Business & Tech

Subway Closing 500 Stores: Are Georgia Locations At Risk?

The Subway sandwich chain has more than 25,000 U.S. locations and plans to close 500 of them while opening 1,000 in other countries.

ATLANTA, GA — Thanks to Amazon and other online sellers, retail chains like Sears, Kmart, and Toys R Us are closing stores at a record pace in the U.S. Now, a chain restaurant is joining the ranks. Subway, which has more than 25,000 restaurants across America, this week announced plans to close more than 500 U.S. locations and open 1,000 new restaurants overseas.

It's unknown how many of the chain's 900-plus Georgia locations could be shuttered. As of Thursday, the company had not released a list of planned closings, but said North American store closings will happen by the end of 2018.

Even when Subway reduces its numbers in the U.S., it will still have the most stores nationally as YUM Brand, which operates Pizza Hut, Taco Bell and KFC, is in second place with 17,500 locations, according to CNN Money.

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The chain has around 3,200 restaurants in Canada, 2,300 in the U.K., 1,300 in Australia and nearly 1,000 in Mexico, according to the company website.

"We want to be sure that we have the best location," Subway Restaurants CEO Suzanne Greco told Bloomberg News in an interview. "Store count isn't everything." A Subway spokeswoman told Fortune the company expects "having a slightly smaller, but more profitable footprint in North America" but with far more stores overseas.

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Subway's sales slipped by 4.4 percent in 2017, Fortune reports.

The chain endured controversy in recent years after spokesman Jared Fogle admitted to having sex with minors and distributing child porn in 2015. Fogle has since unsuccessfully appealed his more than 15-year federal prison sentence. He recently filed a $57 million lawsuit against the prosecutors and judges who put him behind bars, saying the amount is three times the value of the lucrative career he lost when he was arrested.

Brian McCready, Patch National Staff, contributed to this report

Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images

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