Stein Mart, Inc.
                                  ------------

                           NOTICE AND PROXY STATEMENT
                                  ------------

                    NOTICE OF ANNUAL MEETING OF STOCKHOLDERS
                             TO BE HELD JUNE 7, 2005

TO THE HOLDERS OF COMMON STOCK:

         PLEASE  TAKE NOTICE that the annual  meeting of  stockholders  of Stein
Mart, Inc. will be held on Tuesday,  June 7, 2005, at 2:00 P.M.,  local time, at
The  Cummer  Museum of Art and  Gardens,  829  Riverside  Avenue,  Jacksonville,
Florida.

         The meeting will be held for the following purposes:

          1.   To elect a Board of  Directors  for the  ensuing  year and  until
               their successors have been elected and qualified.

          2.   To approve the Stein Mart, Inc. Management Incentive Compensation
               Plan.

          3.   To transact  such other  business as may properly come before the
               meeting or any adjournment thereof.

         The  stockholders  of record at the close of business on April 8, 2005,
will be entitled to vote at the annual meeting.

         It is hoped you will be able to attend the  meeting,  but in any event,
we will  appreciate  it if you will vote  according to the  instructions  on the
enclosed  proxy as  promptly as  possible.  If you are able to be present at the
meeting, you may revoke your proxy and vote in person.

                                             By Order of the Board of Directors,



                                             James G. Delfs
                                             Secretary

Dated:  April 25, 2005



                                Stein Mart, Inc.

                           1200 Riverplace Boulevard
                          Jacksonville, Florida 32207

                                  ------------

                     PROXY STATEMENT FOR ANNUAL MEETING OF
                      STOCKHOLDERS TO BE HELD JUNE 7, 2005


     This  Proxy  Statement  and the  enclosed  form of proxy are being  sent to
stockholders  of Stein Mart,  Inc. on or about April 25, 2005 in connection with
the  solicitation  by the Company's  Board of Directors of proxies to be used at
the Annual Meeting of Stockholders  of the Company.  The meeting will be held on
Tuesday,  June 7, 2005 at 2:00 P.M., local time, at The Cummer Museum of Art and
Gardens, 829 Riverside Avenue, Jacksonville, Florida.

     The Board of Directors has designated Jay Stein and John H. Williams,  Jr.,
and each or either  of them,  as  Proxies  to vote the  shares  of common  stock
solicited on its behalf. If the enclosed form of proxy is executed and returned,
it may  nevertheless be revoked at any time insofar as it has not been exercised
by (i) giving written notice to the Secretary of the Company, (ii) delivery of a
later dated  proxy,  or (iii)  attending  the meeting and voting in person.  The
shares  represented  by the proxy will be voted unless the proxy is mutilated or
otherwise received in such form or at such time as to render it not votable.

                                VOTING SECURITIES

     The  stockholders of record entitled to vote was determined at the close of
business  on April 8, 2005.  At such  date,  the  Company  had  outstanding  and
entitled to vote 43,268,161  shares of common stock,  $.01 par value. Each share
of common stock  entitles  the holder to one vote.  Holders of a majority of the
outstanding  shares of common stock must be present in person or  represented by
proxy to constitute a quorum at the annual meeting.

                                       2



     The following table shows the name, address and beneficial  ownership as of
April 1, 2005 of each person known to the Company to be the beneficial  owner of
more than 5% of its outstanding common stock:

                                          Amount and Nature of        Percent
Beneficial Owner                          Beneficial Ownership        of Class
------------------------------------    ------------------------    ------------

Jay Stein                                     16,363,922(1)             37.9%
1200 Riverplace Boulevard
Jacksonville, Florida  32207

T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc.                 3,515,920(2)              8.2%
100 E. Pratt Street
Baltimore, Maryland  21202
------------------------------------

(1)  Shares  consist  of  15,463,550  shares  held  by  Stein  Ventures  Limited
     Partnership,  the general partner of which is Carey Ventures, Inc., 429,450
     shares  held by the Jay Stein  Foundation  over  which  Mr.  Stein has sole
     voting and dispositive  power as trustee of the Foundation,  220,000 shares
     over  which  Mr.  Stein  serves as  Custodian  under  the  Florida  Uniform
     Transfers to Minors Act and has sole voting and  dispositive  power,  2,422
     shares held by Carey  Ventures,  Inc., a  corporation  wholly-owned  by Mr.
     Stein,  16,900  shares  held by Jay Stein and  231,600  shares  held by Mr.
     Stein's wife, Deanie Stein.

(2)  According  to  Schedule  13G  filed   February  14,  2005,  T.  Rowe  Price
     Associates,  Inc. is the beneficial owner of 3,515,920  shares,  or 8.2% of
     shares then outstanding of the Company's common stock. These securities are
     owned by various  individual and institutional  investors for which T. Rowe
     Price Associates,  Inc. ("Price  Associates")  serves as investment advisor
     with power to direct  investments and/or sole power to vote the securities.
     For purposes of the reporting  requirements of the Securities  Exchange Act
     of 1934,  Price  Associates  is  deemed  to be a  beneficial  owner of such
     securities;  however,  Price Associates  expressly disclaims that it is, in
     fact, the beneficial owner of such securities.

     The  following  table  sets  forth  certain  information  with  respect  to
beneficial  ownership  of the  Common  Stock as of April  1,  2005 by:  (i) each
director and nominee for  director;  (ii) each  executive  officer  named in the
Summary  Compensation  Table, except for Jay Stein who is listed above and (iii)
all directors and executive officers as a group.

                                            Amount and Nature          Percent
Name                                    of Beneficial Ownership(1)   of Class(2)
-------------------------------------   --------------------------   -----------

Alvin R. Carpenter(3)(4)(5)                           11,368               -
James G. Delfs(3)(5)                                 135,244             0.3%
Linda McFarland Farthing(3)(4)(5)                      9,868               -
Michael D. Fisher(3)(5)                              376,598             0.8%
D. Hunt Hawkins(3)(5)                                 83,846             0.2%
Mitchell W. Legler(4)(5)(6)                           30,368             0.1%
Michael D. Ray(3)(5)                                  66,988             0.2%
Michael D. Rose(3)(4)(5)                              49,368             0.1%
Richard L. Sisisky(4)(5)(7)                            7,668               -
Martin E. Stein, Jr.(3)(4)(5)                         23,808             0.1%
J. Wayne Weaver(3)(4)(5)                               4,008               -
John H. Williams, Jr.(3)                             733,000             1.6%
James H. Winston(4)(5)(8)                             58,868             0.1%
All directors and executive officers
   as a group (14 persons)(3)(5)                  17,954,922            40.4%
-------------------------------------

(1)  All shares of Common  Stock  indicated in the table are subject to the sole
     investment and voting power of the directors and executive officers, except
     as otherwise set forth in the footnotes below.

(2)  Where  percentage  is not  indicated,  amount  is less  than  0.1% of total
     outstanding common stock.

                                       3



(3)  Includes the following shares which are not currently outstanding but which
     the named holders are entitled to receive upon exercise of options:

            Alvin R. Carpenter                                     4,000
            James G. Delfs                                       123,300
            Linda McFarland Farthing                               4,000
            Michael D. Fisher                                    336,950
            D. Hunt Hawkins                                       73,300
            Michael D. Ray                                        57,300
            Michael D. Rose                                        8,000
            Martin E. Stein, Jr.                                   2,640
            J. Wayne Weaver                                        2,640
            John H. Williams, Jr.                                633,000
            All directors and executive officers as a group    1,245,130

     Options  that are  exercisable  within 60 days are  included  in the shares
     indicated.  The shares  described in this note are deemed to be outstanding
     for the purpose of computing  the  percentage of  outstanding  Common stock
     owned by each  named  holder  and by the  group,  but are not  deemed to be
     outstanding  for the purpose of computing the  percentage  ownership of any
     other person.

(4)  Each outside  director  receives  non-qualified  options to purchase  4,000
     shares of common stock of the Company upon becoming a director.

(5)  Includes  the  following  shares of  restricted  stock which are  currently
     outstanding,  are held by the Company in  safekeeping  and delivered to the
     key employee or outside director upon vesting:

            Alvin R. Carpenter                                    1,368
            James G. Delfs                                       11,131
            Linda McFarland Farthing                              1,368
            Michael D. Fisher                                    36,617
            D. Hunt Hawkins                                      10,289
            Mitchell W. Legler                                    1,368
            Michael D. Ray                                        9,658
            Michael D. Rose                                       1,368
            Richard L. Sisisky                                    1,368
            Martin E. Stein, Jr.                                  1,368
            J. Wayne Weaver                                       1,368
            James H. Winston                                      1,368

(6)  These  shares  are  owned  by Mr.  Legler  and his wife as  tenants  by the
     entirety.

(7)  Includes 300 shares over which Mr.  Sisisky  serves as custodian  under the
     Florida Uniform Transfers to Minors Act.

(8)  Includes  8,550 shares owned through  corporations  of which Mr. Winston is
     the sole stockholder.

             SECTION 16(a) BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP REPORTING COMPLIANCE

     Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 requires the Company's
directors and executive  officers,  and persons  owning more than ten percent of
the Company's  common stock to file with the Securities and Exchange  Commission
initial reports of ownership and reports of changes in ownership of common stock
and other  equity  securities  of the Company  and to furnish  the Company  with
copies of all such reports. To the Company's  knowledge,  based solely on review
of copies of such reports  furnished to the Company during fiscal year 2004, all
Section  16(a) filing  requirements  applicable to its  directors,  officers and
greater than ten percent beneficial owners have been complied with.

                              ELECTION OF DIRECTORS

     At the meeting,  a Board of eleven (11)  directors  will be elected for one
year and until the election and  qualification  of their  successors.  Directors
will be elected by a plurality  of votes cast by shares  entitled to vote at the
meeting.  Abstentions  and broker  non-votes will have no effect on the outcome.
The accompanying proxy will be voted, if authority to do so is not withheld, for
the election as directors of the persons named below who have been designated by
the Board of  Directors as nominees.  Each nominee is at present  available  for
election  and was  elected to the Board by the  Company's  stockholders.  If any
nominee should become  unavailable,  which is not now  anticipated,  the persons
voting the  accompanying  proxy may in their  discretion  vote for a substitute.
There are no family relationships between any directors or executive officers of
the  Company.  Information  concerning  the  Board's  nominees,  based  on  data
furnished by them, is set forth below.

                                       4



The Board of  Directors  of the Company  recommends a vote "for" the election of
each of the following nominees.  Proxies solicited by the Board will be so voted
unless stockholders specify in their proxies a contrary choice.



                                                                                                        Year
                                                  Positions with the Company;                           First
                                                 Principal Occupations During                          Became
    Name                                            Past Five Years; Other                            Director
     Age                                                Directorships                             of the Company(1)
-------------------------------     -------------------------------------------------------     ---------------------
                                                                                                  
   Jay Stein                          Chairman  of the Board of the  Company  since  1989               1968
   (59)                               and Chief  Executive  Officer of the  Company  from
                                      1998  to  September   2001;   former   director  of
                                      American  Heritage Life Insurance  Company based in
                                      Jacksonville,  Florida and Promus Hotel Corporation
                                      based in Memphis, Tennessee

   John H. Williams, Jr.              Vice Chairman of the Board since  February 2003 and               1984
   (67)                               director of the  Company;  Vice  Chairman and Chief
                                      Executive  Officer of the  Company  from  September
                                      2001 to  February  2003;  President  of the Company
                                      from 1990 to September  2001;  director of SunTrust
                                      Bank, North Florida, N.A. in Jacksonville, Florida

   Alvin R. Carpenter vB              Director  of  the  Company;  Vice  Chairman  of CSX               1996
   (63)                               Corporation   from  July  1999  to  February  2001;
                                      President  and  Chief  Executive   Officer  of  CSX
                                      Transportation,  Inc.  from 1992 to 1999;  director
                                      of Regency  Centers  Corporation  and Florida  Rock
                                      Industries, Inc.

   Linda McFarland Farthing +B        Director of the Company;  President  and  director,               1999
   (57)                               Friedman's,  Inc.  1998;  President  and  director,
                                      Cato Corporation 1990-1997;  director nominee of CT
                                      Communications

   Michael D. Fisher                  Director  of  the  Company;   President  and  Chief               2003
   (57)                               Executive  Officer of the  Company  since  February
                                      2003;   President   and   Chief   Operating Officer
                                      of  the  Company  from September  2001 to  February    
                                      2003;  Executive   Vice President,  Stores  of  the  
                                      Company  from August 1993 to September 2001

   Mitchell W. Legler                 Director of the Company;  majority  shareholder  of               1991
   (62)                               Kirschner & Legler,  P.A.  since  April 2001;  sole
                                      shareholder  of  Mitchell  W.  Legler,   P.A.  from
                                      August 1995 to April 2001;  general  counsel to the
                                      Company since 1991

   Michael D. Rose vB                 Director   of  the   Company;   Private   Investor;               1997
   (63)                               Chairman  of  Gaylord   Entertainment  since  2001;
                                      director  of  Darden   Restaurants,   Inc.,   First
                                      Tennessee  National  Corporation,   Felcor  Lodging
                                      Trust, Inc. and General Mills, Inc.

