For decades, America’s biggest retailers weren’t just where you went to buy clothes or appliances. They were the anchors for downtowns, filled suburban malls and shaped how generations shopped.
Now many of them are hanging on by a thread. Some, like Sears and Kmart, are on the verge of extinction. Saks Global has declared bankruptcy.
Others, like Kohl’s, are shrinking, restructuring or struggling to stay afloat.
On a recent Freakonomics podcast, retail analyst Mark Cohen described Macy’s stores as looking “terrible” (1). He doesn’t think they’ll be around another 10 years.
So what does this big shift in retail mean for the average American consumer?
Macy’s announced that another 14 stores are slated to close this year as it tries to cut costs and concentrate on the most profitable stores. This follows the path of the “Bold New Chapter” plan that CEO Tony Spring introduced in 2024 (2).
In 2025, that list of closures included its historic downtown Philadelphia location, which has operated since 1911 (3). It’s a stark reminder that even century-old flagships are no longer safe.
Saks Global, the parent company of Saks Fifth Avenue and Neiman Marcus, is struggling with debt and weak performance and bankruptcy is a real possibility. Maintaining large, expensive physical stores becomes harder to justify (4).
Kohl’s has spent years searching for a turnaround, going through four CEOs in four years (5). Sales have declined, they’ve been impacted by tariffs and cost-of-living and 27 closures were announced in 2025 (6).
Kohl’s core customers are middle-income households who are feeling the pain from inflation, high interest rates and rising costs, so the loss of its stores hit average Americans (7).
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Sears and Kmart aren’t just struggling, they’re disappearing. Only five Sears stores and a single Kmart are left in the U.S., a shocking collapse for stores that were once household names (8).


