A MAJOR high street retailer has announced the full list of shops that are set to close.
Cancer Research confirmed that stores including Birmingham, Edinburgh and High Wycombe will shut by May 2026.

The charity is reducing the number of its shops to 320 across the UK[/caption]
The charity has blamed higher national insurance contributions, inflation pressures and changing consumer habits as the key reasons for having to axe the stores.
A further 100 will be gone by April 2027.
The changes are expected to impact around 600 members of staff and up to 3,000 volunteers.
The charity said it would redeploy some staff members and help others find a new job or volunteering opportunities elsewhere.
The charity also announced that its online marketplace will shut in early 2026.
This means they will no longer sell donated items on reselling platforms.
Around 320 charity shops will remain open across the UK.
However, the charity has plans to open another 12 ‘superstores’ by 2028.
The charity already has 46 larger, out-of-town shops like this.
It said it wanted to meet ” increasing demand for spacious, value-focused shopping experiences.”
The move is expected to raise £12.4million for the charity over the next five years.
Full list of Cancer Research stores closing
ALL of these stores will close by May 2026.
- Aberdeen, 19 Rosemount Viaduct, AB25 1NE
- Airdrie, 5 Bank Street, ML6 6AF
- Balham, 168 Balham High Road, SW12 9BW
- Ballymena, 49 Ballymoney Street, BT43 6AN
- Banbury, 9 Parsons Street, OX16 5LW
- Barnstaple, Gammon Walk, EX31 1DJ
- Belfast, Bloomfield 17 Bloomfield Avenue, BT4 1RX
- Biggleswade, 24 High Street, SG18 0JL
- Birkenhead, Borough Pavement, CH41 2XX
- Birmingham, 245 High Street, Erdington, B23 6SS
- Bognor, 1-2 Clock Walk, P021 1SG
- Bolton, 6 Newport Street, BL1 1NB
- Bradford, 34-36 Ivegate, BD1 1SW
- Burton, On Trent 25 Station St, DE14 1AU
- Chesham, 34 High Street, HP5 1EP
- Clevedon, 1 Station Road, BS21 6NH
- Clydebank, 23 Sylvania Way South, G81 2UA
- Coatbridge, 20-22 Main Street, ML5 3AE
- Cotteridge, 20 Watford Road, Birmingham, B30 1JA
- Crewe, 10 Market Street, CW1 2EG
- Derby, 826 Osmaston Road, Allenton, DE24 9AA
- Dewsbury, 22 Longcauseway, WF12 8EN
- Dudley, 258 Castle Street, DY1 1LQ
- East Barnet, 276 East Barnet Road, EN4 8TD
- Edinburgh, 9-10 Ormiston Terrace, Corstorphine, EH12 7SJ
- Epping, 197 High Street, CM16 4BL
- Fakenham, 26 Market Place, NR21 9BS
- Falkirk, 18 Vicar Street, FK1 1JL
- Galashiels, 55 High Street, TD1 1RZ
- Gillingham, 90 High Street, ME7 1AX
- Glasgow, 420-424 Victoria Road, G42 8YZ
- Gosport, 98 High Street, PO12 1DS
- Gravesend, 34 New Road, DA11 0AB
- Halesowen, 79 High Street, B63 3BQ
- Harrogate, 24A Oxford Street, HG1 1PU
- Hazel Grove, 129B-C London Road, Stockport, SK74HH
- Hemel Hempstead, 101 Marlowes, HP1 1LF
- High Wycombe, 8 Church Street, HP11 2DE
- Hornchurch, 8 Station Lane, RM12 6NJ
- Keswick, 24 Main Street, CA12 5JD
- Kings Lynn, 61 High Street, PE30 1AY
- Lancaster, 54-54A Market Street, LA1 1HS
- Leeds, 28 L&S Lane, LS1 6LB
- Lincoln, 254 High Street, E20 1QJ
- Lisburn, 4 Smithfield Square, BT28 1AD
- Louth, 20 Market Place, LN11 9PD
- Ludlow, 3 Castle Street, SY8 1AS
- Maidenhead, 101 High Street, SL6 1JX
- Maidstone, 19 Gabriels Hill, ME15 6HR
- Market Drayton, 27 High Street, TF9 1QF
- Melton Mowbray, 6 South Parade, LE13 0PU
- Merthyr, Tydfil 14 Graham Way, CF47 8BT
- Mill Hill, 37 The Broadway, NW7 3DA
- Moreton, 242 Hoylake Road, CH46 6AD
- Newark, 26 Stodman Street, NG24 1AW
- Newcastle, Under Lyme 19 Ironmarket, ST5 1RF
- Northwood, 38 Green Lane, HA6 2QB
- Paddock Wood, 5 Commercial Road, TN12 6EN
- Penrith, 10 Angel Lane, CA11 7BP
- Perth, 27 Scott Street, PH1 5TQ
- Redditch, 4 Market Place, B98 8AA
- Redruth, 71 Fore Street, TR15 2AF