   Richard L. Sisisky +B              Director   of  the   Company;   President   of  The               2003
   (50)                               Shircliff   &   Sisisky   Company,   a   management
                                      consulting  company,   since  2003;  President  and
                                      Chief    Operating    Officer   and   director   of
                                      ParkerVision,  Inc.  from  1998 to  2003;  Managing
                                      Director   of  The   Shircliff   Group,   Inc.,   a
                                      management consulting company, from 1988 to 1998

                                       5



                                                                                                        Year
                                                  Positions with the Company;                           First
                                                 Principal Occupations During                          Became
    Name                                            Past Five Years; Other                            Director
     Age                                                Directorships                             of the Company(1)
-------------------------------     -------------------------------------------------------     ---------------------
                                                                                                  
   Martin E. Stein, Jr. vB            Director  of  the   Company;   Chairman  and  Chief               2001
   (52)                               Executive  Officer of Regency Centers  Corporation,
                                      a  real   estate  investment   trust,  since  1997;   
                                      President   and   Chief    Executive   Officer   of  
                                      Regency  Centers  Corporation   from  1988 to 1997;  
                                      director  of  Patriot Transportation  Holding, Inc. 
                                      and EverBank Financial Corp.

   J. Wayne Weaver B                  Director  of  the   Company;   Chairman  and  Chief               2001
   (70)                               Executive  Officer  of LC  Footwear,  L.L.C.  since
                                      1995;   Chairman,   Chief  Executive   Officer  and
                                      majority owner of Jacksonville  Jaguars since 1993;
                                      Chairman of Shoe Carnival, Inc. since 1988

   James H. Winston +B                Director of the  Company;  Chairman of LPMC, a real               1991
   (71)                               estate   investment  firm  based  in  Jacksonville,
                                      Florida,  since  1979;  President  and  Director of
                                      Omega  Insurance  Company and Citadel Life & Health
                                      Insurance  Company since 1983;  director of Patriot
                                      Transportation  Holding,  Inc.,  Winston Hotels and
                                      Scott-McRae Group, Inc.

-------------------------------
+   Member of the Audit Committee 
v   Member of the Compensation Committee  
B   Member of the Corporate Governance Committee  
(1) Directors are elected for one-year terms






Executive Officers

The executive officers of the Company are:

     Name (Age)                     Position
     ----------                     --------
                                 
     Jay Stein (59)                 Chairman of the Board
     Michael D. Fisher (57)         President and Chief Executive Officer
     James G. Delfs (58)            Senior Vice President, Finance and Chief Financial Officer
     D. Hunt Hawkins (46)           Senior Vice President, Human Resources
     Michael D. Ray (48)            Senior Vice President, Director of Stores

     For additional  information  regarding  Messrs.  Stein and Fisher,  see the
Directors' table on the preceding pages.

     Mr. Delfs joined the Company in May 1995 as Senior Vice President,  Finance
and Chief Financial Officer.

     Mr. Hawkins  joined the Company in February 1994 as Senior Vice  President,
Human Resources.

     Mr. Ray joined the Company in February  1990 as a General  Manager.  He was
promoted to District  Director of Stores in July 1994,  to Regional  Director of
Stores in  January  1997 and to Senior  Vice  President,  Director  of Stores in
September 2001.

                                       6



Board of Directors and Standing Committees

     Regular  meetings  of the Board of  Directors  are held four  times a year.
During  fiscal  2004,  the  Board  held a total of four  regular  meetings.  All
directors  attended  at  least  75%  of all  meetings  of the  Board  and  Board
committees on which they served during fiscal 2004.

     The  Board of  Directors  has  established  four  standing  committees:  an
Executive  Committee,  an  Audit  Committee,  a  Compensation  Committee  and  a
Corporate  Governance  Committee  which are  described  below.  Members of these
committees are elected annually at the regular Board meeting held in conjunction
with the annual stockholders' meeting.

     Executive  Committee.  The  Executive  Committee  is  comprised  of any two
directors who are  independent  directors under The Nasdaq Stock Market(R) rules
and any one additional  director who is a member of  management.  Subject to the
limitations  specified by the Florida  Business  Corporation  Act, the Executive
Committee is authorized by the Company's bylaws to exercise all of the powers of
the  Board of  Directors  when the Board of  Directors  is not in  session.  The
Executive Committee held no meetings during fiscal 2004.

     Audit  Committee.  During fiscal 2004, the Audit Committee was comprised of
Ms. Farthing (Chairperson),  and Messrs. Sisisky and Winston, each of whom is an
independent director under NASDAQ rules. During fiscal 2004, the Audit Committee
held ten meetings.  The Audit Committee, has been established in accordance with
Section  3(a)(58)(A)  of the Securities  Exchange Act of 1934;  operates under a
written charter  adopted by the Board of Directors,  a copy of which is attached
as Appendix A, and is appointed  by the Board to assist the Board in  monitoring
(1) the integrity of the financial statements of the Company, (2) the compliance
by the Company with legal and regulatory  requirements  and (3) the independence
and performance of the Company's internal and external  auditors.  During fiscal
2005, the Audit  Committee will be comprised of Ms. Farthing  (Chairperson)  and
Messrs.  Sisisky and Winston.  The Company's  Board of Directors has  determined
that  each of the  Audit  Committee  members  qualifies  as an  Audit  Committee
Financial  Expert  pursuant  to the final  rule  adopted by the  Securities  and
Exchange  Commission  in  implementing  Section  407  (Code  of  Ethics)  of the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

     Compensation Committee.  During fiscal 2004, the Compensation Committee was
comprised of Messrs.  Carpenter (Chairman),  Rose and Martin E. Stein, Jr., each
of whom is an independent  director under NASDAQ rules.  During fiscal 2004, the
Compensation Committee held six meetings.  This Committee has the responsibility
for  approving  the  compensation  arrangements  for  senior  management  of the
Company, including annual bonus compensation. It also recommends to the Board of
Directors  adoption of any compensation plans in which officers and directors of
the Company are eligible to participate.  The Compensation Committee also serves
as the Option  Committee  and makes grants of stock  options under the Company's
2001 Omnibus  Plan.  During  fiscal 2005,  the  Compensation  Committee  will be
comprised of Messrs.  Carpenter  (Chairman),  Rose and Martin E. Stein,  Jr. The
Compensation  Committee operates under a written charter adopted by the Board of
Directors.   The   charter   is   available   on  the   Company's   website   at
www.steinmart.com.

     Corporate  Governance  Committee.  The  Corporate  Governance  Committee is
comprised of Messrs.  Rose (Lead  Director and  Chairman),  Carpenter,  Sisisky,
Martin E.  Stein,  Jr.,  Weaver,  Winston and Ms.  Farthing,  each of whom is an
independent  director under NASDAQ rules.  The Committee is responsible  for the
search and selection of future directors of the Company.  It also reviews,  from
time to time, the roles of the other standing  committees,  determines committee
assignments and evaluates, on a periodic basis, the performance of the Board and
each of its  committees  as well as the  relationship  between the Board and the
Company's  management.  It is scheduled to meet at least two times per year. The
Committee is chaired by Mr. Rose who has been

                                       7



elected Lead Director. The Lead Director, among other things, assists in setting
agendas for meetings of the board,  acts as a moderator  of  executive  sessions
made up solely of  independent  directors of the Company and serves as a liaison
to increase the flow of information  between board members and management of the
Company.

     The Corporate  Governance  Committee operates pursuant to a charter adopted
by the full  Board.  The  charter  is  available  on the  Company's  website  at
www.steinmart.com.

     The Corporate  Governance  Committee  will consider  nominees for directors
recommended  by security  holders.  Any security  holder  wishing to make such a
recommendation  to  the  Corporate   Governance   Committee  should  submit  the
recommendation,  in writing,  with such  supporting  information as the security
holder  believes  appropriate  to the  committee in care of the  Company's  Lead
Director at the Company's headquarters in Jacksonville, Florida.

     The  Committee  reviews a broad  range of  criteria  when  considering  all
possible candidates for the Board, including experience,  education,  ability to
read and understand financial statements,  ethics, business reputation and other
factors that the Committee believes relevant in determining  whether a candidate
would add to the Board's ability to guide the Company.  The Committee informally
evaluates  incumbent  directors to determine whether they should be nominated to
stand for re-election based on such factors as well as their contribution to the
board during their current terms.  When a vacancy  develops,  the Committee will
solicit  input  regarding  potential new  candidates  from a variety of sources,
including existing  directors and senior  management.  If the Committee deems it
appropriate,  the Committee may engage a third-party  search firm. The Committee
will evaluate potential  candidates based on their biographical  information and
qualifications,  and their "independence," and, if a potential candidate appears
to be a good choice, will arrange personal interviews of qualified candidates by
one or more committee members, other board members and senior management, as the
Committee believes appropriate.

     Shareholders  who wish to communicate  with the Board of Directors,  or any
particular Director, may send a letter to the Company's Secretary at the address
set forth on the first page of this proxy statement. The mailing envelope should
contain  a  clear  notation  on  the  outside  that  the  enclosed  letter  is a
"Shareholder-Board Communication" or a "Shareholder-Director Communication." All
such letters should  identify the author as a  shareholder,  stating the name in
which the shares of such  author  are held,  and  clearly  stating  whether  the
intended  recipients  are all  members  of the board or just  certain  specified
individual  directors.  The  Secretary  will  make  copies  of such  letter  and
circulate them to the appropriate director or directors.

     The Company  does not have a formal  policy  requiring  Directors to attend
annual meetings of shareholders.  However,  the annual meeting is generally held
on the same day as a regularly  scheduled  Board meeting and the Company expects
that the majority of the Company's  Directors  will attend the annual meeting of
shareholders.

                                       8



                                 PROPOSAL NO. 2
                        APPROVAL OF THE STEIN MART, INC.
                     MANAGEMENT INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN

     In order to permit the  deductibility  under Section 162(m) of the Internal
Revenue  Code of cash  bonuses  awarded to  certain  executive  officers  of the
Company,  the stockholders  are being asked to approve the Company's  Management
Incentive   Compensation  Plan  (the  "Incentive   Compensation   Plan").   Upon
stockholder  approval of the Compensation Plan, the Committee will be authorized
to make  incentive  compensation  awards,  subject  to a  maximum  annual  award
limitation,  to  management  of the  Company  based  on the  performance  of the
Company,  its  subsidiaries,  affiliates,  divisions or operating  units, or any
combination of the foregoing.

            Description of the Management Incentive Compensation Plan

     This summary of the material  terms of the Incentive  Compensation  Plan is
qualified  in its  entirety  by  reference  to Appendix B attached to this Proxy
Statement,  which contains a copy of the  Compensation  Plan.  Stockholders  are
encouraged to review the Incentive Compensation Plan.

     Purpose.  The  purpose of the  Incentive  Compensation  Plan is to attract,
retain  and  motivate  highly  qualified  individuals  who  are  key  management
employees  of the Company and its  subsidiaries;  to attract and retain the most
qualified  employees;   to  obtain  the  best  possible  performance  from  each
Participant;  to further  underscore  the  importance  of  achieving  particular
business objectives established for the Company; and to include in Participants'
compensation  package a bonus component that is tied directly to the achievement
of  those   objectives.   Such  bonus   component  is  intended  to  qualify  as
performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986, as amended from time to time (the "Code").

     Committee's   Authority.   The  Company's   Compensation   Committee   (the
"Committee")  has sole  responsibility  for  selecting  eligible  employees  and
participants,  establishing  performance  goals,  setting  performance  periods,
setting target/maximum award amounts,  certifying whether performance goals have
been attained and determining actual award amounts.  Subject to the terms of the
plan,  the  Committee has the authority to determine the terms of any award made
under the plan.  Within  the first 90 days of the  performance  period  (or,  if
shorter,  within the maximum  period  allowed under Section 162(m) of the Code),
the  Committee  will  establish  in writing  (1) the  length of the  performance
period,  (2) the  eligible  employees  who will  participate  in the  applicable
performance period, (3) the target/maximum award payable to each participant and
(4) the performance goal(s) for awards granted for that performance period.

     Maximum Award.  Awards payable under the Incentive  Compensation  Plan with
respect to any fiscal year of the Company to any individual  participant may not
exceed $2,000,000.

     Eligible  Participants.  Any individual who is on the active payroll of the
Company and its  subsidiaries  and  affiliates at anytime  during the applicable
performance  period and who is determined by the Committee to be a key member of
management  of the Company and its  subsidiaries  and  affiliates is eligible to
participate in the Incentive  Compensation Plan. Within the first 90 days of the
applicable performance period (or, if shorter, within the maximum period allowed
under  Section  162(m) of the Code),  the Committee  will select those  eligible
executive officers who will participate in the plan for the performance  period.
The  Committee  may  remove any  participant  from the plan at any time prior to
payment of awards for the applicable performance period.

     To be eligible  to receive an award,  the  participant  must  generally  be
employed  through  the  last  day  of the  applicable  performance  period.  The
Committee  may in its  discretion,  however,  make  payment  of an  award to any
participant who has retired or whose employment has terminated after

                                       9



the  beginning  of the  performance  period,  or to the  designee or estate of a
participant  who died prior to the date on which the Company makes payments with
respect  to awards for the  applicable  performance  period,  but not unless and
until the Committee has certified  attainment of the relevant  performance goals
for the applicable performance period.

     Performance  Period.  A  performance  period  under the plan will be a full
fiscal year of the Company unless,  to the extent consistent with Section 162(m)
of the Code, otherwise determined by the Committee.

     Performance  Goals.  The  performance  goal(s)  that may be selected by the
Committee may be based upon one or more of the following criteria:  revenue, net
cash  provided  by  operations,  return on assets,  return on equity,  operating
income,  gross or operating  margins,  net income  before or after taxes,  total
earnings, net operating profit, basic or diluted earnings per share (EPS), total
shareholder return (TSR), relative (versus an index or peer group) TSR, or stock
price. The foregoing criteria may, as determined by the Committee, relate to the
Company, one or more of its subsidiaries,  affiliates,  divisions or operational
units,  or any  combination of the foregoing,  and may be applied on an absolute
basis  and/or  be  relative  to one or more peer  companies  or  indices  or any
combination  thereof.  To the extent  required under Section 162(m) of the Code,
within the first 90 days of the performance  period (or, if shorter,  within the
maximum  period  allowed under Section  162(m) of the Code),  the Committee will
define,  in writing and in an objective  fashion,  the manner of calculating the
performance criteria it selects to use for the applicable  performance period in
order  to  determine  whether  the  applicable  performance  goal(s)  have  been
attained.

     The  Committee  is  authorized  at any time during the first 90 days of the
performance  period (or, if shorter,  within the maximum  period  allowed  under
Section 162(m) of the Code),  or any time thereafter (but only to the extent the
exercise of such authority after such time would not cause the awards to fail to
qualify as "qualified  performance based  compensation"  under Section 162(m) of
the  Code),  in its sole and  absolute  discretion,  to  adjust  or  modify  the
calculation of performance goal(s) for the applicable  performance period to the
extent  permitted  under  Section  162(m) of the Code (1) in the event of, or in
anticipation of, any unusual or extraordinary corporate item, transaction, event
or development  affecting the Company,  or any of its subsidiaries,  affiliates,
divisions  or  operating  units (to the extent  applicable  to such  performance
goal(s)) or (2) in recognition of, or in  anticipation  of, any other unusual or
nonrecurring   events  affecting  the  Company  or  any  of  its   subsidiaries,
affiliates,  divisions  or  operating  units (to the extent  applicable  to such
performance  goal(s)),  or the financial statements of the Company or any of its
subsidiaries, affiliates, divisions or operating units (to the extent applicable
to such  performance  goal(s)),  or of changes  in  applicable  rules,  rulings,
regulations  or  other  requirements  of any  governmental  body  or  securities
exchange, accounting principles, law or business conditions.

     Payment of Awards.  Following the completion of the applicable  performance
period, the Committee will meet to review and certify in writing whether, and to
what  extent,  the  performance  goal(s)  for the  performance  period have been
achieved.  If  the  applicable  performance  goal(s)  have  been  achieved,  the
Committee  will then determine the actual size of each  participant's  award for
the performance  period.  In determining the actual size of an individual  Award
for a performance  period,  the Committee may, in its sole  judgment,  reduce or
eliminate the Award  otherwise  payable to the  Participant  for the performance
period, based on the level of performance achieved and certified.

     Awards  will be paid in cash to  participants  as soon as  administratively
possible following completion of the Committee's certification of the attainment
of the performance goals, unless the Committee  determines that any award or any
portion  thereof will be  deferred.  In no event may a  participant  receive any
payment  (1) in  respect of an award  unless  and until,  and only to the extent
that, the performance goal(s) for the applicable performance period are achieved
and  certified  by the  Committee  and (2) of any award in excess of the  annual
limitation set forth under the plan.

                                       10



     Administration.  The Incentive  Compensation  Plan is  administered  by the
Committee.  The  Committee  has full power to construe and  interpret  the plan,
establish and amend rules and  regulations for its  administration,  correct any
defect,  supply any omission and reconcile any inconsistency in the plan and any
award  granted  thereunder,  and  perform  all other acts  relating to the plan,
including the delegation of  administrative  responsibilities,  that it believes
reasonable  and proper and in  conformity  with the purposes of the plan and the
requirements  of Section 162(m) of the Code. Any decision made, or action taken,
by the Committee arising out of or in connection with the interpretation  and/or
administration  of the plan is final,  conclusive  and  binding  on all  persons
affected thereby. In no event may the Committee use its discretionary  authority
to (1) provide  payment in respect of any award for the  applicable  performance
period if the  performance  goal(s) have not been  attained and certified by the
Committee, (2) increase an award for any participant following the first 90 days
of the  performance  period (or, if shorter,  the maximum  period  allowed under
Section 162(m) of the Code) or (3) increase an award above the calculated amount
payable under the plan.

     No member of the Board of  Directors,  the Committee or any employee of the
Company or any of its  subsidiaries  or affiliates will be liable for any action
taken or omitted  or any  determination  made in good faith with  respect to the
plan or any award granted under the plan,  and those persons will be indemnified
in  connection  with such  actions  taken or omitted and such  determination  in
accordance with the terms of the Incentive Compensation Plan.

     Amendment/Termination.  The  Incentive  Compensation  Plan will continue in
effect until  terminated by the Board of Directors.  The Committee may amend the
Incentive  Compensation Plan from time to time, repeal it entirely or direct the
discontinuance   of  awards  under  the  Incentive   Compensation   Plan  either
temporarily  or  permanently.  Any plan  amendment  that changes (1) the persons
eligible  to receive  awards  under the  Incentive  Compensation  Plan,  (2) the
criteria  that may be used to set  performance  goals or (3) the  maximum  award
payable  to a plan  participant,  will not be  effective  prior  to  shareholder
approval thereof.

     Non-Transferability.  No right or interest of any  participant  in the plan
shall be assignable or transferable, or subject to any claims of any
creditor or subject to any lien.

                             2005 Performance Period

     The Committee  has  established  fiscal year 2005 as the first  performance
period under the Incentive  Compensation Plan. For the 2005 performance  period,
the Committee has selected participants,  established  performance goals and set
maximum award amounts.  Payment of awards under the Incentive  Compensation Plan
is  contingent  upon  stockholder  approval  of the plan and  attainment  of the
Committee's  pre-established performance goals and is subject to the Committee's
use of its discretion in its sole judgment, to reduce or eliminate an individual
Award otherwise payable to the Participant for the performance period,  based on
the level of performance achieved and certified.

     It is not possible for us to determine at this time whether the performance
goals for the 2005 performance period will be attained and therefore whether any
amounts will be payable for the 2005 performance  period.  Furthermore,  because
the  Committee  may  reduce  any   participant's   awards  under  the  Incentive
Compensation  Plan in its sole judgment,  we cannot determine the actual amount,
if any, that will ultimately be paid to any participant for the 2005 performance
period.  Please refer to the Compensation  Committee report appearing at page 13
of this Proxy  Statement  for a fuller  explanation  of the actions taken by the
Committee to implement the Incentive  Compensation  Plan, subject to shareholder
approval,  for the 2005 performance period.  However, there is no assurance that
the  Committee  will use  similar  criteria  or  performance  goals  for  future
performance periods.

     The Board of Directors and management  recommend a vote FOR the approval of
the Stein Mart Management Incentive Compensation Plan.

                                       11



                             AUDIT COMMITTEE REPORT

                                  April 4, 2005


     The charter of the audit committee of the board of directors specifies that
the committee is  responsible  for  providing  oversight of the integrity of the
Company's financial statements, the adequacy of the Company's system of internal
controls,  and the qualification,  independence and performance of the Company's
independent auditors.  The audit committee is composed of three directors,  each
of  whom is  independent  as  defined  by The  Nasdaq  Stock  Market(R)  listing
standards.

     Management is responsible for the Company's internal controls and financial
reporting  process.  The audit committee  monitors  management's  preparation of
quarterly and annual financial reports in accordance with accounting  principles
generally accepted in the USA and oversees the implementation and maintenance of
effective systems of internal and disclosure controls.  The independent auditors
are responsible for performing an audit of the Company's  consolidated financial
statements in accordance with auditing  standards  generally accepted in the USA
and issuing a report thereon.  The audit committee  supervises the  relationship
between the Company and its independent  auditors,  including  making  decisions
about their appointment or removal, reviewing the scope of their audit services,
approving non-audit services, and confirming their independence.

     In connection  with these  responsibilities,  the audit  committee met with
management  and the  independent  auditors  ten times  during 2004 to review and
discuss the Company's annual and quarterly  financial  statements prior to their
issuance and other  matters.  Four of these  meetings  also  included  executive
sessions with the  independent  auditors  without the presence of management and
executive  sessions  without others present with the Company's  Chief  Financial
Officer and separate  meetings  with the  Company's  Vice  President of Internal
Audit, Safety and Security.  During 2004, management advised the audit committee
that each set of financial  statements  reviewed had been prepared in accordance
with accounting  principles  generally  accepted in the USA. The audit committee
also discussed with the independent  auditors the matters  required by Statement
on Auditing Standards No. 61 (Communication with Audit Committees) including the
quality  of  the  Company's   accounting   principles,   the  reasonableness  of
significant  judgments,   and  the  clarity  of  disclosures  in  the  financial
statements.   The  audit  committee   received  written   disclosures  from  the
independent  auditors  required by  Independence  Standards Board Standard No. 1
(Independence  Discussions  with  Audit  Committees),  and  discussed  with  the
independent  auditors  their  firm's  independence.  The  audit  committee  also
monitored  the  Company's  progress in  compliance  with the  internal  controls
provisions of Section 404 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.

     Based  upon the  audit  committee's  discussions  with  management  and the
independent  auditors  and  its  review  of  their  representations,  the  audit
committee   recommended  that  the  Board  of  Directors   include  the  audited
consolidated  financial  statements in the Company's  annual report on Form 10-K
for the fiscal year ended January 29, 2005, to be filed with the  Securities and
Exchange Commission.
                                        
                                        STEIN MART, INC.
                                        AUDIT COMMITTEE


                                        Linda McFarland Farthing, Chairperson
                                        Richard L. Sisisky
                                        James H. Winston

                                       12



                  COMPENSATION COMMITTEE REPORT TO SHAREHOLDERS

                                  April 5, 2005

Overall Review

     The Compensation Committee (the "Committee") has determined to continue the
compensation  programs implemented during late 2003 relating to: (i) annual base
salaries  paid  by  Stein  Mart  to its  officers  ("Base  Compensation");  (ii)
long-term  incentives  such as the  Company's  stock  option  plans  ("Long-Term
Incentive  Compensation");  and  (iii)  the  Company's  annual  bonus  plans and
formulas (the "Annual Incentive  Compensation").  If the Company's  shareholders
approve the Stein Mart Management  Incentive  Compensation Plan (the "Management
Compensation Plan"), the compensation decisions of the Committee as described in
this report will be implemented  under the Management  Compensation Plan for the
2005 Performance Period.

     The  Committee  continued  to  apply  the  Company's  philosophy  that  the
Company's Base  Compensation  should be  conservative  compared to the Company's
peer group,  and that the  overall  Company  compensation  plans  should  reward
performance  within the Company and seek to align the interests of the Company's
officers with those of the Company's shareholders.

Base Compensation

     The  Committee's   compensation   strategy  calls  for  conservative   Base
Compensation  coupled  with  market-competitive,  performance-based  annual  and
long-term  incentive  opportunities,  which  seek  the  use of the  compensation
programs to encourage business success through meeting or exceeding earnings per
share goals and attaining a long-term superior shareholder return, combined with
the need to attract,  retain and  motivate  key talent to support the  Company's
success.  The  Committee  adopted a general  target for its senior  officers  of
establishing Base  Compensation at the mid-range of a percentile  slightly below
the 50th percentile of the Company's peer group.

Performance Based on Agreed Annual Plan

     The  Committee  decided  that the best method of aligning  the  interest of
management  with those of our  shareholders  for 2005 was to base all  incentive
compensation  on  performance  as a  direct  function  of the  Company's  actual
earnings per share  ("EPS")  performance  compared  with the EPS budget and plan
adopted  by the  Company's  Board of  Directors  for the year in  question  (the
"Agreed Annual Plan").  The  Compensation  Committee set three target levels for
2005 as a function of the Agreed  Annual Plan:  (i) The minimum  threshold  (the
"Threshold") as a percent of the Agreed Annual Plan which would be set at an EPS
level which the Committee  believed the Company would have an 80% probability of
achieving;  (ii) the EPS level which the  Committee  believed the Company  would
have a 60% probability of achieving (the "Goal");  and (iii) the EPS level which
the  Committee  believed  the Company had only a 20%  probability  of  achieving
("Superior"). Incentive compensation will then be based on which, if any, of the
three levels were actually achieved.

Annual Incentive Compensation

     The Committee also believes that Annual  Incentive  Compensation  (bonuses)
paid to the Company's  officers should create a potential bonus for each officer
equal to a pre-established  percentage of the officer's Base  Compensation.  For
example, at the corporate director level,  Annual Incentive  Compensation set by
the Committee for 2005 would be 5% of Base  Compensation  if the Threshold level
of performance  were achieved,  10% if the Goal level were achieved,  and 20% if
the Superior level were achieved. At the Chief Executive Level, Annual Incentive
Compensation set by 

                                       13



the Committee for 2005 would be 35% of Base  Compensation if the Threshold level
of performance were achieved,  70% if the Goal level were achieved,  and 140% if
the Superior level were achieved.

     The Annual  Incentive  Compensation  mix is based on  performance  in three
areas: (i) the Company's performance overall compared to the Agreed Annual Plan,
(ii) the performance  compared to plan of the individual  business unit in which
the employee in question was employed, and (iii) individual performance criteria
established annually in advance for each employee subject to such analysis.  The
weight given to each area depends on the employee's  position.  For example, the
CEO and other executive officers' Annual Incentive  Compensation is based solely
on the Company's overall performance.  At other positions, the Company's overall
performance  counts  for a low of 50% to a  high  of 83% of the  total  possible
Annual  Incentive  Compensation.  Except  in the  case  of the  CEO,  individual
performance goals count for a low of 17% and a high of 50% of the total possible
Annual Incentive Compensation.

