Business & Tech

Major Clothing Retailer On Long Island Closing 150 U.S. Stores

Carter's has nearly a dozen stores on Long Island.

LONG ISLAND, NY — A popular mall retailer with stores in on Long Island is closing 150 locations nationwide this year in a bid to stay afloat after being battered by tariffs.

The children’s clothier Carter’s has not disclosed what stores will be shuttered but said in a press release that stores would close as their leases expired as part of its turn-around push.

Atlanta-based Carter’s, which also operates the OshKosh and B’Gosh labels, has 11 stores on Long Island including Commack (120 Veterans Memorial Hwy), Deer Park (878 The Arches Circle), West Babylon (721 W. Montauk Hwy), Centereach (211 Centereach Mall), Patchogue (499 Sunrise Hwy), Levittown (3567 Hempstead Turnpike), Carle Place (240-B Voice Rd), New Hyde Park (1440 Union Turnpike), Freeport (214 E. Sunrise Hwy), Oceanside (3544 Long Beach Rd) and Valley Stream (2034 Green Acres Road, Green Acres Mall, Space 2200A).

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Douglas C. Palladini, the former CEO of Carter’s, said last fall after the release of the company’s third-quarter 2025 earnings report that the company had made “meaningful progress in stabilizing our business. But, he added, “elevated product costs, in part due to the impact of higher tariffs, as well as additional investment, weighed meaningfully on our profitability.”

Carter’s previously planned to close 100 stores over the 2025 and 2026, but increased its target to 150 that collectively represent about $110 million in annual sales.

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On top of the store closures, Carter’s also laid off about 300 employees to absorb losses, Retail Dive reported.

The Carter’s closings are among 1,400 stores expected to close in 2026, including other clothing stores such as Macy’s, Francesca’s and Eddie Bauer. The convenience store chain 7-Eleven is closing about 645 stores in North America.

Grocery Outlet and Kroger are also reducing their store footprints as grocery stores nationwide face pressure from rising food prices and labor costs, as well as evolving consumer preferences to online markets.

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