Restaurants & Bars
These 10 Coffee Shops To Close As DMV Chain Files For Bankruptcy
Three Northern Virginia coffee shops are among the locations Compass Coffee plans to shutter in the DMV, along with 6 in DC and one in MD.
Updated: Wednesday, Jan. 7, 10 a.m.
Compass Coffee, which operates 25 coffee shops across the DMV, plans to close 10 locations, including three in Northern Virginia, according to reports.
On Tuesday morning, the coffee shop chain filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Washington, D.C.
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Included in the filing submitted by Compass CEO Michael Haft was a list of 10 unexpired non-residential leases the company asked the court to reject.
"The Debtor leases the premises for each of its 25 cafés from unaffiliated landlords," according to the filing. "Certain of the Leases have become unprofitable due to decreased customer traffic, in part as a result of the financial headwinds the Debtor faced leading to the filing of this Case, as more fully described in the M. Haft Declaration. The Debtor has conducted a thorough analysis and identified the cafés related to the Leases listed on the Lease List as those that are likely to continue to drive losses for the Debtor, and as a result, should be rejected."
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One of the leases on the list was for the company's headquarters building, which is located at 1401 Okie St., Northeast in Washington, D.C. The other nine locations on the list were:
- 1401 I St. Northwest, Washington, D.C.
- 1921 Eighth St. Northwest, Washington, D.C.
- 655 New York Ave. Northwest, Washington, D.C.
- 7393 Lee Highway, Falls Church, Virginia
- 1924 14th St., Northwest, Washington, D.C.
- 1827 Adams Mill Road Northwest, Washington, D.C.
- 4300 Wilson Blvd., Arlington, Virginia
- 1703 H St., Northwest, Washington, D.C.
- 4210 Knox Road, College Park, Maryland
The company recently completed negotiations with a strategic buyer with a "substantial, global presence in the retail coffee business," according to Haft, adding that he would file a purchase agreement for the court's approval.
Haft filed the petition on behalf of the company, which owes about $1.7 million to four creditors, who have filed liens against the company.
"The proposed sale is contemplated to be a sale of assets of the business as a going concern, free and clear of claims, except those expressly assumed," Haft wrote. "Compass expects through the sale to pay its secured lenders in full, to pay the restructuring costs incurred to conduct the chapter 11 sale process, and to have additional proceeds sufficient to make a distribution to unsecured creditors through the chapter 11 case."
Compass owes EagleBank $643,779.25 on a term loan, the Small Business Administration $464,782.07 on a disaster assistance loan made to the company following the pandemic, and Square $518,083.19, which provided receivables financing for some of the cafés, according to the court filing.
The company owes approximately $5.2 million to insider and outside investors, as well as about $100,000 in credits to inKind.
In addition, the company has more than 100 unsecured creditors who are owed a total of about $4.8 million, which are mostly past due rent, unpaid purchase amounts and accounts payable to suppliers and other vendors, according to court records.
In 2014, Haft co-founded Compass with Harrison Suarez. The opened the first Compass Café in Washington, D.C. the same year.
"The onset of the Covid-19 pandemic in early 2020 had a massive impact on the company," Haft wrote in his filing. "Compass had to modify its customer-facing retail business, which resulted in the loss of considerable revenue and a resulting need to downsize its workforce. During the pandemic, the company developed a coffee roastery and distribution business in an attempt to offset the loss of income from the substantial reduction in café traffic."
Related: Compass Coffee Cafe Opens Amid Brewing Legal Battle: Reports
Once the pandemic was over, customer traffic continued to depress due to forces beyond the company's control, according to Haft. These included the reduction of federal government employees and the remote nature of many of the businesses in the region.
"While some café locations remain profitable, others are only minimally profitable or unprofitable," Haft wrote. "In an attempt to overcome the loss of customer traffic, the company has instituted significant overhead reductions to maintain its operating cashflow while attempting to cultivate opportunities for a value-maximizing transaction. In particular, Compass has exited the coffee distribution business and returned its focus to the core business of operating cafés."
Compass employs 166 workers on a full- or part-time basis across its corporate headquarters and 25 cafés in D.C., Maryland and Virginia.
In May 2021, Compass began to market itself for sale as a going concern, with the assistance of numerous industry contacts, according to Haft. Multiple suitors expressed an interest in exploring transactions that would result in the sale of the entire company or significant portions of it.
On Jan. 13, 2025, Suarez filed a lawsuit against Haft, according to The Washington Post. The two men met while they were serving in the U.S. Marine Corps.
In the lawsuit, Suarez said he was terminated by Haft in an email in mid-2021, according to the Post. Suarez sought millions of dollars in compensation, accusing Haft, Compass Coffee, and the Haft family of “running a racketeering enterprise,” while failing to pay him the fair market value of the company based on the operating agreement he had signed, the Post reported.
On Dec. 17, 2025, U.S. District Judge Sparkle L. Sooknanan granted Haft's motion for a protective order in Suazez's lawsuit against his former business partner.
Haft notified the court on Tuesday that he had filed for relief under chapter 11 and requested an automatic stay in the civil case. He and Suazez will file a joint status report within seven days addressing how the bankruptcy case will affect discovery and further proceedings in the lawsuit, according to court records.
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