Long-Term Compensation

     The Committee determined that for 2005 the Long-Term Incentive Compensation
should be made  available to the Company's  officers  through a  combination  of
stock options and restricted  stock grants.  The actual award pool for 2005 will
be a direct  function  of the  Company's  performance  compared  with the Agreed
Annual  Plan.  Long-term  incentive  grants  will be made for  2005  only if the
Company  achieves  the  minimum  Threshold  level of EPS  compared to the Agreed
Annual Plan. The incentive  grants would be limited to not more than 2.2% of the
Company's  outstanding  shares per year.  The option  component of the Long-Term
Compensation would vest at the end of five years with 1/3 vesting in each of the
third,  fourth and fifth years.  The restricted stock grants would cliff vest at
the end of seven years except that the vesting  would  accelerate  to the end of
the third year after each grant if the Company  achieved its EPS Target level in
the  third  year  which  had  been  established  at the time of the  grant.  The
Committee determined that the combination of annual grants and long term vesting
would  balance the focus of  management  on both short term (one year) EPS goals
and longer term (three years) EPS goals and be most likely to create the maximum
increase in shareholder value.  Moreover,  the Committee  determined that annual
grants would be more  successful in tying  officers'  incentives to  shareholder
interests by creating a "price-averaging"  strategy into the incentive grants to
officers. The proposed Management  Compensation Plan would provide the Committee
the ability to implement that strategy and preserve the tax deduction for all of
the incentive compensation under that Plan.

Current Executive Officer Compensation

     In General.

     Base Compensation. The Committee caused surveys of the Company's peer group
of  retail   companies  to  be  taken  and  concluded  that  the  existing  Base
Compensation  of  a  number  of  the  Company's   officers  remained  below  the
Committee's  goal  of  establishing  Base  Compensation  at the  mid-range  of a
percentile  slightly below the 50th percentile of the Company's peer group.  The
adjustments in Base  Compensation  for all senior  officers at the end of fiscal
2004 were based on that determination.

     Annual  Incentive  Compensation.  The Committee  noted that the Company had
achieved  excellent  results for fiscal 2004 and the  Company's EPS would exceed
the Superior  performance level previously set for fiscal 2004. As a result, the
Committee approved the application of the Annual Incentive  Compensation formula
discussed above and determined that management would receive the maximum bonuses
resulting from that formula for fiscal 2004.

                                       14



     Specific  Officers.  The Committee  applied the strategies and philosophies
described above to specific officers as follows:

     1)     Jay Stein, the  Company's Chairman, received  Base Compensation  for
fiscal 2004 of $300,000.  The Committee  determined that his compensation should
remain at the $300,000 level without increase and that no bonus would be paid to
Jay Stein.

     2)     Michael D. Fisher,  the  Company's  President  and  Chief  Executive
Officer received Base  Compensation  for fiscal 2004 of $630,000.  The survey of
peer companies  indicated that his target Base  Compensation  level as described
above  should be  approximately  $758,000-$778,000  for the  current  year.  The
Committee  granted  a  $70,000  increase  in  Base  Compensation  to Mr.  Fisher
resulting in a Base  Compensation  for fiscal 2005 of $700,000.  That amount was
intended to continue the gradual increase in his base  compensation  towards the
targeted level  relative to his peer group.  The Annual  Incentive  Compensation
formula  described  above as a result of the  Company's  having  achieved an EPS
above its Superior  target resulted in a bonus to Mr. Fisher of 140% of his 2004
base compensation,  or a bonus of $882,000.  Under the Long Term Incentive Plan,
in fiscal  2005,  Mr.  Fisher also  received  137,810  stock  options and 26,490
restricted  shares,  all subject to the vesting  requirement  described  in this
Report.

     Other officers received Base Compensation  adjustments  consistent with the
compensation   philosophy   described  above  to  reach  targeted   salaries  at
approximately  the mid-range of a percentile  slightly below the 50th percentile
of the Company's peer group.  Annual Incentive Bonuses were awarded based on the
application of the Annual Incentive  Compensation  formula  described above. The
Committee determined that the formula  appropriately  recognized the outstanding
performance  by  management  during 2004 and  determined  that no  discretionary
bonuses were needed.

     Long-Term Incentive Compensation.  Stock options and restricted shares were
also awarded to the executive  officers by the  Committee  based on applying the
formula for Long-Term Incentive Compensation described above.

CEO Compensation

     The Compensation  Committee's  policies with respect to the compensation of
the Company's Chief Executive Officer,  Michael D. Fisher,  were the same as the
policies  applied with respect to the Company's  other  executive  officers.  In
applying the  compensation  philosophy  described above, and as indicated above,
the Chief  Executive  Officer  will be  entitled  to  receive  Annual  Incentive
Compensation  of 35% of his  Base  Compensation,  if the  Company  achieves  its
minimum  Threshold,  of 70% of his Base Compensation if the Company achieves its
Agreed Annual Plan and of 140% of his Base  Compensation if the Company achieves
superior performance as a function of its Agreed Annual Plan.

     In addition,  the  Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer will be entitled to
Long-Term  Incentive  Compensation  awards  in the  form of  stock  options  and
restricted share grants of up to 175% of the CEO's base  compensation at the top
end of performance.  The number of options is based on an option value fixed for
2004 and 2005 at $4.00 per share.  Each  option  will be issued with an exercise
price equal to the trading price of the Company's  shares on the public  markets
on the day of grant,  and the number of restricted  shares will also be based on
the trading  price of the Company's  shares on the public  markets on the day of
grant.  All  options  and  restricted  shares  will be  subject  to the  vesting
requirements described above under "Long-Term Compensation."

                                       15



Certain Tax Matters

     Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code,  enacted in 1993,  precludes a
public corporation from deducting  compensation of more than $1 million each for
its chief executive  officer or for any of its four other highest paid officers.
Certain   performance-based   compensation  is  exempt  from  this   limitation.
Currently,  it is  possible  that if the higher  levels of the annual  incentive
compensation  and  the  long-term  incentive  compensation  outlined  above  are
reached, a portion of such amounts might not be deductible.

     The  Compensation  Committee  has  reviewed  the  impact  of  162(m) of the
Internal  Revenue Code,  and it is the general policy of the Company to have its
executive  compensation plan qualified to be treated as deductible  compensation
whenever,  in the  judgment  of the  Compensation  Committee,  to do so would be
consistent with the objectives of that  Compensation  Plan in the best interests
of the Company. Accordingly, the Committee has adopted and proposed for adoption
by the Company's shareholders a formal Management Incentive Compensation Plan to
maximize the  Company's  ability to obtain  federal  income tax  deductions  for
compensation paid under that plan.

                                        STEIN MART, INC.
                                        COMPENSATION COMMITTEE


                                        Alvin R. Carpenter, Chairman
                                        Michael D. Rose
                                        Martin E. Stein, Jr.

                                       16



                             EXECUTIVE COMPENSATION

     The following  table  summarizes  the  compensation  paid or accrued by the
Company for services  rendered  during the fiscal years indicated to each of the
Company's  executive  officers  whose total salary and bonus  exceeded  $100,000
during the year ended  January  29,  2005.  The  Company did not grant any stock
appreciation  rights or make any  long-term  incentive  plan payouts  during the
years indicated.





                           SUMMARY COMPENSATION TABLE
                                                                                   
                                                                                   Long-Term
                                     Annual Compensation                      Compensation Awards
                         -------------------------------------------     ----------------------------
Name &                                                    Other            Restricted     Securities          All
Principal                                                 Annual              Stock       Underlying         Other       
Position                 Year   Salary (1)    Bonus    Compensation       Awards ($)(2)   Options (#)   Compensation (3)
----------------------- ------ ------------ --------- --------------     --------------- ------------- ------------------
                                                                                             
Jay Stein                2004      $300,000        $0        $59,341(4)             -           -                 $ 8,040
Chairman of the Board    2003       300,000         0         51,373(4)             -           -                   8,322
                         2002       300,000         0         88,163(4)             -           -                   9,931

Michael D. Fisher        2004      $624,167  $882,000               (5)             -           -                 $67,781
President and Chief      2003       544,167         0        $86,211(6)          $56,002        -                  94,952
Executive Officer        2002       525,000   315,000               (5)             -        200,000               69,721

James G. Delfs
Senior Vice President,   2004      $272,917  $247,500               (5)             -           -                 $34,860
Finance and Chief        2003       246,667    25,000        $70,640(7)          $25,001        -                  36,851
Financial Officer        2002       230,000    60,000               (5)             -           -                  34,581

D. Hunt Hawkins          2004      $252,917  $229,500               (5)             -           -                 $31,292
Senior Vice President,   2003       226,667    23,000        $59,145(8)          $22,999        -                  33,599
Human Resources          2002       210,000    60,000               (5)             -           -                  31,405

Michael D. Ray           2004      $237,917  $216,000               (5)             -           -                 $29,644
Senior Vice President,   2003       210,000    21,500        $56,806(9)          $21,501        -                  33,096
Director of Stores       2002       185,000    70,000               (5)             -           -                  28,551
-------------------------

(1)  Includes amounts deferred under the 401(k) features of the Company's Profit
     Sharing plan and under the Executive Deferral plan.

(2)  On May 5, 2003, the Company granted  restricted  stock awards to certain of
     the named executive officers (Mr. Fisher - 10,127 shares, Mr. Delfs - 4,521
     shares,  Mr. Hawkins - 4,159 shares and Mr. Ray - 3,888 shares).  The value
     for these awards is based on the closing price of $5.53 per share on May 5,
     2003,  the date of grant.  As of  January  29,  2005,  the named  executive
     officers held the following  number of shares of restricted  stock with the
     following values (based on the closing price of $19.24 per share on January
     28, 2005): Mr. Fisher - 10,127 shares valued at $194,843; Mr. Delfs - 4,521
     shares valued at $86,984;  Mr. Hawkins - 4,159 shares valued at $80,019 and
     Mr. Ray - 3,888 shares valued at $74,805.

(3)  The amounts  shown for 2004 include a matching  contribution  of $3,100 for
     Mr. Stein,  $3,691 for Mr.  Fisher,  $3,912 for Mr.  Delfs,  $3,929 for Mr.
     Hawkins and $3,788 for Mr. Ray to the 401(k)  portion of the Profit Sharing
     Plan as well as matching  contributions of $59,791 for Mr. Fisher,  $28,645
     for Mr.  Delfs,  $26,529  for Mr.  Hawkins  and  $24,941 for Mr. Ray to the
     Company's  Executive  Deferral  Plan.  Also,  included  for 2004 is imputed
     income on the Executive  Split Dollar plan of $4,940 for Mr. Stein,  $4,299
     for Mr. Fisher, $2,303 for Mr. Delfs, $834 for Mr. Hawkins and $915 for Mr.
     Ray. The amounts shown for 2003 include a matching  contribution  of $4,000
     for Mr. Stein, $4,058 for Mr. Fisher, $4,033 for Messers. Delfs and Hawkins
     and $4,050 for Mr. Ray to the 401(k)  portion of the Profit Sharing Plan as
     well as matching  contributions of $87,208 for Mr. Fisher,  $30,833 for Mr.
     Delfs,  $28,833 for Mr.  Hawkins  and $28,249 for Mr. Ray to the  Company's
     Executive  Deferral Plan. Also,  included for 2003 is imputed income on the
     Executive Split Dollar plan of $4,322 for Mr. Stein, $3,686 for Mr. Fisher,
     $1,985  for Mr.  Delfs,  $733 for Mr.  Hawkins  and $797 for Mr.  Ray.  The
     amounts  shown for 2002 include a matching  contribution  of $4,500 for Mr.
     Stein, $4,242 for Mr. Fisher,  $4,200 for Mr. Delfs, $4,183 for Mr. Hawkins
     and $3,837 for Mr. Ray to the 401(k)  portion of the Profit  Sharing  plan,
     annual  contributions  to the Profit  Sharing  plan of $1,757 for  Messers.
     Stein, Fisher, Delfs, Hawkins and Ray as well as matching  contributions of
     $60,583 for Mr. Fisher,  $26,917 for Mr. Delfs, $24,833 for Mr. Hawkins and
     $22,270  for  Mr.  Ray to the  Company's  Executive  Deferral  Plan.  Also,
     included for 2002 is imputed  income on the Executive  Split Dollar plan of
     $3,674 for Mr. Stein, $3,139 for Mr. Fisher, $1,707 for Mr. Delfs, $632 for
     Mr. Hawkins and $687 for Mr. Ray.

(4)  The amount shown for 2004 includes $37,774 medical expenses not provided to
     non-executive employees, $11,700 personal use of Company automobile, $2,672
     personal use of Company airplane and $7,195 miscellaneous. The amount shown
     for 2003 includes  $25,223 medical  expenses not provided to  non-executive
     employees, $4,717 personal use of Company automobile,  $14,201 personal use
     of Company  airplane  and $7,232  miscellaneous.  The amount shown for 2002
     includes $55,030 medical expenses not provided to non-executive  employees,
     $6,194 personal use of Company automobile,  $20,017 personal use of Company
     airplane and $6,922 miscellaneous.

(5)  Excludes certain personal benefits,  the total value of which was less than
     the lesser of $50,000 or ten percent of the total annual  compensation  and
     bonus for each of the named executives.

                                       17



(6)  The amount shown for 2003 includes $9,158 medical  expenses not provided to
     non-executive employees, $10,800 automobile allowance, $63,494 above-market
     earnings on deferred compensation and $2,759 miscellaneous.

(7)  The amount shown for 2003 includes $7,017 medical  expenses not provided to
     non-executive employees, $10,800 automobile allowance, $50,248 above-market
     earnings on deferred compensation and $2,575 miscellaneous.

