Monro's nearest audiences span a wide mix of retail, dining, fuel, and services — with no single neighbor pulling far ahead of the rest. Similarity here measures how closely two entities' audiences resemble each other in composition; a score near 0.80 indicates strong overlap, and the top 10 sit in a tight band from 0.80 down to 0.75.
The shape is flat. Gabe's leads at 0.80, a department store, followed by Cook Out (0.79, casual dining), Speedy Cafe (0.79, gas stations), and Steak 'n Shake (0.79, fast casual dining). J.D. Byrider (0.78, automotive dealerships) is the only other automotive entity in the top 10, and it's a dealership rather than a repair service. Holiday Hair (0.78, beauty salons) and Aldi USA (0.77, grocery and superstores) round out the upper cluster. Further down, Sheetz (0.76, gas stations) and Leonard (0.75, home improvement and hardware) continue the cross-category spread, with Daniel Tosh (0.75, comedians) the lone celebrity in the set. Across the full top 10, the subcategory distribution is almost entirely cross-kind: department stores, casual and fast casual dining, gas stations, dealerships, beauty salons, grocery, home improvement, and one comedian — no other maintenance and repair service appears.
That breadth, compressed into a narrow similarity band, points to an audience defined less by automotive interest than by a consistent everyday-errand profile that cuts across value retail, convenience food, and accessible services.