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It's worth noting that retailers regularly open and close shops for a number of reasons, not just because they are struggling.
For example, they may have a store nearby that is performing better or it may be that they want to move to a spot that has higher footfall, such as a retail park.
Here are all the shops we know are shutting in April 2025.
A further 10 stores have been shuttered since March 2023, including sites in Manchester and Bicester.
The brand is in fact set to leave the high street forever as it has agreed to sell 500 shops as part of a £76million deal.
Retailinvestor Modella Capital snapped up the portfolio, with the stores eventually set to rebranded as TGJones.
WHSmith will instead be investing in its more than 580 travel stores across airports, hospitals, railway stations and motorway service areas.
Beaverbrooks
Jewellery brand Beaverbrooks is also shutting three shops early this month.
Its Huddersfield branch will close on Saturday, while its stores in Croydon and Sutton Coldfield will shut on Sunday.
The retailer said last month it would be closing down seven branches that are “no longer commercially viable”.
Its stores in East Kilbride, Dundee and Birmingham Fort closed last month.
When the closures were announced, managing director Anna Blackburn said the decision was made following a review of business performance.
She added: “We aim to retain as many colleagues as possible within other Beaverbrooks stores or the wider business, and are working closely with each individual affected to provide them with options for their specific needs, supporting them with theirnextstepswhatever they may be.”
Sports Direct
The huge sports retailer is axing its Newmarket Road store in Cambridge on April 18.
Shoppers can get big bargains in the closing down sale before then.
One bargain hunter posted on Facebook: “Sports Direct on Newmarket Rd is closing down, 18/04. Lots of bargains in store!”
Sports Direct has closed a number of its branches over the last few years.
Its store in the Central Six Retail Park,Coventry, closed at the end of January 2024.
Its branches in Stroud, Gloucestershire, and High Wycombe, Buckinghamshire, also shut down last year.
Refill
An environmentally friendly store in Chelmsford, Essex, will also be closing its doors this month.
The shop had offered unpackaged items in bulk to be bought in small quantities as refills.
No exact closure date has been given yet but it said it would aim for the end of April once its stock has been sold.
Refill's owners said they had struggled with financial difficulties, as well as being unable to give the shop the “time and energy it deserves”.
The store had been saved from closure in January 2023 when its original owner stepped back, but passionate eco-warriors Russell Betts, Danielle Cottee and Andy McAlonan took it over as new owners at the time.
The store in Dundee will be closing for good after bosses took the decision not to renew their lease at the site.
The Scottish business had started out as a butcher shop in Aberdeen in the 1950s before it evolved into a supermarket chain with more than 350 branches.
In addition to the Dundee branch, FarmFoods has been closing other branches across the country, including in Banbury and in Southend.
However retailers close branches here and there for a number of reasons, such as leases coming to an end.
FarmFoods sales surpassed £1billion for the first time in 2023, the most recent accounts available for the supermarket show.
The store on Eastgate Street in Gloucester will shut for good on April 12.
It will leave the small retail chain with just four sites, all of which are inWales.
Owner David Meek said the Gloucester city centre store was shutting due to the hike in employerNationalInsurancecontributions (NICs), a reduction inbusinessrate relief and lower footfall.
He said the shop had not been “covering its costs”.
Products at the store have been massively reduced ahead of the closure.
Aldi
The discount supermarket will be shutting its Swanfield Place branch in Llanelli,Waleson April 27.
It says it has no plans to replace the store, meaning shoppers will have to go a 30-minute walk to the site in Trostre.
Labour councillor Shaun Greaney said at the time: “People can ill-afford to lose this store. With risingenergyprices, waterbills, and a near 9% hike incouncil tax, this shop was a lifeline for those barely scraping by.
“I don't know how people are going to manage now.”
An unhappy customer wrote on Facebook: “Been on the cards for a long time. Just been seeing out their lease. They were never going to keep two open in the town.”