(8)  The amount shown for 2003 includes $5,351 medical  expenses not provided to
     non-executive employees, $10,800 automobile allowance, $40,419 above-market
     earnings on deferred compensation and $2,575 miscellaneous.

(9)  The amount shown for 2003 includes $3,515 medical  expenses not provided to
     non-executive employees, $10,800 automobile allowance, $39,916 above-market
     earnings on deferred compensation and $2,575 miscellaneous.

     Options.  None of the executive officers named in the "Summary Compensation
Table" received any stock options or stock  appreciation  rights during the year
ended January 29, 2005.

     The  following  table  sets  forth  information  concerning  stock  options
exercised by the named executives during the year ended January 29, 2005 and the
number and value of unexercised options as of January 29, 2005 held by the named
executives in the Summary Compensation Table above.





                   OPTIONS EXERCISES AND YEAR-END VALUES TABLE

                                                                                             Value of Unexercised
                            Shares                      Number of Unexercised                    In-the-Money
                           Acquired                  Options at January 29, 2005         Options at January 29, 2005
                              On        Value                    (#)                                ($)(2)
                           Exercise    Realized   ---------------------------------   ---------------------------------      
Name                         (#)        ($)(1)      Exercisable     Unexercisable       Exercisable     Unexercisable
------------------------- ---------- ------------ --------------- -----------------   --------------- -----------------
                                                                                           
Jay Stein, Chairman of                   Not                                                Not              Not
the Board                          0  Applicable             None              None      Applicable       Applicable

Michael D. Fisher,
President and Chief
Executive Officer             30,000     $324,358         286,000           349,000        $2,099,084        $3,291,940

James G. Delfs,
Senior Vice President,
Finance and Chief
Financial Officer             12,000     $153,412         138,000            10,000        $1,055,994        $  103,400

D. Hunt Hawkins, 
Senior Vice President,
Human Resources               40,000     $392,333         100,000            10,000        $  542,750        $  103,400
                                                                                                             
Michael D. Ray,
Senior Vice President,
Director of Stores             6,000     $ 34,457          66,500            43,500        $  457,165        $  480,610
-------------------------

(1)  Value  realized is calculated  based on the  difference  between the option
     exercise  price and the market price of the  Company's  Common Stock on the
     date of exercise  multiplied  by the number of shares to which the exercise
     relates.

(2)  Value  of  unexercised  in-the-money  options  is  calculated  based on the
     difference  between the option  exercise price and the closing price of the
     Company's  Common  Stock at January 28, 2005,  multiplied  by the number of
     shares underlying the options. The closing price on January 28, 2005 of the
     Company's  Common  Stock as  reported  on The Nasdaq  Stock  Market(R)  was
     $19.24.

     Compensation  of Directors.  Effective for 2005, the  director's  fees will
increase  from $18,000 per year to $24,000 per year for each  outside  director.
Each outside  director  also  receives  $2,000 for each meeting of the Board and
$1,500  for any  committee  thereof  which  they  attend  in  person or $750 per
committee meeting attended by telephone conference. Chairpersons of the standing
committees of the Board of Directors, other than the Audit Committee,  receive a
retainer of $1,000 per quarter in  addition  to the normal  Board of  Directors'
fees.  Due to increased  responsibilities,  effective for 2004, the retainer fee
for the Chairperson of the Audit  Committee  increased from $1,000 to $3,000 per
quarter.  The Company's Lead Director receives an additional 

                                       18



$20,000  per  year of  compensation  in  recognition  of the  additional  duties
associated   with  that   position.   Outside   directors  are   reimbursed  for
out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with attending meetings.  Pursuant
to the Company's  director  stock option plan,  upon  becoming a director,  each
outside  director  receives  non-qualified  options to purchase  4,000 shares of
common  stock of the  Company.  Approximately  one-third  of the options  become
exercisable on each of the third, fourth and fifth anniversary dates of grant at
an exercise price equal to the fair market value of the common stock on the date
of grant.  Also,  beginning  in 2004,  in an effort  to align the  interests  of
directors with those of the Company's  shareholders,  all outside directors will
receive  annual  grants of  $25,000 in  restricted  shares  that are  subject to
three-year cliff vesting.

Certain   Transactions;    Compensation   Committee   Interlocks   and   Insider
Participation

     The Audit Committee of the Board of Directors is responsible for evaluating
the appropriateness of all related-party transactions.

     Set forth below are various transactions  involving the Company and members
of the Board of Directors or their related  parties.  The Audit Committee of the
Board of Directors  does not believe  that the  relationships  and  transactions
described below regarding members of the Board of Directors adversely affect the
performance by the members of their duties.

     Mr. Mitchell W. Legler. Mr. Legler is the majority shareholder of Kirschner
& Legler,  P.A.,  general  counsel to the Company since April 2001.  From August
1995 to April  2001,  Mr.  Legler  was the sole  shareholder  of the law firm of
Mitchell W. Legler, P.A., which served as general counsel to the Company.  Legal
fees received by Kirschner & Legler, P.A. for fiscal year 2004 were $100,000.

     Mr. Martin E. Stein, Jr. Mr. Stein is Chairman and Chief Executive  Officer
of Regency Centers  Corporation,  a real estate investment trust,  through which
the Company  leases five  locations  owned by Regency  Centers  Corporation  for
approximately  $1.1  million  in base  rent  annually.  The  Board of  Directors
believes  that rents paid for leased  space are  competitive  with  amounts that
would be paid to a third party to lease similar space.

                                       19



                          COMPARATIVE STOCK PERFORMANCE

     The following graph compares the cumulative total stockholder return on the
Company's  common  stock with the  cumulative  total  return on The Nasdaq Stock
Market(R) and The Nasdaq Stock Market(R)  Retail Trades Stock Index for the last
five years ended January 29, 2005. The  comparison  assumes $100 was invested at
the beginning of the five year period in Stein Mart,  Inc.  stock and in each of
the indices shown and assumes reinvestment of any dividends.

       **(INSERT STOCK PERFORMANCE GRAPH BASED ON VALUES BELOW)**
                          **(Use a Scale of 0 - 400)**

                                                NASDAQ              NASDAQ
                    Stein Mart, Inc.            (U.S.)              Retail
                         Value                  Value               Value
     Date               To Plot                To Plot              To Plot     
--------------    --------------------    -----------------    -----------------
   01/29/00              100.0                  100.0                100.0
   02/03/01              251.9                   68.2                 76.9
   02/02/02              186.0                   49.3                 91.6
   02/01/03              112.8                   34.4                 74.5
   01/31/04              220.7                   53.5                109.3
   01/29/05              399.8                   53.0                130.8

                    INDEPENDENT CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTANTS

     According to the timetable  specified in the Audit Committee  Charter,  the
independent certified public accountants for the Company for the upcoming fiscal
year ending January 28, 2006 have not been selected.  However, at this time, the
Company has no reason to believe  that  PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP would not be
willing to continue  in that  capacity  for the fiscal  year ending  January 28,
2006. That firm has served as the auditor for the Company since 1983.

     Representatives of PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP are expected to be present at
the annual meeting of stockholders  and will be accorded the opportunity to make
a statement, if they so desire, and to respond to appropriate questions.

     The  following  table shows the fees paid or accrued by the Company for the
audit and fees billed for other services provided by PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP
for the past two fiscal years:

                                             2004             2003
                                         ------------     ------------
        Audit Fees (1)                      $185,000         $172,000
        Audit-Related Fees (2)               527,857            9,325
        Tax Fees (3)                          80,972          195,645
        All Other Fees                          -                -
                                         ------------     ------------
                                            $793,829         $376,970
                                         ============     ============

(1)  Includes fees for professional services relating to the annual audit of the
     Company's  financial  statements  and  review  of the  Company's  quarterly
     financial statements.
(2)  Includes fees for professional  services  relating to the audit of employee
     benefit  plans  and,  for 2004,  fees  relating  to the  audit of  internal
     controls.
(3)  Includes  fees  for  professional   services  relating  to  tax  compliance
     (preparation of returns) and tax planning (consultation on matters relating
     to tax accounting methods).

     The Audit Committee must  pre-approve (i) all audit services,  and (ii) all
non-audit services provided by the outside auditor that are permitted by Section
201 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, except if:

     1.   in the case of permissible  non-audit services,  such services qualify
          as de minimus under Section 202 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and
          the  Company  did not  recognize  that such  services  were  non-audit
          services at the time of the engagement;
     2.   the  Audit  Committee,  or one or  more  of  its  designated  members,
          approves the permissible  non-audit  services before completion of the
          audit; and

                                       20



     3.   when  one or more  designated  members  approve  such  services,  such
          approval is  presented to the Audit  Committee  at its next  scheduled
          meeting.

     All    audit,     audit-related    and    tax    services    provided    by
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP were  pre-approved  in  accordance  with  the  Audit
Committee's guidelines.

     The   Audit    Committee    discussed   the    non-audit    services   with
PricewaterhouseCoopers  LLP and determined that their provision would not impair
that firm's independence.

                                  OTHER MATTERS

     The Board of  Directors  does not know of any other  matters to come before
the meeting;  however,  if any other matters properly come before the meeting it
is the intention of the persons designated as proxies to vote in accordance with
their best judgment on such matters.  If any other matter should come before the
meeting,  action on such  matter will be approved if the number of votes cast in
favor of the matter exceeds the number opposed.

                              STOCKHOLDER PROPOSALS

     Regulations  of  the  Securities  and  Exchange  Commission  require  proxy
statements to disclose the date by which stockholder  proposals must be received
by the Company in order to be included in the Company's  proxy materials for the
next annual meeting.  In accordance  with these  regulations,  stockholders  are
hereby  notified  that if they wish a proposal to be  included in the  Company's
proxy statement and form of proxy relating to the 2006 annual meeting, a written
copy of their  proposal must be received at the principal  executive  offices of
the Company no later than  December 26, 2005.  To ensure  prompt  receipt by the
Company,  proposals  should be sent  certified  mail return  receipt  requested.
Proposals must comply with the proxy rules relating to stockholder  proposals in
order to be included in the Company's proxy materials.

     If any  shareholder  proposals  are  submitted  to the  Company but are not
requested  to be  included in the Company  proxy  materials  for the 2006 annual
meeting,  the persons  named in proxies  solicited by the Board of Directors for
the 2006 annual meeting may exercise  discretionary voting power with respect to
any such proposal that the Company receives after March 11, 2006.

                                  ANNUAL REPORT

     A copy of the  Company's  Annual Report for the year ended January 29, 2005
accompanies this proxy statement.  Additional  copies may be obtained by writing
to Ms. Susan Datz Edelman, the Company's Director of Stockholder  Relations,  at
1200 Riverplace Boulevard, Jacksonville, Florida 32207.

                            EXPENSES OF SOLICITATION

     The cost of  soliciting  proxies will be borne by the Company.  The Company
does not expect to pay any  compensation for the solicitation of proxies but may
reimburse  brokers and other  persons  holding  stock in their names,  or in the
names of nominees,  for their  expenses for sending proxy material to principals
and obtaining their proxies.

Dated:  April 25, 2005

     STOCKHOLDERS  ARE URGED TO  SPECIFY  THEIR  CHOICES  AND VOTE BY  INTERNET,
TELEPHONE OR MAIL.  INTERNET OR TELEPHONE  VOTES  AUTHORIZE THE NAMED PROXIES TO
VOTE YOUR SHARES IN THE SAME MANNER AS IF YOU MARKED,  SIGNED AND RETURNED  YOUR
PROXY CARD. IF YOU VOTE YOUR PROXY BY INTERNET OR BY TELEPHONE,  YOU DO NOT NEED
TO MAIL BACK YOUR PROXY CARD.

                                       21



                                   APPENDIX A
                                   
                                STEIN MART, INC.
                             AUDIT COMMITTEE CHARTER

                         Revised as of December 7, 2004


     Purpose.  The Audit  Committee of the Board of Directors  (the  "Board") of
Stein,  Mart, Inc. (the "Audit  Committee") is appointed by the Board to oversee
the accounting and financial  reporting  processes of the Company and the audits
of the Company's financial statements.

I.   Members

     There shall be not less than three members of the Audit  Committee,  one of
whom  shall  be  elected  by the  Board to serve  as  Chairperson  of the  Audit
Committee  (the  "Committee  Chairperson"),  and  each of whom  shall  meet  the
independence   and  experience   requirements  of  The  Nasdaq  Stock  Market(R)
("NASDAQ").  Thus, the members of the Audit  Committee  shall meet the following
criteria:

     A.   The members must meet the Company's Director  Independence Criteria as
          set forth on Exhibit A hereto; and

     B.   Each member shall be able to read and understand fundamental financial
          statements, including a balance sheet, income statement, and cash flow
          statement.  At least one member shall  qualify as an "Audit  Committee
          Financial  Expert"  under  Securities  & Exchange  Commission  ("SEC")
          regulations.  In  determining  whether  a member  is such a  financial
          expert, the Board of Directors will determine:

          1.   Whether  one  member of the  Audit  Committee  has the  following
               attributes:

               a.   an understanding of Generally Accepted Accounting Principles
                    and financial statements;
               b.   the  ability  to  assess  the  general  application  of such
                    principles in connection  with the accounting for estimates,
                    accruals and reserves;
               c.   experience  preparing,  auditing,  analyzing  or  evaluating
                    financial  statements  that  present a breadth  and level of
                    complexity   of   accounting   issues  that  are   generally
                    comparable to the breadth and  complexity of issues that can
                    reasonably  be  expected  to  be  raised  by  the  Company's
                    financial statements, or experience actively supervising one
                    or more persons engaged in such activities;
               d.   an  understanding  of internal  controls and  procedures for
                    financial reporting; and
               e.   an understanding of audit committee functions; and

          2.   Whether that person acquired such  attributes  through any one or
               more of the following:

               a.   education and experience as a principal  financial  officer,
                    principal accounting officer, controller,  public accountant
                    or  auditor  or  experience  in one or more  positions  that
                    involve the performance of similar functions;

                                       22



               b.   experience   actively   supervising  a  principal  financial
                    officer,  principal accounting officer,  controller,  public
                    accountant, auditor or person performing similar functions;
               c.   experience   overseeing  or  assessing  the  performance  of
                    companies  or  public   accountants   with  respect  to  the
                    preparation, auditing or evaluation of financial statements;
                    or
               d.   other relevant experience.

