There are 30 Brandt locations in the United States of America as of April 18, 2026. The state or territory with the most Brandt locations is Illinois, with 25 sites, accounting for roughly 83.3% of the total.


Brandt operates 30 United States of America locations across 4 states. Largest clusters are in Illinois, Florida, and California; the top 10 states contain 100.0% of sites. Coverage is thinner in Florida, California, and Iowa.

Brandt has 30 locations across the United States, with 83.3% (25 locations) concentrated in Illinois, resulting in the best access at one location per 510,305 people. Florida and California have fewer locations—3 and 1 respectively—covering much larger populations per location, with California being the most stretched at one location per 39,356,104 people. The top three states account for 96.7% of all Brandt locations, while the top ten states cover 100%.
Locations concentrate around major metros such as Sangamon, McLean, Menard, Cass, and Highlands. The top 10 cities account for 76.7% of U.S. sites.

Brandt operates 30 locations across the United States, with 76.7% concentrated in its top 10 cities. Sangamon, Illinois, leads with 7 locations, followed by McLean, Illinois, with 5. Most of the top cities are in Illinois, while Highlands, Florida, represents the only non-Illinois city in the top 10.
Street-level clusters show corridors where multiple Brandt locations sit within the same neighborhood indicating strong local presence and coherence. Brandt operates a total of 30 nationwide.

The complete dataset of Brandt locations across the United States of America is available for download, including coordinates, traffic patterns, and operational status.

Brandt has 30 locations across the United States of America. The key variables shows the most infleuntial aspects for Brandt locations nationwide. This provides a closer look of how Brandt is operating from different prespectives.

Brandt's presence in the United States spans several states with varying land areas. California has the largest state land area at 423,965 km² but only one location, while Iowa, with the smallest area of 145,746 km², also has a single location. Illinois hosts the most locations at 25, despite having a smaller area of about 149,995 km². Florida covers 184,934 km² and has three Brandt locations.

Brandt's business status in the United States shows predominantly open locations across several states. Illinois has 24 open out of 25 total locations, with a 96% open rate. Florida and Iowa each have all their locations open, with 3 and 1 respectively. California is the only state with a closed location, having 0 open and 1 closed.
This section summarizes customer sentiment toward Brandt. Using ratings and review totals from 30 locations, we highlight where scores are consistently high and where feedback volume is greatest. Average star ratings reflect perceived quality, while total reviews indicate engagement and reach across the network.

Brandt's highest average ratings in the United States are in Florida and Iowa, both with a perfect score of 5.0. Illinois follows with an average rating of 4.6, and California has 4.4. Illinois leads significantly in review volume, contributing 143 reviews, while California, Florida, and Iowa have notably fewer reviews, with 7, 2, and 1 respectively.
Brandt's highest average ratings are in Florida and Iowa, both at a perfect 5.0, followed by Illinois at 4.6 and California at 4.4. Illinois leads in total reviews with 143, significantly more than California's 7, Florida's 2, and Iowa's single review. The data highlights Illinois as the primary source of Brandt's customer feedback in the United States.

Brandt achieved full phone coverage in all listed states within the United States of America. Illinois had the highest total with 25 phones, all covered, followed by Florida with 3 phones, California and Iowa each with 1 phone, all at 100% coverage.
Brandt POI data enables clear measurement of footprint and demand. Analysts can rank states and cities by location count, compare coverage on a per-capita basis, and use traffic scores and review volumes to spot high-performing markets and under-served pockets. The result is an objective view of saturation, growth opportunities, and performance outliers.
For network planning, the data supports scoring candidate trade areas using location density, population per location, and nearby traffic intensity. Teams can evaluate cannibalization risk via nearest-store distance, surface whitespace along key corridors, and prioritize sites near retail anchors, campuses, or transit where observed activity is strongest.
Planners can map clusters and service gaps to understand commercial access at the neighborhood level. Per-capita coverage highlights communities with limited access, while changes in openings or closures signal shifts in activity. These insights inform corridor revitalization, streetscape and transit planning, and data-driven zoning decisions.