straw fits perfectly into that ecosystem.

This reinforces The Village as a top-tier retail node in the Treasure Valley—not just for shopping, but for experience-driven tenants.


2. Food & Beverage Concepts Are Still Expanding

Even with shifting consumer habits, food-driven tenants are still active—especially ones that:

  • Offer something unique
  • Create repeat visits
  • Build brand loyalty

For landlords, that’s critical.

These tenants:

  • Drive traffic for neighboring retailers
  • Extend dwell time
  • Strengthen overall center performance

3. Second-Generation Space Is Moving Faster

The fact that Salt & Straw is stepping into a closing concept’s space matters.

It tells us:

  • Well-located retail space isn’t sitting vacant long
  • There’s still demand for quality locations
  • Tenant turnover can actually refresh a center

For investors and landlords, this is a healthy sign.


Local Market Impact: What to Watch Next

This isn’t just about one ice cream shop.

It reflects broader trends shaping Boise development and leasing strategy.

Retail Landlords

  • Expect continued demand for smaller, high-visibility spaces
  • Experiential tenants will remain a priority
  • Tenant mix curation is becoming more strategic

Developers

  • New retail projects need strong anchors AND lifestyle tenants
  • Location and design matter more than ever
  • Walkability and atmosphere are key drivers

Investors

  • Centers with strong tenant rotation and demand will outperform
  • Value-add opportunities may exist in underperforming retail
  • Focus on nodes with proven traffic patterns

My Take: Boise Is Still a Target Market—But It’s Getting Selective

Here’s what stands out to me.

Salt & Straw didn’t rush into Idaho.

They waited.

That tells you something.

National brands are being more careful about where they expand—and Boise is still making the cut.

But it’s not about just entering the market anymore.

It’s about:

  • Picking the right center
  • The right co-tenants
  • The right demographic pocket

The Village checks all those boxes.

Going forward, I expect:

  • More selective expansion from national brands
  • Continued strength in lifestyle retail centers
  • Increasing competition for the best retail spaces

The Bottom Line

This deal might look small—but it’s not.

It shows that:

  • Boise remains on the radar for national retail brands
  • High-quality retail centers are still attracting strong tenants
  • Experiential concepts continue to lead leasing demand

For anyone watching Boise commercial real estate, this is another clear signal:

Retail isn’t slowing down—it’s evolving.


Mike Gioioso (joy-OH-so) has for 16+ years been helping companies of all sizes buy, build, and lease perfect places for business in greater Boise, Idaho and beyond.
www.streetsmartidaho.com mike@streetsmartidaho.com 208-209-9166

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