Razya Supermarket
Supermarkets like this one keep neighbourhoods functioning—they're where people grab everyday staples without driving across the city, where traders source stock for their own shops, where families do their quick top-ups between paychecks. In areas like Durban, a reliable supermarket with decent pricing and consistent stock levels becomes a community anchor. That means they manage the fine line between competitive pricing and sustainable margins, stock what locals actually eat rather than just what head office dictates, and stay open hours that match how the neighbourhood lives. The relationship built over time—knowing the regulars, remembering preferences, standing behind products—matters as much as the shelves themselves.