Value City Furniture Crash Leaves Columbus Shoppers and Workers in the Lurch

Value City Furniture, the Columbus-born discount furniture chain, is winding down for good after its parent, American Signature Inc., failed to land a buyer in a court-supervised sale and kicked off company-wide liquidation sales on January 10, 2026. The shutdown will close remaining local stores, including the Value City on West Dublin-Granville Road, and puts hundreds of corporate and store-level Columbus jobs at risk. Customers who put deposits down on undelivered furniture now face an uncertain road to refunds as the bankruptcy and liquidation processes unfold.

Local media and retail watchers have been busy trying to sort out what the collapse means for Columbus and for discount furniture shopping more generally. As reported by WOSU Public Media, the chain’s meltdown was the focus of a January 29, 2026 panel discussion on the future of retail. TheStreet reports that after a fast sale process produced no third-party buyer, a joint venture of SB360 Capital Partners, Hilco Global and Gordon Brothers began going-out-of-business sales at the company’s remaining stores on January 10, 2026.

Why the chain folded

In court filings, the company cited a steep drop in housing-related demand and rising costs, with co-chief restructuring officer Rudolph Morando calling it “one of the most severe housing market declines in recent history.” According to Retail Dive, net sales fell sharply from 2024 to 2025 and liquidity tightened in the runup to the November 2025 Chapter 11 filing.

Local impact: Columbus stores, HQ and workers

For central Ohio, the story is bigger than some empty showrooms and lost coupons. Public filings and reporting indicate the company plans to wind down operations that include its Columbus corporate base and dozens of stores. Court summaries and case timelines show that the headquarters at 4300 E. Fifth Avenue is slated for closure, and WARN notices describe hundreds of terminations beginning in January, according to filings and coverage compiled on the case. Case notes and summaries also list the West Dublin-Granville Road store as one of the Columbus locations running closing sales.

What shoppers should know

For anyone still eyeing a “deal,” there are strings attached. The company’s public statements and the court record spell out that stores are in liquidation mode while inventory lasts, returns are limited, and gift cards are no longer being accepted at closing locations. TheStreet and company notices explain that customers who put down deposits for undelivered orders may need to file a proof of claim in the bankruptcy case or seek chargebacks through their card issuers. Information about claims is being handled through the company’s retained claims agent.

Legal questions and next steps

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS