From the upscale corridors of ABQ Uptown to the regional hubs of Farmington and Santa Fe, here are the major retail chains closing their doors in New Mexico this month.
1. American Home Furniture & Mattress: Local Consolidation
In a move that has shocked local shoppers, the 90-year-old, family-owned American Home Furniture and Mattress is closing its regional outposts this month. After filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in early March, the company is consolidating its operations to survive a "perfect storm" of economic pressures.
- The Closures: Floor model liquidation sales are wrapping up at the Santa Fe (Cerrillos Rd.) and Farmington (E. Main St.) locations.
- The Reason: Leadership cited prolonged freeway construction near their flagship sites, combined with inflationary costs and high tariffs, as the primary drivers for the reorganization.
- What Remains: The two Albuquerque locations (on Comanche and Carlisle) will remain open as the company’s primary hubs moving forward.
2. Eddie Bauer: The Total Brand Exit
The legendary outdoor brand Eddie Bauer is concluding its total physical retail wind-down this month. After the brand's retail operator failed to find a buyer during bankruptcy proceedings, all North American storefronts are scheduled to go dark by April 30.
- The New Mexico Impact: Final sales are finishing at ABQ Uptown and the Santa Fe Premium Outlets.
- The Shift: While the brand itself will continue to exist through e-commerce and wholesale partners, its century-long run as a physical mall anchor is officially ending in the Land of Enchantment.
3. Francesca’s: The Boutique Blackout
The women’s specialty boutique Francesca’s is finishing its final liquidation this month after filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in February. The brand is permanently shuttering all 457 of its locations nationwide.
- Targeted Locations: Clearance sales are hitting their final days at Coronado Center, ABQ Uptown, and Santa Fe Place Mall.
- The Fallout: This closure marks the end of the "boutique-style" mall model for the brand, which struggled to maintain its high-rent footprint against digital-only competitors.
4. Big Lots: The Final Albuquerque Wind-Down
After a long and public struggle with debt, the final remnants of Big Lots are disappearing from the New Mexico map this April. The discount giant is finishing its total liquidation as part of a post-bankruptcy exit.
- The Impacted Sites: Final doors are closing at the Coors Blvd NW and Montgomery Blvd NE locations in Albuquerque.
- The Strategy: The company is pivoting toward a leaner, digital-first model, leaving behind several large "big box" vacancies that local developers are already eyeing for conversion into medical clinics or climate-controlled storage.
Why the Correction in New Mexico?
Three specific factors are driving the April 2026 retail cliff in New Mexico:
- Construction & Infrastructure: For local players like American Home, years of disruptive roadwork on New Mexico's major arteries have finally reached a breaking point, making it difficult for customers to access physical showrooms.
- The "Outlets" Evolution: The Santa Fe Premium Outlets are seeing a transition as legacy apparel brands (like Eddie Bauer) exit, making room for more experiential tenants and dining-focused concepts.
- Digital Adoption in High Desert: E-commerce adoption in Albuquerque and Las Cruces has accelerated in 2026, leading national chains to prioritize "last-mile" delivery centers over high-rent storefronts in traditional malls like Coronado Center.