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The furniture and home decor store is closing 29 underperforming stores

Furniture chain At Home is packing up in 29 cities across the country. The Coppell, Texas–based home decor giant filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in June, blaming inflation, high interest rates and tariffs that drove up import costs. Court documents now confirm that nearly 30 "underperforming" stores will shutter by Tuesday, September 30.
It’s the latest hit in a year that’s already seen Big Lots, Joann, Kohl’s, Macy’s and Party City slash locations or close outright. The reason? Brick-and-mortar fatigue, plus the mounting costs of running massive retail footprints in a shaky economy.
At Home has already closed six stores in the past year, but this new wave is by far the largest. Initially, 26 closures were on the chopping block, but three more stores quietly joined the list this summer.
The full list of closures stretches coast to coast—from Sacramento to Miami to Madison. As part of its bankruptcy filing, the company will be handed over to hedge funds and investment firms out of New York and San Francisco. So the brand may survive, but in a leaner, investor-driven form.
For fans of At Home’s sprawling aisles of faux plants, oversized rugs and endless storage bins, the clock is ticking.
Here's the full list of At Home stores that will close by September 30:
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