
7-Eleven Closing 645 North American Stores in 2026 as It Pivots Toward Food and Larger Formats
Seven & i Holdings is trading store count for margin quality, delaying a planned IPO while repositioning the convenience chain around fresh food and a reduced dependence on fuel and tobacco 7-Eleven’s North American operation is undergoing its most deliberate structural transformation in years. The Tokyo-based parent company, Seven & i Holdings, has authorized the closure of 645 stores across North America for fiscal year 2026, which runs from March 2026 through February 2027. With only 205 new locations planned during the same period, the chain faces a net reduction of 440 stores — its fifth consecutive year of footprint contraction in the region. The closures are not a signal of brand collapse. They represent a calculated decision to shed underperforming legacy locations in favor of a leaner, higher-margin portfolio built around fresh food, private-label products, and a store format designed to compete in a convenience retail landscape that looks meaningfully different than it did a decade ago. The Economic Conditions Driving the Decision The restructuring reflects genuine pressure on 7-Eleven’s core customer base. The chain’s low-to-middle-income demographic has grown increasingly cautious in its spending, choosing essential purchases over discretionary convenience items as persistent inflation continues to weigh on household













