     C.   Each member of the Audit  Committee  shall also be  "independent,"  as
          defined in Section 301 of the  Sarbanes-Oxley  Act of 2002. Thus, each
          member may not,  other than in his or her  capacity as a member of the
          Board of Directors, the Audit Committee or any other board committee:

          1.   Accept,  directly or indirectly,  any  consulting,  advisory,  or
               other compensatory fee from the Company; or
          2.   be an affiliated person of the Company or any subsidiary.

     D.   Each member  shall not have  participated  in the  preparation  of the
          financial  statements of the Company or any current  subsidiary of the
          Company at any time during the past three years.

II.  Appointment; Authority; Complaints

     A.   Appointment. The Board shall appoint members of the Audit Committee.

     B.   Professional  Advisors.  The Audit Committee shall have the authority,
          and is hereby  authorized  to incur costs,  to retain  special  legal,
          accounting  or other  consultants  to advise the  Committee  and/or to
          assist with any investigations,  which the Audit Committee may wish to
          undertake.  The Audit Committee may request any officer or employee of
          the Company or the Company's outside counsel or independent auditor to
          attend a meeting of the  Committee  or to meet with any members of, or
          consultants to, the Committee.

     C.   Outside Auditors. The Audit Committee shall have direct responsibility
          for appointment,  compensation and oversight of the Company's  outside
          auditors, including resolving disagreements between management and the
          auditors  regarding  financial  reporting.  The outside auditors shall
          report  directly to the Audit  Committee.  The Audit  Committee  shall
          pre-approve  (i) all audit services,  and (ii) all non-audit  services
          provided by the outside  auditor that are  permitted by Section 201 of
          the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, except if:

          1.   in the case of  permissible  non-audit  services,  such  services
               qualify as de minimus under Section 202 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
               of 2002 and the Company did not recognize that such services were
               non-audit services at the time of the engagement;
          2.   the Audit  Committee,  or one or more of its designated  members,
               approves the permissible  non-audit services before completion of
               the audit; and
          3.   when one or more designated  members approve such services,  such
               approval  is  presented  to  the  Audit  Committee  at  its  next
               scheduled meeting.

     The Audit  Committee  shall be  responsible  for receiving from the outside
auditors, and where the Audit Committee determines it necessary or desirable, to
question the outside  auditors and management  about, all reports required to be
made  by  the  auditors  to  the  Audit  Committee  under  Section  204  of  the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002,

                                       23



regarding  critical  accounting  policies,  alternative  treatments of financial
information discussed with management, and other material written communications
between the outside auditors and management.

     D.   Complaints.

          1.   Contacts. The Audit Committee shall appoint an independent person
               (who  may be an  attorney  who is not  otherwise  engaged  by the
               Company and who is called the  "Independent  Contact") to receive
               calls  from  persons  who  wish to make a  complaint  or  express
               concern  about  the  accounting  procedures,  internal  controls,
               auditing  matters  and/or  reporting  methods of the  Company (an
               "Accounting  Complaint") and to facilitate  Accounting Complaints
               by those wishing to maintain an anonymous status.

          2.   Retention. The Independent Contact and any Audit Committee Member
               who receives an Accounting Complaint shall cause a report of such
               Accounting  Complaint (the "Complaint  Report") to be made to the
               Committee  Chairperson who shall maintain a confidential  file of
               all  Complaint  Reports that are made in writing and such written
               Complaint  Reports shall be preserved for 10 years  following the
               receipt of such Accounting Complaint.

          3.   Action on Complaint.  The Committee Chairperson shall review each
               Complaint  Report to make a preliminary  determination  as to the
               probable validity of such Accounting  Complaint and the Committee
               Chairperson is authorized to undertake such  investigation as the
               Committee Chairperson believes warranted under the circumstances.

     E.   Disclosure Committee.

          1.   Responsibility.   The  Company   shall  have  a  committee   (the
               "Disclosure   Committee")  which  is  responsible  for  reviewing
               internal controls relating to financial  reporting and for making
               certain  that the  appropriate  questions  are  asked of  various
               members of the financial  department  and of operations  and that
               appropriate  certificates  are obtained from various  individuals
               within  those areas of  responsibility  in the Company to provide
               assurance  to the Company and to the  Company's  Chief  Financial
               Officer  and Chief  Executive  Officer in  connection  with those
               parties'  certification  of the periodic reports of the Company's
               activities.

          2.   Committee Members.  The Disclosure  Committee shall be made up of
               persons  holding the  offices of the  Company's  Vice  President,
               Controller,  the Company's Director of Accounting,  the Company's
               Vice  President  of  Internal  Audit,  Safety and  Security,  the
               Company's  Senior  Vice  President,   Director  of  Stores,   the
               Company's  Vice  President  of  Planning  and   Allocation,   the
               Company's Vice President of Information Systems and the Company's
               Director of Stockholder Relations.

          3.   Report to Audit  Committee.  At least  annually,  the  Disclosure
               Committee  shall report to the Audit  Committee on its activities
               and the results of its oversight of disclosure matters.

                                       24



     F.   Related-Party  Transactions.  The Audit  Committee  shall  review  and
          approve  all   "related-party   transactions."   A  transaction  is  a
          "related-party  transaction"  if  it  is a  financial  or  contractual
          transaction between the Company and any Director or executive officer.

III. Committee Meetings

     The Audit  Committee will hold meetings at such times and at such places as
it shall deem  necessary but shall hold at least the following  meetings:  (a) a
"Year-End Meeting",  (b) a "Mid-Spring Meeting", (c) a "Late Summer Meeting, (d)
a "Winter  Meeting",  and (e) meetings to approve each release of the  Company's
quarterly financial numbers.

IV.  Specific Responsibilities

The Audit Committee shall make regular reports to the Board. The Audit Committee
shall undertake the following tasks generally at the times indicated:

     A.   Quarterly:

          1.   Review with management and the independent  auditor the Company's
               quarterly financial  statements prior to filing of SEC Form 10-Q.
               Determine  through  questioning  management  and the  independent
               auditor that the reports reflect:

               a.   all  material,  correcting  adjustments  identified  by  the
                    Company's independent auditor;
               b.   any off-balance sheet transactions;
               c.   all SEC  requirements  regarding any disclosure of pro-forma
                    information;  
               d.   management's   assessment   of   disclosure   controls   and
                    procedures and internal controls;
               e.   in  plain  English,   the  material   changes  in  financial
                    condition or results of operations;

          2.   Ascertain  through  questioning  management  and the  independent
               auditor that:

               a.   the independent  auditors have not engaged in any prohibited
                    consulting services for the Company such as: (i) bookkeeping
                    and accounting,  (ii) financial  information systems design,
                    (iii) appraisals,  valuations, fairness opinions, etc., (iv)
                    actuarial  services,  (v) internal audit  outsourcing,  (vi)
                    management or human resources functions, (vii) broker dealer
                    and investment  banking, or (viii) legal and expert services
                    unrelated to audit;
               b.   as part of their  certification  process  for the Form 10-Q,
                    the Company's  Chief  Executive  Officer and Chief Financial
                    Officer  have  reported  to and  discussed  with  the  Audit
                    Committee and the auditors any: (i) significant deficiencies
                    or  material  weaknesses  in  the  design  or  operation  of
                    internal controls over financial  reporting,  and (ii) fraud
                    involving   management   or  other   employees  who  have  a
                    significant  role in the  Company's  internal  controls over
                    financial  reporting,  as  required  by  Section  302 of the
                    Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 and, beginning with the audit for
                    fiscal  2004,  the  independent  auditors  have  reported on
                    management's   assessment  of  internal  controls  including
                    findings,  evaluation of whether  internal  controls include
                    proper maintenance of records, whether there is a reasonable
                    assurance that  transactions are recorded in accordance with
                    GAAP,  and   description  of  any  material   weaknesses  in
                    controls; and

                                       25



               c.   the   independent   auditors   have  reported  any  material
                    non-compliance as a result of testing.

     B.   Year-End Meeting:

          1.   Review the annual audited  financial  statements with management,
               including   major  issues   regarding   accounting  and  auditing
               principles and practices as well as the quality and acceptability
               of such principles,  practices and underlying estimates,  and the
               adequacy of internal controls that could significantly affect the
               Company's financial statements.

          2.   Review an analysis  prepared by  management  and the  independent
               auditor of significant  financial  reporting issues and judgments
               made  in  connection   with  the  preparation  of  the  Company's
               financial statements.

          3.   Review major  changes to the  Company's  auditing and  accounting
               principles and practices as suggested by the independent auditor,
               internal auditors or management.

          4.   Obtain from the  independent  auditor a formal written  statement
               delineating  all  relationships   between  the  auditor  and  the
               Company, consistent with Independence Standards Board Standard 1,
               discuss with the auditor any disclosed  relationships or services
               that may impact auditor  objectivity and  independence,  and take
               appropriate action to insure the independence of the auditor.

          5.   Obtain from the independent auditor assurance that Section 10A of
               the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (which deals
               with the requirement  that auditors report any illegal acts which
               they have discovered) has not been implicated.

          6.   Discuss with the independent  auditor the matters  required to be
               discussed by Statement  on Auditing  Standards  No. 61 ("SAS 61")
               such as: (i) the methods used to account for significant  unusual
               transactions;  (ii) the effect of significant accounting policies
               in  controversial  or emerging areas for which there is a lack of
               authoritative  guidance or  consensus;  (iii) the process used by
               management  in  formulating   particularly  sensitive  accounting
               estimates and the basis for the auditor's  conclusions  regarding
               the  reasonableness  of those estimates;  and (iv)  disagreements
               with management  over the  application of accounting  principles,
               the  basis  for  management's   accounting  estimates,   and  the
               disclosures in the financial  statements  relating to the conduct
               of the audit.

          7.   Review with the independent  auditor any problems or difficulties
               the auditor may have encountered. Such review should include:

               a.   any  difficulties  encountered  in the  course  of the audit
                    work,  including any restrictions on the scope of activities
                    or access to required information.
               b.   any changes  required in the planned  scope of the  internal
                    audit.
               c.   the internal audit department  responsibilities,  budget and
                    staffing.

          8.   Ascertain  through  questioning  management  and the  independent
               auditor that:

               a.   all audit documents and e-mails are preserved for the period
                    of time required by current rules of the SEC;

                                       26



               b.   the independent  auditors  report to the Committee  critical
                    accounting   policies  and   practices   used,   alternative
                    treatments within GAAP and any other material communications
                    with management.

          9.   Beginning with fiscal 2004,  determine that the Company's  annual
               report includes:

               a.   a  statement  of  the   responsibility   of  management  for
                    establishing  and maintaining an adequate  internal  control
                    structure and procedures for financial reporting, including,
                    with respect to controls to assure that:  (i) the  Company's
                    transactions  are properly  authorized,  (ii) the  Company's
                    assets are safeguarded against unauthorized or improper use,
                    and (iii) the Company's  transactions are properly reported,
                    and
               b.   an  assessment,  as of the end of the Company's  most recent
                    fiscal year, of the effectiveness of those controls.  Obtain
                    from the  independent  auditor an attestation to, and report
                    on management's assessment of internal controls.

          10.  Approve the report  required by the rules of the  Securities  and
               Exchange  Commission to be included in the Company's annual proxy
               statement   stating   whether  the  committee  (a)  reviewed  and
               discussed the audited financial  statements with management,  (b)
               discussed with the auditors the matters  requiring  discussion by
               SAS 61 (as  described  in section (6) above),  (c)  received  the
               written  disclosures  and letter  from the  auditor  required  to
               confirm  the  auditors'   independence  and  discussed  with  the
               auditors  their  independence,   and  (d)  based  on  the  above,
               recommended to the Board that the audited financial  statement be
               included in the Company's Annual Report on SEC Form 10-K.

          11.  Verify that the  Company's  Annual Report on Form 10-K and annual
               meeting proxy  statement  filed with the  Securities and Exchange
               Commission contain required disclosures about (i) the Committee's
               pre-approval policy for audit and permissible  non-audit services
               and  (ii) the  fees  billed  to the  Company  by the  independent
               auditor.

          12.  Review with the Company's  general counsel legal matters that may
               have a material impact on the financial statements, the Company's
               compliance   policies  and  any  material  reports  or  inquiries
               received from regulators or governmental agencies. Determine from
               questioning  the general counsel that he or she has maintained an
               open door policy  encouraging  all outside  counsel to report any
               concerns  about  material   violations  of  securities   laws  or
               fiduciary duties by the Company or any of its personnel.

          13.  Review with  independent  auditor the  adequacy of the  Company's
               management  information  systems and the security of such systems
               for the purpose of producing fairly stated financial statements.

