The Death of Wyoming Retail? Massive Store Closures Confirmed for 2026

Travel Map IconWYOMING - In Wyoming, the "Retail Apocalypse" isn't just an inconvenience; it is a connectivity crisis. When a store closes in Cheyenne or Casper, you can't just drive to the next town—because the next town might be 100 miles away. As 2026 begins, the Cowboy State is facing a retail contraction that is hitting its most vital sectors: groceries, affordable home goods, and rural essentials. From the uncertainty surrounding the state's biggest supermarket chains to the liquidation of discount anchors, Wyoming's retail landscape is shrinking.


The Death of Wyoming Retail?
The Death of Wyoming Retail?

Here is the breakdown of the retail shakeup hitting Wyoming in 2026.

The Grocery Monopoly: The "Divestiture 5"

The biggest story of 2026 is the potential disruption of the State food supply chain.



  • The List: As part of the massive Kroger (Smith's) and Albertsons merger, 5 Wyoming Albertsons locations have been officially listed for divestiture (sale) to C&S Wholesale Grocers to satisfy antitrust regulators.
  • The Locations: The affected stores are in Casper (CY Ave), Cheyenne (Pershing Blvd), Gillette, Jackson, and Rock Springs.
  • The Fear: C&S is primarily a wholesaler, not a retailer. Locals fear that without the backing of a major national chain, these stores could face inventory shortages, price hikes, or eventual closure, leaving massive gaps in the grocery landscape of these key cities.

The Big Box Bankruptcy: Big Lots Leaves Cheyenne

The collapse of the discount home goods market has landed in the capital city.

  • The Closure: Big Lots has confirmed the closure of its store at 3501 E. Lincolnway in Cheyenne as part of its Chapter 11 restructuring.
  • The Impact: This location was a staple for budget-conscious shoppers of furniture and pantry items. Its exit leaves a large, hard-to-fill gap in a corridor already fighting to retain national tenants, forcing shoppers to rely more on Walmart for discount home goods.

The "Craft" Crisis: JoAnn Fabrics

For a state with a rich tradition of quilting and home crafting, 2026 delivers a painful blow.



  • The Hit: JoAnn Fabrics has placed its stores in Cheyenne (Frontier Mall) and Rock Springs on the closure list following its own bankruptcy struggles.
  • The Reality: This is more than just a store closing; it's a lifestyle hit. For residents in Rock Springs, the closure means the nearest dedicated fabric store is now a significant drive away. The loss effectively dismantles the local "maker" infrastructure in these communities.

The Mall Watch: Frontier Mall's Struggle

Cheyenne's Frontier Mall enters 2026 in a fragile state.

  • The Trend: With the loss of JoAnn Fabrics and the earlier exit of Justice, the mall is struggling to keep its inline space filled.
  • The Future: While JCPenney and Planet Fitness remain, the "middle-class" shopping experience is evaporating. The mall is increasingly pivoting toward non-traditional tenants, but the vacancies are becoming harder to ignore amid dwindling foot traffic.

The Rural Lifeline: Family Dollar

In Wyoming's vast rural stretches, the Family Dollar is often the general store.

  • The Threat: As parent company Dollar Tree executes its plan to close 1,000 stores nationwide, Wyoming's rural outposts are at high risk.
  • The Consequence: In towns where the Family Dollar is the only place to buy milk and bread without driving an hour, these closures threaten to turn isolated communities into genuine food deserts.

The consolidation of the grocery market and the retreat of national chains like Big Lots and JoAnn Fabrics are forcing residents to drive farther and pay more for basic goods. The convenience of the "town store" is fading, replaced by the necessity of the "city run"—or the delivery truck.


Frontier Mall in 2025 - What's changed? (Cheyenne, WY) | Optopolis