While Delaware often escapes the worst of national retail purges thanks to its tax-free shopping status, June 2026 is bringing a significant wave of closures to the First State’s premier shopping destinations. From the massive corridors of the Christiana Mall in New Castle County to the capital’s Dover Mall in Kent County and the seasonal hubs near Rehoboth Beach, the “fleet optimization” strategies of brands like Chick-fil-A, Wendy’s, and Subway are hitting home.
As corporate leases expire at the mid-year mark, Delaware shoppers are seeing a quiet but steady exodus of “inline” tenants and food court staples.
1. Chick-fil-A: The Suburban Shift
Following the trend seen across the Mid-Atlantic, Chick-fil-A is aggressively pivoting away from traditional mall food courts. The company’s focus on high-capacity drive-thrus and mobile-order-only pods means that smaller, walk-up mall units are being phased out as their contracts conclude.
- The Local Impact: While the Christiana Mall remains a high-traffic powerhouse, older food court models in satellite shopping centers are under heavy review this June.
- Why it’s happening: The chain is finding higher profit margins in standalone sites that can accommodate their latest “2026 Express” double-lane drive-thru technology, which traditional mall layouts simply cannot support.
2. Wendy’s: “Project Fresh” Trims the First State
As part of its “Project Fresh” initiative to shutter nearly 350 underperforming stores by mid-2026, Wendy’s is identifying locations that no longer fit its “Global Next Gen” brand image.
- Where to Watch: Older mall-adjacent units and food court counters along the Route 13 corridor and in the Dover metro area are most at risk.
- The Trend: Wendy’s reported a significant dip in U.S. same-store sales late last year, leading to a “restaurant-by-restaurant” closure strategy that favors new, tech-integrated buildings over older mall stalls.
3. Subway: The Food Court Contraction
Subway continues to be the hardest hit by the rising costs of mall real estate. In Delaware, where food courts often rely on office workers for lunch traffic, the shift toward remote work in Wilmington has left several sites struggling.
- The Risk: Malls in New Castle County are seeing a thinning of “Subway Series” locations as franchisees opt not to renew expensive mall leases in favor of cheaper strip-mall locations.
- The June Deadline: Expect several “Store Closing” banners to appear by June 30 as the chain consolidates its Delaware footprint.
4. Rite Aid & Adjacent Eateries (The Domino Effect)
While not a restaurant, the final stages of Rite Aid’s post-bankruptcy reduction are having a massive impact on the “quick-bite” ecosystems in Delaware malls.
The Reach: Confirmed closures at the Rehoboth Mall Boulevard and select sites in Lewes are reducing overall foot traffic…