
River Island will close dozens of stores within weeks, as part of a restructuring plan aimed at preventing the company from collapsing into administration.
The UK high street giant, which currently has over 200 shops nationwide, will close 33 stores before the end of January and pay reduced rent on another 71 shops.
Landlords are being requested to cut rents for three years and potentially halt payments completely on some sites in a bid to stem losses.
River Island made a £33.2m pre-tax loss in 2023 after sales fell 19 per cent, with losses close to doubling to £64m in 2024, according to its accounts.
In August, Matthew Weaver KC, for River Island, told a hearing that the company “simply has not been able to reverse” a trend of financial challenges.
He cited a drop in footfall and sales due to “the pressures of a highly competitive and changing retail environment as well as the prevailing trend away from high street retail stores to online shopping”.
He added: “A number of geopolitical events have also resulted in continuing supply chain disruption which, together with energy, labour and other price increases, has resulted in a cost base that’s too high and unsustainable at its current level.”
The rescue plan was approved by a High Court judge in August. No one appeared at the court hearing on Friday to oppose the proposals.
Ben Lewis, CEO of River Island, said: “We have a clear transformation strategy to ensure the long-term viability of the business, and this decision gives us a strong platform to deliver this.”
He added: “Recent improvements in our fashion offer and shopping experience are starting to show results, and the restructuring plan will enable us to align our store estate to our customers’ needs. We are grateful to our suppliers, landlords and other stakeholders for their constructive engagement and shared confidence in River Island’s future.”
In June, Lewis said that while River Island is a “much-loved” British shop, the boom in online shopping has left the company with “a large portfolio of stores that is no longer aligned to our customers’ needs”.
He said that a “sharp rise in the cost of doing business over the last few years has only added to the financial burden”.
River Island employs around 5,500 people and was founded in 1948 under the Lewis and Chelsea Girl brand before being renamed in the 1980s.
Here’s a full list of the stores set to close:
Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire Bangor Bloomfield, Northern Ireland Barnstaple, Devon Beckton, Greater London Brighton, East Sussex Burton-Upon-Trent, Derbyshire Cumbernauld, Scotland Didcot, Oxfordshire Edinburgh Princes Street, Scotland Falkirk, Scotland Gloucester, Gloucestershire Great Yarmouth Grimsby, Lincolnshire Hanley, Staffordshire Hartlepool, County Durham Hereford, Herefordshire Kilmarnock, Scotland Kirkcaldy, Scotland Leeds Birstall Park, West Yorkshire Lisburn, Northern Ireland Northwich, Cheshire Norwich, Norfolk Oxford, Oxfordshire Perth, Scotland Poole, Dorset Rochdale, Greater Manchester St Helens, Merseyside Stockton On Tees, County Durham Surrey Quays, Greater London Sutton Coldfield, Warwickshire Taunton, Somerset Workington, Cumbria Wrexham, Wales