
Starbucks has closed at least two local cafes as part of a larger initiative to trim its store count across the country. (BizSense file)
At least two Starbucks cafes have shuttered in Richmond in recent days as the Seattle-based coffee giant closes locations across the country and lays off employees.
On the chopping block were the chain’s stores at 1017 N. Arthur Ashe Blvd., and a short-lived spot at 4320 Commerce Road on the Southside.
Both had gone dark by Monday. Starbucks didn’t respond to a request for comment.
The Arthur Ashe Boulevard store had operated for about a decade. It was in the same building next to the storefront where Pizzeria Mungo is preparing to open. The property is at the corner of Arthur Ashe and Clay and near The Ace mixed-use building, and is less than a mile up the road from a newer Starbucks location that opened at the Scott’s Walk development to the north.
The South Richmond location had only been open for a few years in a relatively new retail building near the Philip Morris plant. The cafe’s exit leaves Subway as the only currently open tenant in the Commerce Road building.

Starbucks operated at 1017 N. Arthur Ashe Blvd. for about a decade before closing in recent days. (Jack Jacobs photo)
The Richmond closures come as Starbucks announced a wider restructuring of its operations.
The company said late last week it planned to close stores in North America in its 2025 fiscal year, which ended yesterday. Starbucks said the number of company-operated stores would be decreased by about 1% overall, factoring in both openings and closings in the past year. At the end of FY25, Starbucks said it would have nearly 18,300 locations, both corporate-owned and licensed cafes, in the United States and Canada. The company also announced last week plans to lay off 900 “non-retail” employees.
The announcement didn’t specify exactly how many stores would be closed and where. A list compiled by D.C.-based news outlet WUSA 9 determined that as of Friday, nearly 200 locations across multiple states would be shut down.
Despite the closures, Starbucks still has been in expansion mode locally. The chain recently opened a new location on West Broad Street in Henrico and has filed plans for a new location in Northside.