Starbucks slashing 900 jobs, closing hundreds of stores, including iconic roastery, in $1B cost-cutting plan
Starbucks said Thursday it would close underperforming stores in North America, including its iconic Seattle roastery, as CEO Brian Niccol presses ahead with his $1 billion restructuring effort to revive the company’s flagging sales.
The coffee chain’s overall US and Canada store count is expected to drop by 1%, or several hundred stores, by the end of the 2025 fiscal year. Niccol is trying to restore the chain’s “coffeehouse” feel to bring customers back to its outlets after six consecutive quarters of declining US sales.
Among the closed stores was Starbucks’ flagship unionized location in Seattle, a large cafe with an in-house roastery, the company confirmed.
Talks between Starbucks and the Workers United union, which represents over 12,000 baristas, began last April, but have hit a wall since.
In December, some members of the union walked off their jobs in multiple US cities in a strike that spanned several days during the peak holiday season.
