A strip-style community shopping center anchored by everyday-use retailers along East Main Street in Reynoldsburg, this center serves the eastern Columbus suburbs with a tenant mix focused on services, groceries, and value-oriented retail rather than specialty or destination shopping.
The center sits along East Main Street (US-40), the main commercial corridor connecting Reynoldsburg to Columbus's east side. The tenant lineup skews toward practical errands: the kind of stop where you pick up groceries, get a haircut, drop off dry cleaning, or grab a quick meal rather than spend an afternoon browsing. Grocery-anchored strip centers like this one are common along the Main Street and Broad Street corridors on Columbus's east side, and Reynoldsburg Shopping Center fits that mold closely.
Specific tenants shift over time in centers of this type, so confirming current occupancy before making a dedicated trip is worth a quick check online. That said, the format itself is stable: surface parking directly in front of storefronts, easy in-and-out access from East Main Street, and a layout designed for speed rather than extended visits.
If you're comparing this to Tanger Outlets Columbus in the Polaris/north Columbus corridor, they're serving completely different purposes. Tanger draws shoppers specifically for name-brand discounts on clothing and accessories and requires a longer trip from the east side. Reynoldsburg Shopping Center isn't a destination in that sense.
A more direct comparison is the Eastland area on East Broad Street, which offers a broader mix of national chain retail, a Walmart, and more dining options within a compact area. Eastland draws east-side residents who need more variety in a single stop. Reynoldsburg Shopping Center trades range for convenience: it's smaller, faster to navigate, and more useful for residents within a two- or three-mile radius who want to avoid driving to Brice Road or Hamilton Road corridors for routine purchases.
Brice Road near I-270 is the east side's most developed retail node, with Target, Home Depot, a range of chain restaurants, and larger-format stores. For a major shopping run, Brice Road wins on selection. Reynoldsburg Shopping Center wins on speed and proximity for residents in the 43068 zip code who don't need that level of variety.
This is a center for residents, not visitors. If you live in Reynoldsburg or commute along East Main Street, the value is the ease of pulling off the road and handling two or three errands without navigating a large parking structure or a sprawling multi-anchor mall. The format suits weekly routines: grocery runs, quick-service lunch, service appointments.
It does not suit someone driving from Clintonville or Dublin looking for a specific retailer or a distinctive local shopping experience. There's nothing at this center that isn't replicated closer to other parts of Columbus, and the tenant mix doesn't include the kind of independent or local businesses that draw shoppers from outside the immediate neighborhood.
First-time visitors should know that the layout is a standard single-story strip with head-in parking across the full front of the center. Accessibility is straightforward. No valet, no parking deck, no designated loading zones to navigate around. Surface lots at strip centers of this size typically accommodate parking without difficulty except around peak grocery hours on weekend mornings.
East Main Street has consistent traffic during morning and evening commute windows, which can slow the left-turn exit depending on direction of travel. The center is accessible from both directions on US-40, and there are traffic signals at nearby intersections that help with turns during peak hours.
Hours vary by tenant. Anchor-type grocery or pharmacy tenants at centers like this commonly operate 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. or later; service tenants such as hair salons or dry cleaners typically keep shorter hours and are often closed Sundays or Monday. Verifying individual tenant hours before making a trip is the practical move, since a strip center with mixed ownership across its units won't maintain a single published schedule.
For east Columbus residents, Reynoldsburg Shopping Center does exactly what a neighborhood strip center is supposed to do: reduce the number of miles you drive to handle ordinary errands. For anyone outside that immediate area, the Brice Road corridor or Eastland zone will offer more in a single trip.
