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Family Dollar and Dollar Tree will close 1,000 stores

A customer walks out of a Family Dollar store at Hickory Grove Market in Charlotte, N.C., in November 2005.
A customer walks out of a Family Dollar store at Hickory Grove Market in Charlotte, N.C., in November 2005. (Ross Taylor/AP)

CNN — Family Dollar, the struggling discount chain that caters to low-income customers predominantly in cities, will close about 1,000 stores as inflation takes a bite out of consumers’ wallets and low-cost-retailers’ profits.

Family Dollar will close 600 locations in the first half of 2024 and 370 stores over the next several years as store leases expire.

Dollar Tree, which owns Family Dollar, also said it will close 30 stores as leases expire.

Dollar Tree bought Family Dollar in 2015 for $8.5 billion. The combined company hoped that by joining forces, it could grow its customer base, reduce costs and fend off bigger retailers like Dollar General and Walmart. But Dollar Tree has struggled to integrate Family Dollar.

Family Dollar stores were in poor condition when Dollar Tree acquired the business in 2015, analysts say. Although Family Dollar has renovated thousands of stores in recent years, many stores under both banners are still poorly maintained.

The dollar and discount segments of retail have become more competitive in recent years due to the shrinking middle class, inflation and retail store closures.

Many Family Dollar stores have been plagued by health and safety concerns for employees and workers.

Family Dollar was hit with a record fine this year for violating product safety standards after selling items that were stocked in a rat-infested warehouse filled with live, dead and decaying rodents. The $41.6 million fine was “the largest-ever monetary criminal penalty in a food safety case,” the Justice Department said.

This is a developing story. It will be updated.

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