          14.  Review  with  the  head of the  Company's  internal  audit  staff
               matters  relating to the ongoing  internal  audits  activities of
               that staff.

          15.  Review with management actual capital expenditures  compared with
               budget and discuss with the Disclosure  Committee  representative
               any changes in the Company's  policies as to authority to approve
               capital expenses.

          16.  Discuss the adequacy and effectiveness of the Company's  internal
               controls  with  a  representative  of  the  Company's  Disclosure
               Committee.

                                       27



          17.  Meet  in  executive  session   individually  with  the  Company's
               independent auditors, the Company's Chief Financial Officer and a
               representative of the Company's internal audit staff.

     C.   Mid-Spring Meeting:

          1.   Review any management letter provided by the independent  auditor
               and the Company's response to that letter.

          2.   Evaluate the performance of the independent auditor and begin the
               process to appoint or replace the independent auditor, which firm
               is ultimately accountable to the Audit Committee. As part of that
               review,  question independent auditors as to any material matters
               which might bear on their  continuation  as independent  auditors
               such as SEC censures or substantial  judicial  determinations  of
               improper actions since the last discussions of such matters.

          3.   Request educational  information on accounting topics as to which
               the Committee seeks a greater understanding.

          4.   Review  with  the  head of the  Company's  internal  audit  staff
               matters  relating to the ongoing  internal  audits  activities of
               that staff.

          5.   Discuss the adequacy and effectiveness of the Company's  internal
               controls  with  a  representative  of  the  Company's  Disclosure
               Committee.

          6.   Discuss  the  sufficiency  of  the  Company's  disaster  recovery
               business  continuation  plan  with the  Company  officer  who has
               primary responsibility for such plan.

          7.   Review the Company's  continuing fraud  prevention  programs with
               the Company's officer with responsibility for internal audits.

          8.   Meet  in  executive  session   individually  with  the  Company's
               independent auditors, the Company's Chief Financial Officer and a
               representative of the Company's internal audit staff.

     D.   Late-Summer Meeting:

          1.   Review the  significant  reports to  management  prepared  by the
               internal auditing department and management's responses.

          2.   Review the  appointment  or  replacement  of the senior  internal
               auditing executive.

          3.   Meet with the  independent  auditor  prior to the audit to review
               the planning and staffing of the audit and approve the fees to be
               paid to the independent auditor.

          4.   Discuss the adequacy and effectiveness of the Company's  internal
               controls  with  a  representative  of  the  Company's  Disclosure
               Committee.

          5.   Review  with  the  head of the  Company's  internal  audit  staff
               matters  relating to the ongoing  internal  audits  activities of
               that staff.

                                       28



          6.   Review with management actual capital expenditures  compared with
               budget and discuss with the Disclosure  Committee  representative
               any changes in the Company's  policies as to authority to approve
               capital expenses.

          7.   Meet  in  executive  session   individually  with  the  Company's
               independent auditors, the Company's Chief Financial Officer and a
               representative of the Company's internal audit staff.

     E.   Winter Meeting

          1.   Meet with management to review the Company's major financial risk
               exposures  and the  steps  management  has taken to  monitor  and
               control such exposures.

          2.   Advise  the Board  with  respect to the  Company's  policies  and
               procedures   regarding   compliance   with  applicable  laws  and
               regulations.

          3.   Review and reassess the  adequacy of this  Charter,  submit it to
               the Board for  approval,  and cause a copy of this  Charter to be
               attached to the  Company's  annual  proxy  statement  every three
               years, in accordance with SEC Rule Item 7(e) of Schedule 14A.

          4.   Provide  the NASDAQ  with  written  confirmation  as to the Audit
               Committee member qualifications and related Board determinations,
               as well as the  annual  review  and  re-evaluation  of the  Audit
               Committee Charter.

          5.   Review  with  the  head of the  Company's  internal  audit  staff
               matters  relating to the ongoing  internal  audits  activities of
               that staff and review budget and staffing levels for the internal
               audit department.

          6.   Discuss the adequacy and effectiveness of the Company's  internal
               controls  with  a  representative  of  the  Company's  Disclosure
               Committee.

          7.   Meet  in  executive  session   individually  with  the  Company's
               independent auditors, the Company's Chief Financial Officer and a
               representative of the Company's internal audit staff.

V.   Limitation on Duties

     While the Audit Committee has the  responsibilities and powers set forth in
this  Charter,  it is not the duty of the  Audit  Committee  to plan or  conduct
audits or to determine that the Company's financial  statements are complete and
accurate and are in accordance with Generally  Accepted  Accounting  Principles.
This is the responsibility of management and the independent  auditor. Nor is it
the  duty  of  the  Audit  Committee  to  conduct  investigations  or to  assure
compliance with laws and regulations and the Company's Code of Conduct.

     As revised by the Audit Committee, December 7, 2004.
                                             



                                  Linda McFarland Farthing, Chairperson of Audit
                                  Committee

                                       29



                      Exhibit A to Audit Committee Charter
                                STEIN MART, INC.
                         Director Independence Criteria
                                  April 7, 2004


     A member of the Company's Board of Directors shall be "Independent" only if
such director meets all of the following (the "Stein Mart Director  Independence
Criteria"):

     The  director  shall be a person  other than an officer or  employee of the
Company  or its  subsidiaries  or any other  individual  having a  relationship,
which,  in the  opinion of the  Board,  would  interfere  with the  exercise  of
independent  judgment  in carrying  out the  responsibilities  of a director.  A
director shall not be considered independent, if such director:

     1.   is, or at any time  during the past three  years was,  employed by the
          Company or by any parent or subsidiary of the Company;

     2.   accepts or who has a Family Member (as defined below) who accepted any
          payments  from the Company or any parent or  subsidiary of the Company
          in excess of  $60,000  during  the  current  or any of the past  three
          fiscal years, other than the following:

          a.   compensation  for board or board committee  service;  
          b.   payments   arising  solely  from  investments  in  the  Company's
               securities;
          c.   compensation  paid  to a  Family  Member  who is a  non-executive
               employee of the Company or a parent or subsidiary of the Company;
          d.   benefits   under   a    tax-qualified    retirement    plan,   or
               non-discretionary compensation; or
          e.   loans permitted under Section 13(k) of the  Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
               2002 (the "Sarbanes Act");

     3.   is a Family Member of an individual  who is, or at any time during the
          past three  years  was,  employed  by the  Company or by any parent or
          subsidiary of the Company as an executive officer;

     4.   is,  or has a Family  Member  who is, a partner  in, or a  controlling
          shareholder or an executive  officer of, any organization to which the
          Company  made,  or from  which  the  Company  received,  payments  for
          property or  services  in the current or any of the past three  fiscal
          years that exceed 5% of the  recipient's  consolidated  gross revenues
          for  that  year,  or  $200,000,  whichever  is  more,  other  than the
          following:

          a.   payments   arising  solely  from  investments  in  the  Company's
               securities; or
          b.   under   non-discretionary    charitable   contribution   matching
               programs.

     5.   is, or has a Family Member who is, employed as an executive officer of
          another  entity  where at any time  during the past three years any of
          the  executive  officers  of the  Company  served on the  compensation
          committee of such other entity; or

     6.   is, or has a Family Member who is, a current  partner of the Company's
          outside auditor, or was a partner or employee of the Company's outside
          auditor who worked on the Company's  audit at any time during the past
          three years.

     "Family  Member" is a person's  spouse,  parents,  children  and  siblings,
whether by blood,  marriage or adoption,  and anyone  residing in such  person's
house.

                                       30



                                   APPENDIX B
                                STEIN MART, INC.
                     MANAGEMENT INCENTIVE COMPENSATION PLAN

                          (Effective February 1, 2005)


     SECTION 1. Purpose. The purpose of the Stein Mart Inc. Management Incentive
Compensation  Plan (the  "Plan")  is to  attract,  retain  and  motivate  highly
qualified  individuals who are key employees of Stein Mart, Inc.  ("Stein Mart")
and its subsidiaries (together called the "Company");  to attract and retain the
most  qualified  employees;  to obtain the best possible  performance  from each
Participant;  to further  underscore  the  importance  of  achieving  particular
business objectives  established for Stein Mart; and to include in Participants'
compensation  package a bonus component that is tied directly to the achievement
of  those   objectives.   Such  bonus   component  is  intended  to  qualify  as
performance-based compensation under Section 162(m) of the Internal Revenue Code
of 1986,  as  amended  from time to time  (the  "Code"),  and the Plan  shall be
interpreted accordingly.

     SECTION 2.  Definitions.  For the purposes of the Plan, the following terms
shall have the following meanings:

     "Awards" shall mean the incentive awards made pursuant to the Plan.

     "Board of Directors" shall mean the Board of Directors of the Company.

     "Code" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1.

     "Committee"  shall  mean  the  Compensation   Committee  of  the  Board  of
     Directors.

     "Company" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1.

     "Covered Person" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 12(f).

     "Eligible  Employee"  shall  mean  an  Employee  who  is a  key  member  of
     management of the Company, as determined by the Committee.

     "Employee"  shall mean an  individual  who is on the active  payroll of the
     Company at any time  during the period for which an Award is made under the
     Plan.

     "Establishment Period" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 5.

     "Participant"  shall  mean an  Eligible  Employee  who is  selected  by the
     Committee to participate in the Plan.

     "Performance  Period" shall mean a full fiscal year of the Company  unless,
     to the  extent  consistent  with  Section  162(m)  of the  Code,  otherwise
     determined by the Committee.

     "Plan" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1.

                                       31



     "Stein Mart" shall have the meaning set forth in Section 1.

     SECTION 3.  Effective  Date;  Term. The Plan is effective as of February 1,
2005,  subject to approval by the Company's  stockholders  at the Company's 2005
Annual  Meeting of  Stockholders,  and,  subject  to Section 9, shall  remain in
effect until such time as it shall be terminated by the Board of Directors.  The
Plan supersedes all previous bonus plans for Participants.

     SECTION 4. Maximum  Awards.  Awards payable with respect to any fiscal year
of the Company to any Participant shall not exceed $2,000,000.

     SECTION 5. Eligibility.

     (a)  Establishment  Period.  Within  the  first  90 days of the  applicable
Performance  Period (or, if shorter,  within the maximum  period  allowed  under
Section 162(m) of the Code) (the  "Establishment  Period"), the Committee  shall
select  those  Eligible  Employees  who shall  participate  in the Plan for such
Performance  Period. In determining those Eligible Employees who are selected to
participate  in  the  Plan,  the  Committee  shall  give  consideration  to  the
contribution made by the Employee to the achievement of Stein Mart's established
objectives and such other matters as it shall deem relevant. The Committee shall
have the authority at any time prior to the payment of Awards for the applicable
Performance  Period to remove  Participants  from the Plan for that  Performance
Period.

     (b) Employment.  To be eligible to receive an Award, the Eligible  Employee
must be employed through the last day of the Performance Period. Notwithstanding
the  foregoing,  in the  discretion  of the  Committee,  Awards  may be  made to
Eligible Employees who have retired or whose employment has terminated after the
beginning  of the  Performance  Period  for  which an  Award is made,  or to the
designee or estate of an Eligible  Employee  who died prior to the date on which
Stein Mart makes payments with respect to Awards for the applicable  Performance
Period,  but not unless and until the Committee has certified  attainment of the
relevant performance goals in accordance with Section 7(b).

     SECTION 6. Awards.

     (a) Terms.  Subject to the terms of the Plan, the Committee  shall have the
authority to determine the terms of any Award.

     (b) Committee  Actions in Establishment  Period.  Within the  Establishment
Period,  the  Committee  shall  establish  in  writing  (i)  the  length  of the
Performance  Period,  (ii) the Eligible  Employees who shall  participate in the
applicable  Performance  Period,  and (iii) the  performance  goal(s) for Awards
granted for that Performance Period.

     (c) Performance Goals. The performance  goal(s) that may be selected by the
Committee  shall be based upon one or more of the following  criteria:  revenue,
net cash provided by operations,  return on assets, return on equity,  operating
income,  gross or operating  margins,  net income  before or after taxes,  total
earnings, net operating profit, basic or diluted earnings per share (EPS), total
shareholder return (TSR), relative (versus an index or peer group) TSR, or stock
price. The foregoing criteria may, as determined by the Committee, relate to the
Company, one or more of its subsidiaries,  affiliates,  divisions or operational
units,  or any  combination of the foregoing,  and may be applied on an absolute
basis  and/or  be  relative  to one or more peer  companies  or  indices  or any
combination  thereof.  To the extent  required under Section 162(m) of the Code,
within the Establishment  Period,  the Committee shall define, in writing and in
an objective  fashion,  the 

                                       32



manner  of  calculating  the  performance  criteria  it  selects  to use for the
applicable  Performance  Period in order to  determine  whether  the  applicable
performance goal(s) have been attained.

     (d)  Modifications.  The  Committee  is  authorized  at any time during the
Establishment  Period,  or any  time  thereafter  (but  only to the  extent  the
exercise of such authority  after the  Establishment  Period would not cause the
applicable   Awards  to  fail  to   qualify  as   "qualified   performance-based
compensation"  under  Section  162(m)  of the  Code),  in its sole and  absolute
discretion,  to adjust or modify the calculation of performance  goal(s) for the
applicable  Performance  Period to the extent  permitted under Section 162(m) of
the  Code  (i)  in  the  event  of,  or  in  anticipation  of,  any  unusual  or
extraordinary  corporate item,  transaction,  event or development affecting the
Company,  or any of its subsidiaries,  affiliates,  divisions or operating units
(to the extent  applicable to such  performance  goal(s)) or (ii) in recognition
of, or in anticipation  of, any other unusual or nonrecurring  events  affecting
the Company or any of its subsidiaries, affiliates, divisions or operating units
(to  the  extent  applicable  to such  performance  goal(s)),  or the  financial
statements of the Company or any of its subsidiaries,  affiliates,  divisions or
operating units (to the extent  applicable to such performance  goal(s)),  or of
changes in applicable rules,  rulings,  regulations or other requirements of any
governmental body or securities exchange, accounting principles, law or business
conditions.

