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Walgreens customers walking into neighborhood pharmacies may soon notice empty storefronts and smaller staff, and that growing absence ties back to decisions unfolding far beyond the checkout counter. As financial pressure mounts across the chain, layoffs and store shutdown plans have begun surfacing, pointing to a company reshaping how its retail network operates.
Houston Distribution Center Closure

Job cuts in Houston trace back to a distribution hub that once supplied Walgreens stores across the region, and as that facility prepares to close, the company plans to eliminate 159 roles starting June 1, according to a Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification filing submitted to Texas officials.
Illinois Workforce Reductions

Meanwhile, workforce cuts extend into Illinois, where Walgreens plans to eliminate 469 positions in its home state, and that reduction adds to the company’s broader restructuring efforts as leadership trims operations and adjusts staffing levels across parts of its retail and distribution network.
Sycamore Partners Acquisition Impact

Layoffs and restructuring followed Walgreens’ August 2025 acquisition by private equity firm Sycamore Partners, and that ownership change arrived after years of financial strain, which then placed the company under a private structure where leadership began reviewing operations, staffing levels, and long-term retail strategy.
Private Equity Cost-Cutting Concerns

Concerns about deeper reductions surfaced soon after the takeover, and that reaction grew louder as worker advocates pointed to patterns often linked with private equity ownership, where early cost controls like holiday pay reductions sometimes precede layoffs and wider operational restructuring across large retail companies.
Walgreens Plan To Close 1,200 Stores

Layoffs arrive alongside a larger reduction in retail locations, and that effort involves a plan to close 1,200 Walgreens stores across a three year period, including 500 locations scheduled to shut during fiscal year 2025 as leadership reviews unprofitable sites and changing customer habits.
Unprofitable Locations Across The Chain

Company executives have acknowledged that about 25 percent of Walgreens locations no longer generate profit, and that figure has pushed leadership to review store performance across the network as they determine which locations will remain open within a smaller national footprint.
Declining Store And Workforce Numbers

Recent company figures show Walgreens operating about 8,000 locations with roughly 211,000 employees as of January 2026, and that count reflects a noticeable drop from the period before the Sycamore Partners takeover, when the chain reported about 8,500 stores and 220,000 workers nationwide.
Walgreens Response To Layoffs And Restructuring

Company leadership has framed the layoffs as part of a broader effort to simplify internal operations, and through that restructuring, executives say they aim to speed decision-making while improving service inside stores that millions of customers rely on for prescriptions and everyday health needs.
Ongoing Changes Across Walgreens Operations

Store closures and layoffs now sit inside a broader review of Walgreens’ operations, so leadership continues examining locations, staffing levels, and distribution networks, which means more decisions about stores and workforce structure will likely follow as the company keeps adjusting its national retail footprint.
