Nebraska Grocery Shakeup: 3 Major Supermarket Chains Closing Locations This Spring 2026

Food Travel LogoNEBRASKA STATE - As March 2026 unfolds, the Nebraska grocery market is seeing a "surgical" realignment. While the state’s agricultural roots remain strong, the retail side is being squeezed by national consolidation, shifting consumer habits, and a pivot toward digital-first shopping hubs.


Nebraska Grocery Shakeup
Nebraska Grocery Shakeup

From the busy intersections of Omaha to the rural reaches of the Panhandle, here are the three major supermarket chains scaling back their Nebraska footprint this season.


1. Family Fare (SpartanNash): The 108th & Q Exit

The most significant local headline this March is the permanent closure of a long-standing Omaha staple. SpartanNash, the parent company of the Family Fare banner, is continuing to prune its portfolio following a massive national merger with C&S Wholesale Grocers.



  • The Closure: The Family Fare Supermarket located at 5110 South 108th Street (108th & Q) in Omaha is officially closing its doors on March 6, 2026.
  • The Impact: This location has served the Millard and Southwest Omaha areas for years. The closure marks a shift for SpartanNash as it consolidates operations into its higher-performing units and prepares for the integration of the C&S merger, which affects over 20 stores across the state.
  • The Strategy: Leadership has indicated that the closure is part of a "continuous evaluation" of their retail footprint. Employees at the 108th & Q site are being encouraged to apply for positions at other Omaha-area Family Fare or Supermercado Nuestra Familia locations.

2. Safeway (Albertsons): The Mountain West Consolidation

Safeway, owned by Albertsons, is finalizing its exit from select secondary markets as part of a massive regional restructuring. The company has merged its Intermountain and Denver divisions into a new Mountain West Division, leading to the closure of several "aged" storefronts that no longer fit the brand's modern aesthetic.

  • The Panhandle Impact: The Safeway located in Chadron (230 Morehead Street) has been a primary target of this realignment. As of early 2026, the location is finalizing its closure, leaving residents in the northern Panhandle with fewer full-service options.
  • The Reason: Operating in rural Nebraska involves high logistics costs. Albertsons is moving away from high-maintenance, older buildings in favor of centralized "Market Street" hubs in larger cities like Scottsbluff or over the border in Wyoming and Colorado.

3. Kroger (Baker’s): The "Surgical" Efficiency Cuts

Kroger, which operates in Nebraska primarily under the Baker’s banner, confirmed earlier this year that it would shutter approximately 60 underperforming supermarkets nationwide by mid-2026.



  • The Nebraska Strategy: While Baker’s remains a dominant force in the Omaha and Lincoln metros, the brand is targeting "legacy" storefronts that lack the infrastructure for modern delivery volume.
  • What to Watch: The company is prioritizing stores that can support their new AI-driven inventory systems and dedicated curbside pickup lanes. Older, smaller units that are "landlocked" and cannot expand their digital fulfillment capacity are the primary candidates for closure as leases expire this spring.

What This Means for Nebraskans

The 2026 grocery shakeup is more than just a loss of storefronts; it represents a fundamental shift in the Nebraska "Weekly Shop."

  1. The Rise of the Discounters: As traditional chains consolidate, discount heavyweights like Aldi and local independent grocers are seeing a surge in traffic from budget-conscious shoppers.
  2. Digital Dominance: Almost every closing store this spring has cited "changing consumer behavior" as a primary factor. Nebraskans are increasingly trading the grocery aisle for the mobile app.
  3. The Merger Factor: With the C&S/SpartanNash merger officially taking hold this year, expect to see more rebranding and "portfolio cleaning" throughout the summer as the two giants integrate their logistics networks.