There’s a certain blankness when you walk past a closed Starbucks in downtown Toronto; the windows are dark, the green signage is gone, and there’s a paper notice taped to the door. It doesn’t seem like a business choice. Something seems to have been left behind. In just four years, Toronto has lost over forty Starbucks locations. Ten years ago, when the chain appeared to be opening stores more quickly than the city could construct the intersections to host them, this number probably would have seemed unthinkable. Contrary to what most corporate announcements tend to imply, that era is over and the larger picture across North America is more difficult to ignore.
The September 2025 figures are straightforward. Following 1,100 layoffs earlier in the year, Starbucks announced that it was eliminating about 900 corporate positions, primarily in North America. Under what the company internally dubbed “Project Bloom,” a portfolio review that sounds more idealistic than the reality it depicts, hundreds of stores were set aside for closure. By the end of fiscal 2025, the chain’s total number of stores in the United States and Canada is predicted to decrease by about 1%, or a few hundred locations. These are not small seasonal changes. This business is in the midst of a truly challenging situation, attempting to determine both its current state and its potential.
Starbucks restructuring 2025 — Key facts
| Company | Starbucks Corporation (NASDAQ: SBUX) |
| Headquarters | Seattle, Washington, USA |
| CEO (as of 2025) | Brian Niccol — joined 2024, previously led Chipotle Mexican Grill for six years |
| Stores closing (North America) | 400–500 confirmed closures by end of September 2025; overall U.S. and Canada count expected to drop ~1% |
| Corporate job cuts (2025) | ~900 in September 2025, following 1,100 cut in February 2025 — primarily North America support roles |
| Total restructuring cost | ~$1 billion (“Project Bloom” restructuring plan) |
| Sales trend | Six consecutive quarters of declining same-store sales in the U.S. as of July 2025 |
| Share price movement (2025) | Down more than 8% year-to-date as of September 2025 |
| Toronto impact | 13+ locations closing in 2025; over 40 Toronto closures total since 2021 |
| UK/Europe plans | Some closures in UK, Switzerland and Austria; 80 new UK stores and 150 EMEA stores still planned for 2025 fiscal year |
| Turnaround strategy | “Back to Starbucks” — store remodelling, simplified menus, revamped seating, returning condiment bars, reducing wait times |
What the Starbucks situation says about the boundaries of scale is what makes it worth closely examining. For many years, the brand’s strategy appeared to be based on a straightforward idea: more stores, more events, more revenue. There are Starbucks inside the bookstore, one in the hospital lobby, one in the transit station, and one close to the office. ubiquity as a business strategy. Up until it didn’t, it worked. In the U.S., Starbucks’ biggest market, six straight quarters of falling same-store sales are not an anomaly. That is a pattern, and patterns are more likely to show something structural than seasonal. These figures give the impression that the chain overcorrected in favor of convenience at the expense of something more difficult to quantify.
In 2024, Brian Niccol took over as CEO with a great deal of goodwill. Over the course of six years, he had almost doubled sales at Chipotle, transforming a chain that was facing a food safety crisis into one of the better retail turnaround stories of the decade. It was anticipated that he could accomplish a similar feat at Starbucks. His “Back to Starbucks” strategy relies on physical upgrades, streamlined menus, redesigned seating, and the reintroduction of condiment bars that were taken away during the pandemic. This might work. However, the majority of Chipotle’s issues were operational. It appears that part of Starbucks’ issues are cultural, which is more difficult to address with a renovation budget and a new menu design.

In a September research note, analysts at TD Cowen pointedly brought up the issue of competition, pointing out that drive-through coffee chains are reducing Starbucks’ customer base in ways that a redesigned armchair and a shorter wait time might not adequately address. The category of neighborhood coffee shops has also developed significantly. Consumers who previously relied on Starbucks due to habit now have more reliable options that are accessible on foot from the majority of the locations that Starbucks is closing. It’s still unclear if Niccol’s plan sufficiently takes that change into account or if it presumes a loyalty that might have subtly declined.
Baristas at more than 600 company-owned U.S. stores are represented by Workers United, which described the reorganization as an indication that things are “only going backwards” under the current leadership. A turnaround narrative is rarely aided by that kind of public controversy, and Starbucks’ contract negotiations are still ongoing. The idea that its employees, referred to as partners, were treated differently helped the brand establish its reputation. The question that lies beneath all the others is whether that story can withstand this level of pressure.