- Retford, 25 Carolgate, DN22 6BZ
- Ross On Wye, 11 Market Place, HR9 5NU
- Rotherham, 74 Effingham Street, S65 1AL
- Rushden, 22 High Street, NN10 0PW
- Selby, 40A Gowthorpe, YO8 4ET
- Sevenoaks, 137 High Street, TN13 1UX
- Shrewsbury, 9 High Street, SY1 1SP
- Sidmouth, 19 Fore Street, EX10 8AL
- Skipton, 91 Caroline Square, BD23 1DA
- Slough, 8 Park Street, SL1 1PD
- Southend, On Sea 5 Warrior House, Southchurch Road, SS1 2LZ
- St Ives, 6 High Street, TR26 1RR
- Stalybridge, 44A Grosvenor Road, SK15 1RR
- Stockport, 26 Princes Street, SK1 1SE
- Stoke, 44 Devonport Road, Plymouth, PL3 4DH
- Swansea, 19 Union Street, SA1 3EH
- Swindon, 28 Havelock Street, SN1 1SD
- Tiverton, 15 Bampton Street, EX16 6AA
- Urmston, 16 Station Road, M41 9JN
- Welling, 26C Bellegrove Road, DA16 3PU
- Welwyn Garden City, 20 Howardsgate, AL8 6BQ
- West Bromwich, 203 High Street, B70 7QZ
- Whitby, 70 Baxtergate, YO21 1BL
- Wick, 36 Bridge Street, KW1 4NG
- Wigston, 6 Bell Street, LE18 1AD
- Workington, 26-32 Murray Road, CA14 2AG
Staff facing redundancy
Staff were informed last week of the decision in a video call led by retail head Julie Byard.
An insider told The Sun: “It’s heartbreaking. We’ve given years of our life to this charity and now we’re being thrown away just before Christmas.”
The source said “changing trends” – such as people reselling clothes on the likes of Vinted and Depop rather than donating them – has been hurting sales.
Staff were sent an internal memo from Julie Byard detailing the job cuts last Wednesday.
The memo said: “We know that if we don’t act now, a significant number of our shops and our online marketplace are likely to become financially unsustainable over the next five years.
“To ensure we can invest more in life-saving cancer research and give a better experience to our staff, volunteers and customers into the future, we’re reshaping our retail operations.”
High street struggles
Charity retailers are feeling the effects of people spending less on high street.
Disability charity Scope has shut dozens of its shops this year.
It warned in January it could be forced to close a number of its 138 stores.
Some 39 shops had shut by the end of March, with a further 31 expected to close between April this year and March 2026.
Meanwhile in May, other charities including Barnardo’s and Save the Children told The Express they had not ruled out closures this year.
RETAIL PAIN IN 2025
The British Retail Consortium has predicted that the Treasury’s hike to employer NICs will cost the retail sector £2.3billion.
Research by the British Chambers of Commerce shows that more than half of companies plan to raise prices by early April.
A survey of more than 4,800 firms found that 55% expect prices to increase in the next three months, up from 39% in a similar poll conducted in the latter half of 2024.
Three-quarters of companies cited the cost of employing people as their primary financial pressure.
The Centre for Retail Research (CRR) has also warned that around 17,350 retail sites are expected to shut down this year.
It comes on the back of a tough 2024 when 13,000 shops closed their doors for good, already a 28% increase on the previous year.
Professor Joshua Bamfield, director of the CRR said: “The results for 2024 show that although the outcomes for store closures overall were not as poor as in either 2020 or 2022, they are still disconcerting, with worse set to come in 2025.”
Professor Bamfield has also warned of a bleak outlook for 2025, predicting that as many as 202,000 jobs could be lost in the sector.
“By increasing both the costs of running stores and the costs on each consumer’s household it is highly likely that we will see retail job losses eclipse the height of the pandemic in 2020.”