Why Morrisons Is Closing Stores While Sales Are Still Growing

A modern UK convenience store with shoppers inside beside a closed storefront, showing how Morrisons store closures reflect rising retail cost pressure despite sales growth.

Morrisons Sales Growth and Store Closures Explained

Morrisons grew group revenue 3.2 percent to £15.8 billion in the year to October 2025. It posted 12 consecutive quarters of positive like-for-like sales. 

Yet it still closed 17 Morrisons Daily convenience stores as part of a wider 145-site rationalization.

Market Signal

Growth Did Not Protect Every Store

Morrisons’ sales momentum continued, but weaker locations still failed the profitability test.

+3.2% Group revenue growth
12 Positive like-for-like quarters
17 Morrisons Daily stores closed

The closures did not stem from falling demand. They targeted locations where operating costs had moved out of line with usage, volumes, and customer value.

 In simple terms, Morrisons is proving that a store can remain useful to customers and still be uneconomic for the retailer.

That matters because the action occurred in the same year underlying EBITDA stayed flat at £835 million despite £200 million in external cost headwinds from the 2024 Budget, inflation, and a first-quarter cyber incident. 

Statutory pre-tax loss narrowed to £381 million. Revenue and sales momentum continued while the retailer pruned the network.

Why Convenience Stores Are Becoming Less Profitable in the UK

Convenience stores operate with high fixed costs that scale poorly against typical small-basket, top-up purchases. 

Extended hours and local positions increase frequency but rarely generate enough revenue per square foot to absorb sustained increases in labor, energy, business rates, and logistics costs.

Operating Pressure

The Cost Stack Behind Weak Convenience Stores

Small-format stores can look active while still failing commercially if each basket cannot absorb the full cost base.

Labour
Highest pressure
Energy
Volatile cost
Business rates
Fixed burden
Logistics
Scale sensitive
Signal

Convenience is viable only when local demand funds the whole operating model, not just the visible store activity.

The 2024 Budget increases in employer National Insurance and the National Living Wage amplified labor pressure, the highest variable cost in small-format operations. 

Discounters and larger supermarkets continued to pull higher-value trips away, leaving convenience formats with a greater share of low-margin fill-in shopping.

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Morrisons Daily Closures Show a Shift Toward Franchise Growth

The 17 Daily closures appear to have targeted precisely those sites where baseline operating costs were no longer justified by usage and customer value. 

Morrisons retained its remaining convenience estate, focused capital, labor, and supply-chain support on locations that still delivered commercial returns.

This move aligns with a multi-year cost-discipline program that has already delivered £845 million in cumulative savings. Store count is no longer treated as a growth proxy. 

Location economics now determine which convenience assets receive ongoing investment.

Strategic Shift

From Store Count to Store Quality

Morrisons’ closures show a move away from footprint as a growth signal and toward profitability by location.

Old filter

More stores meant more reach

Expansion was treated as a sign of stronger local presence, even when store economics varied by site.

New filter

Each store must justify its cost base

Locations receive investment only when usage, volume and margin support the full operating burden.

Morrisons is not retreating from convenience. 

It plans 250 new franchised Morrisons Daily openings and conversions in 2026, a capital-light route that shifts operating risk to partners better able to manage tighter cost structures.

Operating Model

Morrisons Is Not Leaving Convenience. It Is Changing the Risk Model.

The closure program sits beside a larger franchise expansion plan, which changes who carries more of the local operating burden.

Company-operated sites

Higher direct exposure

  • Retailer carries staffing pressure
  • Direct exposure to weak location economics
  • Capital and supply support stay internal
Franchised Daily stores

More capital-light growth

  • Partner carries more local operating risk
  • Brand presence can expand with less direct capital
  • Growth depends on partner-level economics
2026 signal 250 planned franchised openings and conversions

Why UK Supermarkets Are Reviewing Convenience Store Locations

UK supermarket operators now face the same structural filter. 

Labor inflation, energy volatility, business rates, and logistics expenses consistently outpace the revenue generated by small-basket convenience trips in many locations. 

The result is a market correction: retailers keep sites only where local demand fully funds the full operating cost base.

Weak footfall or persistently low volumes convert once-viable stores into liabilities. 

Convenience delivers accessibility and repeat visits only as long as the fixed-cost structure remains supportable. 

When costs compress margins below acceptable levels, footprint discipline becomes the standard response.

Financial Snapshot

Morrisons FY2024/25 Results Show Growth Without Margin Expansion

The numbers explain why store closures can happen even when headline sales are moving in the right direction.

Total revenue £15.8bn

Up 3.2 percent, showing volume growth amid cost pressure.

Like-for-like sales +2.8%

Positive momentum across 12 consecutive quarters.

Underlying EBITDA £835m

Flat performance, with savings offsetting external headwinds.

Statutory pre-tax £(381)m

Narrowed loss, but interest and depreciation still constrain results.

What Morrisons Store Closures Mean for UK Grocery Retailers

Supermarket strategy has shifted from footprint expansion to footprint quality. Decision-makers must now measure contribution per location after full operating costs. 

Sites that clear the threshold receive continued investment. Those that do not exist, regardless of brand presence or community role.

Executive Watchlist

What Retail Leaders Should Monitor Next

The next phase of UK convenience retail will be shaped by site-level economics, not chain-wide sales momentum.

Contribution by location

Track whether each store funds labour, rent, energy, logistics and local operating complexity.

Franchise conversion pace

Watch whether operators use franchises to preserve coverage while reducing direct exposure.

Small-basket profitability

Measure whether top-up shopping can still support the fixed-cost base in weaker locations.

Competitor closures

Look for similar pruning by supermarket chains with exposed convenience estates.

The UK cost environment has converted convenience from a universal growth lever into a selective discipline. 

Survival depends on whether each location can still generate returns sufficient to justify its fixed costs. Store quality, not store count, has become the decisive metric.