4 Major Retail Chains Closing Doors in Montana: April 2026

Travel Map IconMONTANA STATE - The "Retail Correction" of 2026 has reached a fever pitch in Big Sky Country. While Montana has seen significant population growth in recent years, the brick-and-mortar landscape is struggling to keep pace with the state's high rate of e-commerce adoption and the national wave of retail liquidations. This April, several iconic brands are finishing their final sales, leaving major vacancies in Montana’s primary shopping hubs.


4 Major Retail Chains Closing Doors in Montana: April 2026
4 Major Retail Chains Closing Doors in Montana: April 2026

From the Rimrock Mall in Billings to the regional centers of Missoula and Great Falls, here are the major retail chains closing their doors in Montana this month.


1. Eddie Bauer: The End of an Era in Billings

In what is perhaps the most symbolic blow to Montana’s outdoor-centric identity, Eddie Bauer is concluding its total physical retail exit this month. After failing to find a buyer during bankruptcy proceedings earlier this year, the 100-year-old brand is shuttering all North American storefronts to move to a digital-only model.



  • The Montana Impact: While locations in Missoula, Great Falls, and Bozeman have already gone dark, the Rimrock Mall (Billings) location is the final store standing.
  • The Deadline: Employees have confirmed that the Billings store is expected to permanently close by the end of April 2026. This marks the total disappearance of the "physical" Eddie Bauer experience from a state that practically lives the brand's lifestyle.

2. Francesca’s: The Total Boutique Liquidation

Following a high-profile Chapter 11 filing in February 2026, the popular women's specialty boutique Francesca’s is liquidating its entire U.S. fleet. The company cited an "unexpected loss of funding" and nearly $100 million in liabilities as the drivers for the total shutdown.

  • Targeted Locations: Final "everything must go" sales are reaching their peak at Rimrock Mall (Billings), Southgate Mall (Missoula), and Gallatin Valley Mall (Bozeman).
  • The Fallout: By the end of April, these once-vibrant boutiques will be permanently vacant, reflecting a broader trend of mall-heavy retailers struggling against aggressive online fast-fashion competitors.

3. Walgreens: Pharmacy "Optimization" Continues

Walgreens is deep into its multi-year "footprint optimization" program, which involves closing 1,200 underperforming locations nationwide by 2027.



  • The Local Hit: While the company has not released a comprehensive list of every closing branch, several older pharmacies in Great Falls and Billings have been identified for closure this spring.
  • The Strategy: The company is shifting its resources toward larger "healthcare hubs" and high-volume digital fulfillment, which has raised concerns about "pharmacy deserts" in some of Montana's more rural or older urban neighborhoods.

4. Carter’s: 2026 Footprint Reduction

The children’s apparel giant Carter’s is moving forward with its plan to shut down approximately 100 locations in 2026. The company’s leadership pointed to higher tariffs and declining birth rates as long-term pressures on the brick-and-mortar business.

  • The Status: While Carter's maintains a presence in many Montana power centers, shoppers in regional hubs should keep an eye out for final clearance sales as the company "right-sizes" its portfolio to focus on top-performing suburban sites.


Why Is This Happening in Montana?

Montana presents a unique microcosm of the national retail crisis in 2026:

  1. High E-Commerce Adoption: Montanans have become some of the most proficient online shoppers in the West, often choosing the convenience of home delivery over long drives to regional malls.
  2. The "Mall-to-Mixed-Use" Transition: In growing cities like Bozeman and Missoula, the land occupied by traditional malls is becoming more valuable as high-density residential units or medical offices.
  3. Logistical Volatility: Rising shipping and labor costs have made it difficult for national chains to justify far-flung outposts in the Mountain West, leading to a consolidation in "hub" markets.