Debenhams confirms 19 stores across the UK will close in January 2020 - this is the full list

19 Debenhams stores are due to close this month (Jan 2020) (Photo: Shutterstock)19 Debenhams stores are due to close this month (Jan 2020) (Photo: Shutterstock)
19 Debenhams stores are due to close this month (Jan 2020) (Photo: Shutterstock)

Debenhams has confirmed 19 of its stores across the UK will close their doors for good this month, after the company entered administration last year.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The struggling department store announced a Company Voluntary Arrangement (CVA) in April 2019, announcing the closure of 22 stores by 2020, affecting 1,200 workers.

Impending closures

The retailer has now confirmed that 19 of its stores will close their doors between 11 and 25 January.

This is the full list of stores and the dates they are due to close:

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Altrincham, Greater Manchester – January 11Birmingham The Fort – January 11Kirkcaldy, Fife – January 11Walton-on-Thames, Surrey – January 11Wandsworth, London – January 11Wolverhampton – January 11Chatham, Kent – January 15Great Yarmouth, Norfolk – January 15Slough, Berkshire – January 15Stockton-on-Tees, Co Durham – January 15Welwyn, Herfordshire – January 15Witney, Oxfordshire – January 15Ashford, Kent – January 19Canterbury, Kent – January 19Eastbourne, East Sussex – January 19Folkestone, Kent – January 19Southport, Merseyside – January 19Southsea, Portsmouth – January 19Wimbledon, London – January 19

More closures to come

The closures come as part of a plan which will see around 50 shops shut in total during a three year strategy, leaving 110 shops trading under the Debenhams brand.

Following the 19 store closures this month (Jan 2020), a further 28 stores are expected to shut next year, although details of the locations have not yet been released.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The closures are expected to result in around 660 job losses.

The company entered administration in April last year after struggling to compete with online marketplaces and adapt to a decline in high street shopping.

This article originally appeared on our sister site, Lancashire Evening Post.

News you can trust since 1869
Follow us
©National World Publishing Ltd. All rights reserved.Cookie SettingsTerms and ConditionsPrivacy notice