Key Highlights
- The coffee chain is eliminating 300 corporate positions in the U.S. spanning technology, finance, marketing, and research divisions
- Four regional corporate hubs in Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas, and Burbank are being shut down
- Restructuring expenses will total $400 million
- Additional workforce reductions in international markets are anticipated as the company evaluates its global support structure
- SBUX shares climbed approximately 1% on Friday after the news broke
Starbucks (SBUX) stock experienced a modest uptick of roughly 1% on Friday following the coffee giant’s announcement of 300 corporate job eliminations and multiple regional office closures, continuing CEO Brian Niccol’s transformation strategy.
The workforce reductions target employees stationed in Seattle and those working remotely throughout the nation. Departments affected encompass technology, marketing, finance, and research and development operations. Front-line retail workers will remain untouched by these cuts.
Starbucks is simultaneously closing down regional corporate facilities in Chicago, Atlanta, Dallas, and Burbank, California. The company plans to maintain operations in New York, Toronto, Coral Gables, and its primary Seattle headquarters, alongside a forthcoming Nashville facility.
The coffee retailer anticipates incurring $400 million in restructuring expenses associated with these strategic changes. Within that total, $280 million represents non-cash charges stemming from asset impairments, particularly right-of-use lease assets and related long-lived assets.
The remaining $120 million in cash-based charges primarily cover employee severance and separation packages. Importantly, none of these financial charges impact Starbucks’ retail coffee shop network.
These reductions form part of an ambitious initiative to eliminate $2 billion in operational expenses by fiscal year 2028. The projected savings will help fund substantial investments planned for cafe-level improvements and operations.
International Workforce Reductions Expected
Starbucks acknowledged it is conducting a comprehensive evaluation of its international support infrastructure. The organization stated it “expects additional role impacts outside the U.S.” as it transitions toward becoming a “world-class licensor.”
A company representative informed Investing.com that the corporation is simultaneously “streamlining its real estate footprint” and reassessing lease obligations on a global scale.
This marks another chapter in Niccol’s restructuring campaign. During the previous year, Starbucks eliminated approximately 2,000 corporate positions through two separate reduction rounds and shuttered hundreds of retail locations across the United States.
Despite the cutbacks, the company continues making strategic investments. Starbucks is developing a new $100 million corporate campus in Nashville designed to accommodate 2,000 employees. Technology and supply-chain functions are being relocated from Seattle to this emerging operational center.
Certain senior executives have been granted stock-based incentives worth $6 million contingent upon achieving the cost-reduction objectives.
Nashville Expansion Progresses
The Nashville facility signifies a strategic geographic realignment in Starbucks’ corporate infrastructure approach.
Although Seattle continues as the primary headquarters, the organization is clearly redistributing functions rather than engaging in across-the-board elimination.
The $280 million in non-cash expenses primarily relate to a comprehensive reevaluation of its Starbucks Reserve and Roastery concepts, combined with initiatives to enhance efficiency at non-retail support locations.
Starbucks emphasized that none of the office consolidations or restructuring costs are linked to its coffeehouse retail operations.
The company’s international organizational review remains in progress, with additional announcements regarding overseas positions anticipated in coming months.



