Best of Travel
Print

5 Major Retail Chains Closing Doors in North Dakota: April 2026

Daniel Conner
Hits: 80

Travel Map IconSOUTH DAKOTA - The "Retail Correction" of 2026 is hitting the Peace Garden State this spring, as several long-standing mall anchors and specialty retailers prepare to go dark. While North Dakota’s economy has remained steady, the national wave of liquidations—driven by a second round of post-pandemic bankruptcies and a shift toward digital-first footprints—is leaving significant vacancies in the state's primary shopping hubs.


5 Major Retail Chains Closing Doors in North Dakota: April 2026
5 Major Retail Chains Closing Doors in North Dakota: April 2026

From the busy corridors of West Acres in Fargo to the regional centers in Bismarck and Minot, here are the major retail chains closing their doors in North Dakota this month.


1. Eddie Bauer: The Total Brand Exit

In a major blow to North Dakota's outdoor-centric retail scene, Eddie Bauer is concluding its total physical retail wind-down this month. After the brand's operator failed to find a buyer during bankruptcy proceedings earlier this spring, all 175 North American storefronts are scheduled to be dark by April 30, 2026.



2. Francesca’s: The Boutique Blackout

The popular women's specialty boutique Francesca’s is finishing its total nationwide liquidation this month. After filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in early 2026 and reporting an "unexpected loss of funding," the company is permanently closing all 457 of its locations.

3. Joann Fabric: The Final Wind-Down

Following its second bankruptcy filing in less than a year, Joann Fabric is finishing its total nationwide wind-down this spring. The company confirmed that more than 100 of its remaining locations will close by the end of April, with the rest following in May.



4. Macy’s: Columbia Mall Footprint Reduction

As part of its ongoing "Bold New Chapter" strategy to close 150 underperforming stores by the end of 2026, Macy’s is finalizing its departure from the Columbia Mall in Grand Forks this month.

5. T-Mobile: Kirkwood Mall Anchor District Exit

While not a total brand liquidation, the closure of the T-Mobile at Kirkwood Mall in Bismarck this spring highlights a shift in how major service providers view mall footprints.


Why Is This Happening in North Dakota?

The April 2026 retail shift in North Dakota is driven by three distinct factors:

  1. High E-Commerce Adoption: North Dakotans, particularly in the Fargo-Moorhead area, have become some of the most proficient online shoppers in the Midwest, making it difficult for legacy mall brands to justify high-rent physical footprints.
  2. The "Freestanding" Shift: Service providers (like T-Mobile) and discount retailers are increasingly moving away from enclosed malls in favor of "outparcels" near big-box grocery stores (like Walmart), which offer higher daily foot traffic.
  3. Real Estate Redevelopment: In growing cities like Fargo and Bismarck, the land beneath older retail centers is becoming more valuable as high-density residential housing or medical clinics than as traditional retail space.