Business & Tech

Rite Aid To Close More Stores In NYC: See Where

The new closures will add to the roughly 200 stores that Rite Aid has closed since filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year.

The new closures will add to the roughly 200 stores that Rite Aid has closed since filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year.
The new closures will add to the roughly 200 stores that Rite Aid has closed since filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year. (ErnieJourneys/Shutterstock)

NEW YORK CITY - Rite Aid plans to close two New York City stores and 25 others nationwide, adding to the roughly 200 stores that Rite Aid has closed across the country since filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection last year.

According to new court documents, the following Big Apple Rite Aid stores will be closed sometime this year:

  • 592 East 183rd Street, Bronx, NY
  • 218-35 Hempstead Ave., Queens Village, NY

The following local Rite Aid stores announced they were closing in October of last year:

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  • 10586 2981 Ocean Avenue, Brooklyn
  • 3958 2002 Avenue U, Brooklyn
  • 4868 71-18 Kissena Boulevard, Flushing

The closures come after the struggling drugstore chain filed for Chapter 11 Bankruptcy last October and announced plans to close 150 stores. Since filing for bankruptcy, Rite Aid has said it would close 431 stores.

The Philadelphia-based company has been reporting losses for several years and, like its competitors, faces financial risk from lawsuits over opioid prescriptions.

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The chain said on its website it has 1,704 stores in the United States. That number was about 4,600 in 2013, according to Business Insider. About 2,000 stores were sold to Walgreens in 2017 after a deal to sell the drugstore chain to its rival was nixed by federal regulators.

"Rite Aid regularly assesses its retail footprint to ensure we are operating efficiently while meeting the needs of our customers, communities, associates and overall business," a Rite Aid spokesperson told Business Insider. "In connection with the court-supervised process, we notified the Court of certain underperforming stores we are closing to further reduce rent expense and strengthen overall financial performance."

- With reporting by Miranda Ceja.


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