US Trends

how many starbucks are closing

Starbucks has closed on the order of 400–500 stores in North America as part of a recent restructuring, and it is also planning to shut or convert about 80–90 pickup‑only locations through 2026.

Quick Scoop

  • Around 400 locations were closed in 2025 as part of a strategic reset focused on dense urban areas like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco, Minneapolis, and Baltimore.
  • Overall, reports describe Starbucks having “closed roughly 500 North American locations” as part of its broader efficiency and restructuring plan, with some closures stretching into early 2026.
  • Separately, Starbucks plans to close or convert 80–90 “Starbucks Pick Up” (mobile-order-only) stores through 2026, shifting away from that format toward more traditional cafés with seating.
  • Even with these closures, Starbucks still ends the fiscal year with about 18,300 locations across the U.S. and Canada , and the company is simultaneously opening new stores and remodeling existing ones.

What “how many are closing” really means

If you’re seeing the phrase “Starbucks is closing hundreds of stores” , it refers to:

  1. A restructuring wave where about 400–500 cafés have been shut in dense markets to reduce overlap and cut costs.
  1. An additional cleanup of 80–90 pickup‑only units that will disappear or be converted into full cafés by 2026.

So in total, several hundred locations are closing or being converted, but Starbucks is not exiting markets; it is consolidating crowded areas and investing in remodeled, higher‑performing cafés instead.

At‑a‑glance numbers

[1][5][3] [9] [3]
Item Approx. number Context
Cafés closed in restructuring ≈ 400–500 North American store reduction to cut overlap and costs.
Pickup‑only stores closing/converted ≈ 80–90 “Starbucks Pick Up” locations phased out or converted through 2026.
Remaining U.S. & Canada locations ≈ 18,300 Company- operated and licensed stores after closures.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.