Economic pressures, a surge in organized retail theft, and the rise of digital-first "Next Gen" stores are driving these changes. Here are the three major supermarket chains scaling back their Washington presence in March 2026.
1. Kroger (Fred Meyer & QFC): The Puget Sound Purge
Kroger, the parent company of both Fred Meyer and QFC, is currently in the middle of a massive national "right-sizing" initiative. After pausing store evaluations during its failed merger process with Albertsons, the company is now moving aggressively to shutter underperforming units.
- The Washington Impact: Washington is bearing a heavy load of these closures. Following the recent shuttering of Fred Meyer locations in South Tacoma, Everett, and Kent, the focus this March has shifted to the "Eastside" and North Seattle.
- The Redmond & Lake City Exits: High-profile Fred Meyer locations in Redmond (NE 76th St) and Seattle’s Lake City neighborhood are finalizing their closures this month. These stores were identified as "low performers" relative to their high operational and real estate costs.
- QFC Consolidation: Simultaneously, the company is closing aging QFC storefronts—such as the recently exited Mill Creek location—in favor of newer, high-tech hubs that can handle the massive volume of "ClickList" digital orders.
2. Walmart: The Federal Way & "Neighborhood Market" Shift
Walmart is continuing its aggressive pivot away from smaller, grocery-only footprints in favor of massive "Store of the Future" Supercenters. The company is prioritizing locations that can serve as regional "mini-warehouses" for its InHome delivery service.
- The Washington Impact: Following the "unexpected" closure of the Walmart and pharmacy on South 314th Street in Federal Way, the company is evaluating several other Neighborhood Market locations in the South Sound area this spring.
- The Reason: Walmart leadership cited a "challenging regulatory environment" and shifting consumer demand as the primary drivers. If a store lacks the space for a massive automated pickup expansion, it is being flagged for closure as leases expire at the end of the first quarter.
3. Safeway & Haggen: The "Mountain West" Realignment
Safeway (owned by Albertsons) is also navigating a major portfolio cleanup this spring. As the company reintegrates into a standalone entity following the merger collapse, it is "optimizing" its footprint to better compete with low-cost discounters and premium grocers like PCC.
- The Washington Impact: While the massive "divestiture list" from the merger talks is no longer a legal requirement, the "underperformance" metrics remain. Safeway and its sister brand, Haggen, are quietly closing "aged" locations in overlapping markets—particularly in Bellingham and parts of King County—where operational costs have outpaced local sales.
- The Strategy: The focus is now on high-performing suburban "Market Street" concepts. Older storefronts that have not seen a renovation in over a decade are the primary targets for closure this March.
The "Food Desert" Response (Senate Bill 6147)
The wave of closures has not gone unnoticed by Washington lawmakers. In response to the abrupt exit of the South Tacoma Fred Meyer—which left an entire district without an accessible pharmacy or grocery source—the state is considering Senate Bill 6147.
- The Goal: This bill would require grocery stores in designated "food deserts" to provide six months' notice before closing.
- The Impact: While retail associations argue this is a "burdensome" regulation, community leaders in Tacoma and Seattle are pushing for the law to ensure vulnerable residents have time to find alternatives before their "neighborhood lifeline" disappears.
What This Means for Washingtonians
If your local Fred Meyer, QFC, or Safeway is on the list, March 2026 is the time to adjust your routine:
- Pharmacy Transfers: If your store is closing, check with your pharmacist early. Many QFC and Fred Meyer prescriptions are being automatically transferred to nearby "Next Gen" flagships.
- Digital Incentives: Almost every closing location is offering deep "app-only" discounts to encourage customers to transition to the brand’s digital delivery or pickup services at nearby stores.
- The Rise of Discounters: As the big chains pull back, discount heavyweights like Grocery Outlet and Aldi are seeing a surge in traffic from Washingtonians looking for better value in an inflationary market.