Major update on Boots mass closure plans as 43 more stores to close permanently – check if yours is closing

BOOTS has issued a further update on store closure plans after earlier announcing that 300 chemists would be closing for good.

The health and beauty chain announced last year that it would close hundreds of locations.

Boots plans to close a further 43 stores by October

It comes just a week after the chain confirmed the progress of those plans.

But in a fresh update, Boots told The Sun that 257 stores are now closed.

That means the remaining 43 stores are slated to close soon.

And Boots has now confirmed that all remaining stores marked for closure will be closed for good by early October.

While it did not release a full list of store closings before that date, it said most will occur when the lease on the store in question expires.

It also said most of the stores marked for closure were close to other Boots branches.

Boots has closed around 257 stores over the past year to reduce its headcount from around 2,200 to 1,900.

Last month, Walgreens parent company Boots Alliance (WBA) said it planned to close more of its underperforming US stores following a strategic review.

WBA is also cutting its earnings per share estimate for the financial year to August, amid a “challenging US retail environment”.

Total group revenue was 2.6% higher in the quarter to May to $36.4bn (£28.8bn) as its US business saw stronger pharmacy sales offset by a retail slump.

Four ways to save on your weekly shopping at Boots

In the UK, like-for-like retail sales were up 6% year-on-year, with in-store sales higher due to a stronger presence in travel, cosmetics and flagship stores.

He pointed out that airport shops have performed particularly well after the recent renovation.

Meanwhile, digital sales rose 13.8% in the period as it benefited from investment in its Boots app, which provides customers with personalized offers.

Boots also reported stronger sales growth at its pharmacy arm, which posted a 5.8% increase on increased demand for its healthcare services.

Travel and vaccination services saw high demand ahead of the summer holidays, the company said.

Where has Boots closed stores?

BOOTS has never provided a complete list of the 300 closed stores.

Here’s what we know so far about some of the places the branches that have gone for good have gone.

  • Pool, Cornwall
  • Cambrone, Cornwall
  • Redruth, Cornwall
  • Wood Street, Swindon, Wiltshire
  • Clifton, Yorkshire
  • Cliftonville, Kent
  • Pemberton, Wigan
  • Littlehampton, West Sussex
  • Hough Lane, Layland, Lancashire
  • Front Street, Prudhoe
  • Rhos on the Sea, Wales
  • Colwyn Bay, Wales
  • Portland Walk, Barrow
  • Gestridge Road, Teignbridge
  • Caerleon Road, Newport
  • Chepstow Road, Newport
  • Carlyon Road, St Austell, Cornwall
  • St Blazey, Cornwall
  • Lurgan
  • Chard Road, Plymouth
  • Mannamead Road, Plymouth
  • Claremont Street, Plymouth
  • Heathside Road, Woking
  • UEA campus
  • Hamlet Court Road, Westcliff
  • Holywell, Flintshire (Wales)
  • Windhill Road, Wakefield
  • Upper Warrengate, Wakefield
  • Glastonbury
  • Uppingham Road, Leicester
  • Guildford Road, Woking
  • Kings Square, York
  • Warminster
  • Gorleston, Great Yarmouth
  • High Row, Darlington
  • Mudge Way, Plymouth
  • Mount Pleasant, Exeter
  • Kirkby Ashfield

MORE ON CLOSING SHOES

Starting in 2019, Boots embarked on a major restructuring of the company called the Boots Transformation Plan.

At the time of its launch in 2019, the brand earmarked 200 stores for closure.

The closures lasted for eighteen months.

Many of the closings were because they were unprofitable, and two-thirds of them were within walking distance of each other, the chain said.

Why do merchants close shop?

EMPTY shops have become an eyesore on many of Britain’s high streets and are often a symbol of city center decay.

The Sun’s business editor Ashley Armstrong explains why so many retailers are closing their doors.

In many cases, retailers are closing stores because they are no longer the money makers they once were due to the rise of online shopping.

Falling store sales and rising employee costs have made it even more expensive for stores to stay open. In some cases, retailers close shop and reopen a new store at the other end of the high street to reflect how the city has changed.

The problem is that when a big store closes, footfalls fall across the local high street, putting more stores at risk of closure.

Retail parks are becoming increasingly popular with shoppers looking for easy and free parking at a time when local authorities have increased parking charges in cities.

Many retailers, including Next and Marks & Spencer, are closing high street stores and instead taking larger stores to more efficient retail parks.

Boss Stuart Machin recently said that when he moved a tired store in Chesterfield to a large new store in a retail park half a mile away, his sales in the area increased by 103 per cent.

In some cases, stores were closed when the retailer went bust, such as Wilko, Debenhams Topshop, Dorothy Perkins and Paperchase to name a few.

Increasingly, when a chain goes out of business, a rival retailer or private equity firm acquires the intellectual property rights to own the brand and sell it online.

They may continue to open multiple stores if there is customer demand, but there are rarely that many stores or in the same locations.

In 2020, Boots announced that 48 opticians were closing with the loss of 4,000 jobs.

Last July Boots announced further plans to close a further 300 stores.

The move aims to reduce the chain’s store portfolio from around 2,200 to just 1,900.

So far, 253 of these stores have closed, and another 47 stores will close later this year.

The pharmacy chain employs over 52,000 team members and said the closure will not result in any redundancies.

Parent company Boots, WBA’s quarterly financial report said last month it “plans to reduce its presence in up to 650 Boots stores”.

Since the launch of Boots’ transformation plan in 2019, 581 Boots stores have closed permanently.

However, it’s not all doom and gloom on the high street.

Several major retailers plan to increase the number of their stores.

Which retailers are opening new stores?

IT’S NOT all bad news on the high street as several retailers buck the trend and open stores.

  • German discounter Aldi has announced that it will open 35 new stores in the UK this year. The opening is part of Aldi’s long-term aim to operate 1,500 stores in the UK.
  • Asda is opening hundreds of convenience stores as it looks to compete with major players Tesco and Sainsbury’s.
  • The parent company of Bonmarché, Edinburgh Woolen Mill (EWM) and Peacocks, Purepay Retail Limited has said it wants to open 100 new high street stores over the next 18 months.
  • Home Bargains said it wants to “eventually open 800 to 1,000 retail stores”.
  • Primark is also opening new branches and investing in and renovating more than a dozen of its existing stores.
  • Lidl is set to open hundreds of new stores across the UK.
  • Screwfix is ​​set to open 40 new stores across the country as its owner, Kingfisher, looks to expand the DIY brand’s national presence.
  • Superdrug plans to open 25 new branches in the coming months.
  • Tesco has revealed plans to open a further 70 stores across the UK over the next year as part of a major expansion plan.
  • WHSmith has focused on the travel side of its business and plans to open new locations at airports, train stations and hospitals.

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