Another major discount retailer is shrinking its footprint across America — and California wasn’t spared.
Family Dollar has shuttered roughly 350 stores nationwide over the past 10 months as parent company DollarTree continues a sweeping downsizing effort that could eventually eliminate more than 1,000 locations.
According to an analysis from Local Falcon, the chain has been closing stores at a pace of roughly one per day since July 2025.

California lost three Family Dollar locations during the latest wave of closures, according to the report.
Texas saw the highest number of shutdowns with 35 closures, followed by Ohio with 28 and Georgia with 26.
Only six states — Idaho, Massachusetts, Montana, South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming — reported avoided any closures during the latest round.
The Dollar Tree first announced plans in 2024 to close nearly 1,000 underperforming Family Dollar stores as inflation and reduced government assistance programs continued squeezing lower-income shoppers.

“As lower-income consumers continue to be very deliberate about their spending, the challenges remain structural,” former Dollar Tree CEO Rick Dreiling said in an earnings report cited by TheStreet.
The company later sold Family Dollar to Brigade Capital Management and Macellum Capital Management in a deal valued at roughly $1 billion.
Despite the closures, Family Dollar said earlier this year is it attempting a turnaround strategy centered around smaller-format stores aimed at cutting costs and expanding into dense neighborhoods.
The chain still operates more than 7,000 stores nationwide following the closures, according to the report.
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