Business & Tech
These Beloved Retailers Permanently Closed In VA In 2025
Holiday shopping is almost here, but several retailers and chains have closed over the past year in Virginia.
The holiday shopping season is almost upon us, and Virginia consumers might be surprised to see that some of their favorite brick-and-mortar stores have disappeared since they last checked off gifts on Santa’s list.
Fast fashion retailer Forever 21 is gone. So is Joann, the fabric and crafts retailer. And forget picking up stocking stuffers at Rite Aid, which shuttered its entire fleet of stores this year.
In all, some 2,700 stores nationwide have locked their doors or are planning to close in 2025, according to a Business Insider analysis.
Find out what's happening in Old Town Alexandriafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
There are multiple reasons, but a big one is e-commerce competition. In a report last year, UBS analysts said another 45,000 stores may close by 2029 as retail’s physical footprint increasingly shifts to fulfillment and distribution centers.
Amid the store closures and constrictions, larger corporations such as Walmart, Costco, Target and Home Depot plan to expand, according to the analysis.
Find out what's happening in Old Town Alexandriafor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Large businesses benefit from their size, which allows them to absorb higher costs and secure more favorable agreements compared to smaller businesses — especially the independent shops that anchor main streets across the country.
It only takes a small shift in the economy to sour what was once a profitable business. For many, “the tariffs are that kind of tipping point,” Scott Lincicome, vice president of economics and trade at the libertarian think tank the Cato Institute, told Minnesota Public Radio’s “Marketplace.”

Virginia Retail Closings So Far In 2025
Here’s a look at companies that have closed stores, and some that have gotten a reprieve so far in Virginia in 2025:
Advance Auto Parts planned to close 523 corporate stores and four distribution centers by mid-2025, in addition to 204 independent locations. In March, the company said it planned to open new stores following the "optimization of the company's retail footprint," including additional locations in Virginia.
Advance Auto Parts currently has more than 200 locations in Virginia, according to the company's website.
At Home entered Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in June and said at the time that it planned to close up to 26 stores before the end of September. Included on the list of closures was the company's Manassas location.
Best Buy planned to shutter an additional 10 to 15 stores in 2025 after closing 24 last year.
Big Lots held on during bankruptcy after getting a lifeline from Gordon Brothers Retail Partners, which saved between 200 and 400 stores from full liquidation. However, the new owners planned to sell the leases to 480 stores, according to Business Insider, including nine of the discount retailer chain's 32 Virginia locations.
Claire’s filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection this summer. The retailer planned to close 700 stores and was considering liquidating its entire 1,500-store footprint in North America. However, when a private equity firm acquired Claire’s assets, the liquidation plan was paused for about half of the stores. In Virginia, six stores were closed.
Dollar General planned to close nearly 100 stores and 45 Popshelf stores nationwide by year’s end. The stores represent less than 1 percent of the company’s overall store base, and some Popshelf stores will be converted to Dollar General locations. Dollar General operates nearly 500 stores in Virginia.
Dollar Tree sold Family Dollar to private equity firms in a $1 billion deal that closed in July. Business Insider reported that Dollar Tree initially closed 600 Family Dollar locations in 2024 and planned to close another 370 Family Dollar stores in 2025 when their leases expire.
Foot Locker planned to shut down another 275 Foot Locker and 125 Champs Sports locations, reducing its global store count by 10 percent. At the same time, the chain planned to refresh 300 stores.
Fast-fashion retailer Forever 21 closed 356 U.S. stores, citing overseas competition, rising costs and other economic challenges in its Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition. International stores were not affected. Forever 21 operated nine locations in Virginia that were impacted by the closures.

GameStop isn’t going out of business and still has a large U.S. presence, but the video game retailer planned to close a “significant number” of stores in 2025 as it continues a restructuring plan. GameStop shuttered about 960 stores in 2024.
JCPenney closed eight stores in May, calling them “isolated” closures that did not signal a reduction in the venerable department chain’s store count. In July, two Virginia stores were among 119 stores sold to a Boston private equity firm in a nearly $1 billion deal.
The last Joann fabric stores closed in May; however, one of the retailer’s biggest rivals, Michaels, bought some of the company's private label brands and intellectual property. All 20 Joann locations in Virginia were closed.
Kohl’s planned to close 27 of its 1,500 stores nationwide due to performance issues, as well as an e-commerce fulfillment center in San Bernardino, California, ChainStoreAge reported. Among the closures was a Kohl's location in Herndon.
Liberated Brands planned to shutter its entire fleet of 122 retail stores, including all Volcom, Billabong, Quiksilver, Spyder, RVCA and Roxy stores, Fashion Dive reported.
Macy’s planned to close another 66 stores this year as part of its “A Bold New Chapter” strategy that will shutter 150 underperforming stores by the end of 2026.
Party City closed for good this year, Patch previously reported. This included 21 locations in Virginia.
Citing a revenue slump, Petco announced in September that it would close 25 underperforming stores; however, Virginia locations were spared. The pet supply retailer closed the same number of stores in 2024, and currently has a store count of about 1,400 nationwide.
Rite Aid closed roughly 1,250 stores, selling most to rival pharmacy chains. The company's last remaining Virginia stores closed in October, five months after the company declared its second bankruptcy in two years. Before its first bankruptcy in 2023, Rite Aid had about 65 Virginia locations.
Torrid, which specializes in clothing and intimates for women’s sizes 10 to 30, originally said it would close 40 to 50 stores by the end of 2025 as part of an “optimization” plan, but upped the total to 180 as it shifts to a digital model, according to Torrid’s first-quarter earnings report. Torrid has 14 locations in Maryland.
Walgreens is expected to close 450 locations by the end of the year as part of a multi-year plan to shutter about 1,200 underperforming stores, USA Today reported. More closures are expected in 2026 and 2027 as part of the cost-cutting strategy.

Consumers Fret About Prices
Everyday Americans are on the same precipice. Tariffs are adding to inflation, high credit card interest rates and other pressures already pushing many families to the edges of their financial comfort.
To get the best deals, many consumers began their holiday shopping last summer, before President Donald Trump’s retaliatory tariffs on some of the top importers of U.S. consumer goods took effect.
Nearly half (49 percent) of the 2,600 consumers surveyed by Bankrate said they planned to start buying gifts before Halloween, and 41 percent are worried about higher prices.
“Tariff concerns are likely a prominent reason why more than 2 in 5 holiday shoppers fear higher prices this year,” said Ted Rossman, a senior analyst at Bankrate.
About 70 percent of those surveyed said they expect to spend the same (43 percent) or more (27 percent), according to the survey.
That could be good news for retail businesses that are dependent on the fourth-quarter holiday sales to finish the year in the black.
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.