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Major 4 Furniture and Home Retailers Closing in Oregon This Spring 2026

Austyn Kunde
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Final SaleOREGON — The Oregon retail landscape is experiencing a new wave of closures this spring as national bankruptcies and strategic shifts lead several major furniture-related chains to shutter their doors. While some legacy brands exited the market last year, these closures represent the final stages of large-scale liquidations and corporate restructurings, which are expected to conclude in 2026.


4 Furniture and Home Retailers Closing in Oregon
4 Furniture and Home Retailers Closing in Oregon

Cascade Farm and Outdoor (Full Chain Closure)

In a move that impacts rural and suburban communities across the state, Bi-Mart has confirmed it will close all five of its Cascade Farm and Outdoor locations this spring. The chain, which offers a mix of home goods, furniture, and outdoor equipment, is being phased out as the parent company refocuses on its core pharmacy and membership-discount model.


Value City Furniture / American Signature

Following a bankruptcy filing in late 2025, parent company American Signature Inc. entered a total liquidation phase in January 2026 after failing to find a buyer for its assets. All remaining storefronts nationwide are scheduled to close by the end of this spring.




Orvis (Strategic Retail Retrenchment)

The Vermont-founded lifestyle giant Orvis is in the midst of a major restructuring that includes closing more than 30 stores and outlets nationwide through 2026.


Macy’s Furniture Gallery (Final Wave of Closures)

As part of Macy’s "Bold New Chapter" turnaround plan, the department store giant is completing the closure of 150 underperforming stores by the end of 2026. This spring marks a critical phase for the chain’s standalone Furniture and Mattress Galleries.




Consumer Survival Guide for 2026 Closures

With multiple liquidations happening simultaneously, Oregon shoppers are advised to follow these rules of thumb:

Final SaleAs these physical showrooms close their doors this spring, Oregonians will see a smaller footprint for "sit-and-test" furniture, as the market continues its steady shift toward high-efficiency digital showrooms.