5 Major Retail Chains Announce Closings in Oregon: April 2026

Travel Map IconOREGON STATE - The retail landscape in the Beaver State is facing a significant "portfolio reset" this spring. While Oregon has long been a haven for outdoor-centric brands and regional powerhouses, the economic pressures of 2026—driven by rising logistics costs and a massive shift toward "digital-first" fulfillment—are forcing national giants to trim their footprints. From the Portland metro area to the high desert of Bend, several household names are finishing liquidation sales or exiting the state entirely this April.


5 Major Retail Chains Announce Closings in Oregon: April 2026
5 Major Retail Chains Announce Closings in Oregon: April 2026

Here are the 5 major retail chains scaling back or closing their doors in Oregon this month.


1. Eddie Bauer: The Total Brick-and-Mortar Exit

In one of the most surprising retail stories of 2026, the legendary outdoor apparel giant Eddie Bauer is officially concluding its physical retail presence. After failing to find a buyer during bankruptcy proceedings earlier this spring, the company is shuttering all of its approximately 175 physical stores.



  • The Oregon Impact: This hits hard in a state where the brand was a staple. Final liquidation sales are reaching their conclusion at locations in Bend (Bend Factory Outlets), Tigard (Washington Square), and various outlet centers. * The Deadline: Gift cards were deactivated in mid-March, and the "everything must go" sales are set to wrap up by April 30. For Oregon hikers, the "try-it-on" experience for this legacy brand is coming to a permanent end as the company transitions to a purely e-commerce and wholesale model.

2. Big Lots: The Final Liquidation

After years of financial turbulence and a late-2024 bankruptcy filing, the final remnants of Big Lots are disappearing from the Oregon map this April. While a few locations attempted to pivot in 2025, the brand's statewide presence is now being fully phased out.



  • Targeted Locations: Final clearance events are concluding in markets like Medford, Roseburg, and Klamath Falls. * The Fallout: For many Oregonians, this was a go-to destination for affordable furniture and seasonal goods. By the end of this month, the familiar orange-and-black signs will be cleared from the landscape as the company completes its total exit from the West Coast.

3. Walgreens: The Pharmacy Optimization

Walgreens continues its multi-year "optimization program," with another wave of Oregon closures reaching their final days this April. The chain is in the middle of a plan to shutter approximately 1,200 stores nationwide to combat declining reimbursement rates and persistent labor shortages.

  • The Local Impact: Oregon residents are seeing the impact in older urban centers and rural hubs where leases are expiring without renewal.
  • The Strategy: The company is shifting resources toward high-volume digital fulfillment and larger "primary care" healthcare hubs located in more densely populated regions, leaving some smaller communities to deal with "pharmacy deserts."

4. Bi-Mart (Cascade Farm and Outdoor): The Specialty Retreat

In a move that hits home for many Northwest residents, Bi-Mart recently announced plans to close all five of its Cascade Farm and Outdoor locations this spring.

  • The Oregon Impact: These locations served as specialized hubs for ranching, farming, and outdoor gear. The closures mark a significant shift for the employee-owned company as it refocuses on its core Bi-Mart membership stores.
  • The Shift: Management cited the high cost of maintaining specialized inventory in a competitive 2026 market, opting to consolidate their offerings back into the main Bi-Mart brand.

5. Macy’s: The "Bold New Chapter" Retreat

Macy’s is moving forward with its plan to shutter 150 underperforming stores by the end of 2026. This April marks a major milestone as the clearance sales for the first wave of 2026 closures reach their conclusion in regional malls.



  • Targeted Locations: While the brand is keeping its high-performing "Reimagine" stores in major hubs like Portland, underproductive units in secondary Oregon markets—including those in the Salem and Hillsboro regions—are reaching their final days.
  • The Shift: The company is pivoting toward smaller, boutique-style formats and its luxury segments, Bloomingdale’s and Bluemercury, which have shown stronger growth in the current economy.

Why Is This Happening in Oregon?

Oregon presents a unique challenge for major retailers in 2026. Several factors are accelerating these exits:

  1. Logistical Strain: The high cost of shipping goods to Oregon’s dispersed urban centers has made "fringe" locations significantly more expensive to operate as fuel and shipping rates remain volatile.
  2. The Rise of "Micro-Fulfillment": Retailers are realizing that massive, centralized storefronts are less efficient than smaller, automated hubs. Many brands are choosing to service Oregon through high-speed delivery from neighboring states rather than maintaining high-rent real estate.
  3. The Outdoor Market Saturation: With several major outdoor brands calling the Pacific Northwest home, the competition for the "adventure-seeker" dollar has become fierce. Legacy brands like Eddie Bauer have struggled to compete with high-tech, digital-native competitors.

What’s Replacing Them?

It isn't all "Going Out of Business" signs. As legacy brands retreat, Oregon’s retail scene is being reshaped by:

  • Med-Tail (Medical Retail): Vacated department stores and pharmacy spots are being quickly eyed by urgent care centers and wellness clinics that thrive on the same foot traffic patterns as retail.
  • Local Resilience: Many mall spaces are being reimagined as local artisan markets or multi-use community hubs, moving away from pure retail to stay relevant in 2026.

Note: Many of these closures are location-specific. It is always best to check the official store app or local listings before heading out to use any remaining gift cards or rewards points.