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Fast Company

Albertsons is closing stores: See a list of doomed locations for 2026 as the grocery giant evaluates its footprint

Shoppers in local communities across several states may discover that they have fewer supermarkets to choose from this year. Grocery giant Albertsons Companies has continued to close stores in recent months as it reevaluates its store footprint in the wake of a failed merger with The Kroger Company.  So far in 2026, at least a dozen locations have closed or have been marked for closure, according to an analysis of local media reports, online review platforms, and Albertsons’ own store locator tools.  The closures have impacted stores across Albertsons’ portfolio of grocery and supermarket chains, including Acme, Balducci’s, Randalls, Safeway, and Vons, in addition to banner Albertsons stores. More than half of the closures were in California and Texas, with locations also shuttered in New Jersey, Connecticut, Nevada, and Washington, D.C. As reported in April, Albertsons ended its 2025 fiscal year with 2,244 physical stores, a net decline of 26 when compared to the previous year. Grocery store closures can have an especially corrosive impact on local communities. Researchers have long documented the rise of food deserts in low-income areas, which they attribute in part to industry consolidation. Despite this latest round of closures, Albertsons tells Fast Company that it expects to end its 2026 fiscal year with a net positive store count. Why is Albertsons closing stores?  Albertsons spent two years planning to be acquired by its competitor Kroger in a $25 billion deal that would have created a 5,000-store grocery behemoth. But the companies abandoned the proposed merger in December 2024 after it was blocked by courts. During that two-year process, Albertsons had slowed down the potential optimization of its physical store footprint, a spokesperson told Fast Company when reached for comment, but that process has since resumed. “[Our network positioning] includes opening new stores in areas with strong demand and long-term opportunity, while also making the difficult decision to close some locations,” Albertsons said in an emailed statement. “In these cases, we work to place as many associates as possible in other stores.” The company did not say how many locations it expects to close this year, or how many jobs might be lost. It says it anticipates a net increase in stores for its current fiscal year, which ends in February 2027. Kroger has also been closing locations across its store portfolio since the merger fell apart, as Fast Company reported in March. Which Albertsons stores have closed in 2026?  According to our analysis, 11 of the 12 locations listed below have closed in recent months, with the additional location expected to close in August. The list, which includes stores across several Albertsons-owned chains, may not be a full count. When reached by Fast Company, Albertsons did not comment on specific locations or elaborate on whether additional closures are expected. Acme  455 NJ-23, Sussex, NJ 07461 481 River Rd, Edgewater, NJ 07020 (closing in August) Albertsons  1260 E Ontario Ave, Corona, CA 92881 6700 West Fwy, Fort Worth, TX 76116 1155 N Main St, Euless, TX 76039 1300 E Flamingo Rd, Las Vegas, NV 89119 Balducci’s 1385 Post Rd E, Westport, CT 06880 Randalls   5161 San Felipe St, Houston, TX 77056 Safeway  1601 Maryland Ave NE, Washington, DC 20002 231 W Jackson St, Hayward, CA 94544 Vons 2345 E Valley Pkwy, Escondido, CA 92027 522 Orange St, Redlands, CA 92374 Is Albertsons in trouble? Albertsons has definitely faced its share of recent troubles. In addition to its failed merger, the grocery giant reported a net loss of $481 million during the fourth quarter of last year. This loss was largely due to a $774 million lawsuit settlement, related to allegations that Albertsons pharmacies did not do enough to prevent opioid abuse. In reaching the settlement, Albertsons admitted no wrongdoing. Albertsons saw its all-important “identical sales” metric grow by a modest 2% last year, while digital sales were a bright spot—up 21%. More broadly, supermarket chains have faced rising competition from the likes of big-box retailers like Walmart and Costco, and e-commerce giant Amazon. This survival-of-the-fittest grocery environment is one of the reasons why Albertsons and Kroger wanted so badly to merge in the first place. Shares of Albertsons Companies Inc. (NYSE: ACI) have tumbled roughly 27% over the past 12 months. The stock was trading at $16.21 when the markets closed on Friday and has far underperformed the S&P 500 this year. This story is developing and may be updated with additional locations and details.

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AI 分析

标题洞察

这个标题自带强传播点:大公司关店、2026年、具体门店名单,天然满足“信息更新 + 地方相关性 + 危机感”三种点击动机。它适合改写成“某巨头正在关店,哪些城市受影响”“一份门店关闭名单背后,零售业发生了什么”这类更面向中文读者的标题。若借势创作,可以把“谁在撤退、谁在扩张、谁在承接市场空白”作为标题核心钩子。

核心观点

文章的核心不是单纯的关店名单,而是:Albertsons在并购失败后重新评估门店网络,开始做“优化式收缩”,同时又强调未来财年可能实现净增店数。这里的冲突点很强——表面是在关店,叙事上却是在“为长期增长做结构调整”,这给内容创作者提供了很好的讨论空间。文中还提示了更大的行业背景:超市业正面临大卖场、电商和集中化竞争,关店对社区尤其是低收入地区可能造成食物可得性下降,但这部分影响的广度在原文里没有给出具体量化数据。

创作启发

可以做成“连锁超市为什么一边关店一边说自己在增长”的解读短文,重点解释企业如何用关店、开新店、调结构来讲增长故事。也可以做成地方向内容:按州、按城市拆解哪些地区受影响,适合社媒信息图或本地化新闻视频。若做深度选题,还可以延展到“并购失败后,零售巨头如何重做门店版图”“食品荒漠与连锁撤店的关系”“为什么超市正在比拼存活能力”这几个方向;但涉及就业损失、社区影响范围等细节,原文并未提供完整数据,适合用“待进一步核实”方式处理。