shopfronts
Multiple high street staples are shutting down in November (Pictures: Getty/Rex)

Next month, more of Britain’s favourite high street shops will shutter their doors for good.

The once-thriving British high streets have been struggling with the dawn of online shopping, rising costs and the coronavirus pandemic.

In September, it was revealed 6,945 shops closed in the first six months of 2024, amounting to an astounding 38 shops per day.

This November, Decathalon, Co-Op and Wetherspoon will be closing some of their locations – but other shops are opening. We’ve compiled a list for you below.

Homebase

Shoppers hoping for an easy experience finding DIY materials will be saddened to know two branches of Homebase are shutting down in November.

The chain, which sold off Homebase in 2006, has snapped them up in a £130million deal that will see the sites converted into big supermarkets.

In November, the locations in Marsh Mills Retail Park in Plymouth and Southam Road in Banbury will shut, before being transformed into new Sainsbury’s.

Further Homebase locations will shut down in December. For the full list, read here.

exterior of a wetherspoon
A Wetherspoons in Edinburgh is closing down (Picture: Getty)

Wetherspoon

Those hoping for a tipple while in Leith, Edinburgh, will be disappointed to know Wetherspoon’s Foot of the Walk location will shut on November 3.

A spokesperson said: ‘Wetherspoon does, on occasion, sell pubs, and this is the situation here.’

It would appear Wetherspoon is not exempt from the spate of pub closures seen across the UK in recent years.

Real estate intelligence firm Altus Group said the overall number of pubs, including those which were vacant or being offered to let, fell to 39,096 at the end of June.

The figure is down 305 versus the end of 2023, with the pubs either having closed down, been demolished or turned into something else.

the front of an m&s
Marks and Spencer hasn’t avoided the high street purge of late (Picture: Getty)

Marks and Spencer

The grocery giant’s location in Queensway, Crawley, will shut on November 16 due to ‘changing shopping patterns’ of customers.

It comes as the retailer is slashing the number of these branches – where a selection of clothing, homeware and beauty ranges are on offer alongside food – and increasing the number of food-only stores.

Bosses are aiming to get the number of full-line stores to 180 over the next three years, down from 247 in 2022.

Meanwhile the number of ‘Simply Food’ stores will rise from 316 to 420.

For the full list of all Marks and Spencer locations shutting down this year, read here.

a co op sign
Co-op is also closing a key location (Picture: Shutterstock)

Co-Op

Multiple branches of Co-Op have shut their doors in recent months, and November will be no different.

A 50-year-old Co-Op location in Bridgeway Shopping Centre, Meadows, Nottingham, will shut on November 16.

The lease on the site has expired, the company said, so they are moving out of the neighbourhood.

Locals described the closure as a ‘huge loss’ for the area.

David Cooksy, who has been shopping at the Co-op with his 82-year-old wife Heidi for decades, said: ‘It’s convenient. It’s a convenience store, that’s what it’s called and now it’s not going to be here.

‘It’s always been here. I go back to the 50s in the Meadows and there’s always been a Co-op.’

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