     SECTION 7. Payment of Awards.

     (a) Time of Payment. Awards payable under the Plan for a Performance Period
shall  be  paid in cash to  Participants  as soon as  administratively  possible
following completion of the performance goal certifications  required by Section
7(b), unless the Committee shall determine that any Award or any portion thereof
shall be  deferred.  In no event may a  Participant  receive  any payment (i) in
respect  of an  Award  unless  and  until,  and  only to the  extent  that,  the
performance  goal(s) for the  applicable  Performance  Period are  achieved  and
certified by the Committee in accordance with Section 7(b) and (ii) of any Award
in excess of the limitation set forth in Section 4.

     (b)  Goal  Achievement  Determination.  Following  the  completion  of  the
applicable Performance Period, the Committee shall meet to review and certify in
writing whether, and to what extent, the performance goal(s) for the Performance
Period have been  achieved.  If the  applicable  performance  goal(s)  have been
achieved,   the  Committee   shall  then  determine  the  actual  size  of  each
Participant's  Award for the Performance  Period. In determining the actual size
of an individual Award for a Performance  Period, the Committee may, in its sole
judgment, reduce or eliminate the Award otherwise payable to the Participant for
the  Performance  Period,  based  on  the  level  of  performance  achieved  and
certified.

     SECTION 8. Administration and Interpretation.

     (a)  Committee  Administers.  The  Committee  shall have full  authority to
administer  the Plan.  The  Committee  shall  have full  power to  construe  and
interpret  the  Plan,   establish  and  amend  rules  and  regulations  for  its
administration,  correct any  defect,  supply any  omission  and  reconcile  any
inconsistency  in the Plan and any Award, and perform all other acts relating to
the Plan, including the delegation of administrative  responsibilities,  that it
believes  reasonable and proper and in conformity  with the purposes of the Plan
and the requirements of Section 162(m) of the Code.

     (b) Committee  Determinations.  The Committee has sole  responsibility  for
selecting Eligible Employees and Participants,  establishing  performance goals,
setting Performance Periods,  setting  target/maximum Award amounts,  certifying
whether  performance  goals have been  attained  and  determining  actual  Award
amounts.

                                       33



     (c) Committee Decision  Conclusive.  Any decision made, or action taken, by
the Committee  arising out of or in connection  with the  interpretation  and/or
administration of the Plan shall be final, conclusive and binding on all persons
affected thereby.

     (d) Limitations.  In no event shall any discretionary  authority granted to
the Committee by the Plan be used to (i) provide payment in respect of any Award
if the performance  goal(s) for the applicable  Performance Period have not been
attained  and  certified  by the  Committee,  (ii)  increase  an  Award  for any
Participant  following the Establishment  Period,  (iii) increase an Award above
the maximum  amount payable under Section 4 of the Plan, or (iv) be exercised in
a manner which is inconsistent with Section 162(m) of the Code.

     SECTION 9.  Amendment/Termination.  The  Committee  shall have the right to
amend  the Plan from time to time or to  repeal  it  entirely  or to direct  the
discontinuance of Awards either temporarily or permanently;  provided,  however,
that no amendment  of the Plan that changes (i) the persons  eligible to receive
Awards  under the Plan,  (ii) the criteria  that may be used to set  performance
goals under the Plan,  as set forth in Section  6(b), or (iii) the maximum Award
payable to an Eligible  Employee,  as set forth in Section 4, shall be effective
before approval by shareholders in a manner that complies with the  requirements
of Section 162(m) of the Code.

     SECTION 10. Special Awards and Other Plans.

     (a) Other  Incentives.  Nothing  contained in the Plan shall prohibit Stein
Mart from  establishing  other special  awards or incentive  compensation  plans
providing  for the payment of incentive  compensation  to  Employees  (including
Eligible Employees).

     (b) Other  Plans.  Payments  or benefits  provided to an Eligible  Employee
under any stock, deferred  compensation,  savings,  retirement or other employee
benefit plan are governed solely by the terms of such plan.

     SECTION 11. Rights of Eligible Employees.

     (a) No Right to Continued Employment. Neither the Plan, nor the adoption or
operation of the Plan, nor any documents describing or referring to the Plan (or
any part  hereof)  shall  confer upon any  Employee any right to continue in the
employ of Stein Mart.

     (b) No Interest in Assets of Company.  No  individual  to whom an Award has
been made or any other party shall have any  interest in any asset of Stein Mart
until such amount has been paid.

     (c) Rights Not  Assignable.  No right or interest of any Participant in the
Plan  shall be  assignable  or  transferable,  or  subject  to any claims of any
creditor or subject to any lien.

     SECTION 12. Miscellaneous.

     (a)  Expenses.  All  expenses  and costs  incurred in  connection  with the
operation of the Plan shall be borne by Stein Mart,  and no part thereof  (other
than the amounts of Awards under the Plan) shall be charged  against the maximum
limitation of Section 4.

                                       34



     (b) Withholding.  All Awards are subject to withholding,  where applicable,
for Federal, state, local and foreign taxes.

     (c) Savings  Clause.  Any provision of the Plan that is held to be invalid,
illegal or unenforceable  (whether in whole or in part) shall be deemed modified
to the  extent,  but  only to the  extent,  of such  invalidity,  illegality  or
unenforceability  and the remaining provisions of the Plan shall not be affected
thereby.

     (d) Applicable  Law. The Plan and the rights and obligations of the parties
to the Plan shall be governed by, and  construed and  interpreted  in accordance
with,  the  laws of the  State of  Florida  (without  regard  to  principles  of
conflicts of law).

     (e) Successors.  All obligations of the Company under the Plan with respect
to Awards  granted  hereunder  shall be binding on any successor to the Company,
including any purchaser of all or substantially all the assets of the Company.

     (f)  Limitations  on  Liability;  Indemnity.  No  member  of the  Board  of
Directors,  the  Committee or any employee of the Company  (each such person,  a
"Covered Person") shall be liable for any action taken or omitted to be taken or
any  determination  made in good  faith  with  respect  to the Plan or any Award
hereunder.  Each Covered  Person shall be  indemnified  and held harmless by the
Company  against and from (i) any loss,  cost,  liability or expense  (including
attorneys'  fees) that may be imposed upon or incurred by such Covered Person in
connection  with or resulting from any action,  suit or proceeding to which such
Covered Person may be a party or in which such Covered Person may be involved by
reason of any action  taken or  omitted to be taken  under the Plan or any Award
Agreement  and (ii) any and all amounts  paid by such Covered  Person,  with the
Company's  approval,  in settlement  thereof,  or paid by such Covered Person in
satisfaction of any judgment in any such action, suit or proceeding against such
Covered  Person;  provided  that the  Company  shall have the right,  at its own
expense,  to assume and defend any such action, suit or proceeding and, once the
Company gives notice of its intent to assume the defense, the Company shall have
sole  control  over such  defense  with  counsel of the  Company's  choice.  The
foregoing right of indemnification shall not be available to a Covered Person to
the extent that a court of competent  jurisdiction  in a final judgment or other
final  adjudication,  in either case not subject to further  appeal,  determines
that  the  acts  or  omissions  of  such  Covered  Person  giving  rise  to  the
indemnification  claim resulted from such Covered  Person's bad faith,  fraud or
willful  criminal  act or  omission  or that such  right of  indemnification  is
otherwise prohibited by law. The foregoing right of indemnification shall not be
exclusive of any other rights of indemnification to which Covered Persons may be
entitled under the Company's  Restated  Certificate of Incorporation or Restated
Bylaws,  as a matter of law, or  otherwise,  or any other power that the Company
may have to indemnify such persons or hold them harmless.

                                       35





This Proxy when properly executed will be voted in the manner directed herein by the undersigned           Please
shareholder.  If no direction is made, this  proxy will be voted FOR Proposal 1 and Proposal 2.            Mark Here
The Board of Directors recommends a vote FOR Items 1 and 2.                                                for Address  [ ]         
                                                                                                           Change or       
                                                                                                           Comments
                                                                                                           SEE REVERSE SIDE



                                                                                                         
1. Election of Directors as recommended in the Proxy Statement:                   2.  Approval of the Stein    FOR  AGAINST  ABSTAIN
                                                                                      Mart, Inc. Management    [ ]    [ ]      [ ]  
      FOR all nominees listed               WITHHOLD AUTHORITY                        Incentive Compensation       
 (except as marked to the contrary)   to vote for all nominees listed                 Plan as recommended in   
                                                                                      the Proxy Statement.    
                [ ]                                 [ ]                               
                                                                                  3   Should  any  other  matters  requiring a  vote
   Nominees:                                                                          of  the shareholders arise,  the named Proxies
   01 Alvin R. Carpenter, 02 Linda McFarland Farthing, 03 Michael D. Fisher,          (see reverse) are authorized  to vote the same
   04 Mitchell W. Legler, 05 Michael D. Rose, 06 Richard L. Sisisky,                  in  accordance  with  their  best  judgment in
   07 Jay Stein, 08 Martin E. Stein, Jr., 09 J. Wayne Weaver,                         the  interest  of the  Company.  The Board  of
   10 John H. Williams, Jr., and 11 James H. Winston.                                 Directors is not aware of any matter which  is
                                                                                      to be presented  for  action  at  the  meeting
INSTRUCTIONS: To withhold authority to vote for any individual nominee, write         other  than  the matters set forth herein.
that nominee's name in the space provided below.                                          
_____________________________________________________________________________             
                                                                                          
                                                                                          
                                                                                          






Signature________________________________________________Signature________________________________________________Date______________
Please  insert  the date and sign your name  exactly as it  appears  hereon.  If shares  are held  jointly  each  joint owner should
sign. Executors,  administrators,  trustees,  guardians,  etc.,  should  so  indicate when  signing. Corporations  should sign  full
corporate  name by an  authorized  officer.  Partnership  should sign partnership  name by an  authorized  Partner.  Unless the date
has been inserted below this  proxy  shall be deemed to be dated for all  purposes  as of the date appearing on the  postmark on the
envelope in which it is  enclosed.  In  such  a  case  the  Proxies  named  (see  reverse)  are  authorized  to insert  the date  in
accordance with these instructions.






                            ^ FOLD AND DETACH HERE ^

                      Vote by Internet or Telephone or Mail
                          24 Hours a Day, 7 Days a Week

    Internet and telephone voting is available through 11:59 PM Eastern Time
                      the day prior to annual meeting day.

Your Internet or telephone vote authorizes the named proxies to vote your shares 
   in the same manner as if you marked, signed and returned your proxy card.

---------------------------------------        ---------------------------------------        --------------------------------------
                                                                                                         
                Internet                                     Telephone                                         Mail
 http://www.proxyvoting.com/smrt                           1-866-540-5760                              Mark, sign and date
Use the Internet to vote your proxy.           Use   any  touch-tone  telephone  to                      your proxy card
Have  your proxy  card  in hand when           vote  your  proxy.  Have  your proxy                            and 
you access the web site.                  OR   card in hand when you call.               OR              return it in the         
                                                                                                      enclosed postage-paid    
                                                                                                             envelope.              
---------------------------------------        ---------------------------------------        --------------------------------------


               If you vote your proxy by Internet or by telephone,
                  you do NOT need to mail back your proxy card.


You can view the Annual Report and Proxy Statment
on the internet at www.steinmart.com




                                STEIN MART, INC.

      THIS PROXY IS SOLICITED BY THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS IN CONNECTION WITH
           THE ANNUAL MEETING OF SHAREHOLDERS TO BE HELD JUNE 7, 2005

     The undersigned  hereby  appoints Jay Stein and John H. Williams,  Jr., and
each of them, with full power of substitution and revocation, as true and lawful
agents and  proxies of the  undersigned  to attend and vote all shares of Common
Stock of Stein Mart, Inc., a Florida corporation,  that the undersigned would be
entitled  to  vote  if  then  personally   present  at  the  Annual  Meeting  of
Shareholders of Stein Mart, Inc., a Florida  corporation,  to be held on June 7,
2005 at 2:00 P.M.,  local time,  at The Cummer  Museum of Art and  Gardens,  829
Riverside Avenue, Jacksonville, Florida, and at any adjournments thereof, hereby
revoking any proxy heretofore given.


                (Continued and to be signed on the reverse side)


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Address Change/Comments (Mark the corresponding box on the reverse side)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------




--------------------------------------------------------------------------------



                            ^ FOLD AND DETACH HERE ^


              You can access your Stein Mart, Inc. account online.

Access your Stein Mart, Inc. shareholder account online via Investor 
ServiceDirect(R) (ISD).

Mellon Investor Services LLC, Transfer Agent for Stein Mart, Inc., now makes it
easy and convenient to get current information on you shareholder account.
    - View account status               - View payment history for dividends    
    - View certificate history          - Make address changes
    - View book-entry information       - Obtain a duplicate 1099 tax form
                                        - Establish/change your PIN

              Visit us on the web at http://www.melloninvestor.com

          For Technical Assistance Call 1-877-978-7778 between 9am-7pm
                           Monday-Friday Easter Time

     Investor ServiceDirect(R) is a registered trademark of Mellon Investor
                                  Services LLC