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Check the full list of Sainsbury’s cafes set to close for good as supermarket giant announces 3,000 job cuts as part of major restructuring plans_Nhy

Sainsbury’s has announced it is closing all of its remaining in-store cafes as part of a major overhaul which will also see 3,000 jobs axed.

Simon Roberts, chief executive of the supermarket group, said the company was making the cuts as it attempts to slash spending by a £1billion a year in the face of a ‘particularly challenging cost environment’.

This is despite the supermarket chain recently announcing its ‘biggest ever’ Christmas trading period and predicting profits would likely be between £1.01 billion and £1.06 billion for the whole of 2025.

The job losses mean the current 148,000-strong workforce by will be reduced by 2 per cent and all of the 61 remaining cafes will be closed.

Mr Roberts claimed Sainsbury’s shoppers did not use their cafes regularly anymore, whereas in-store food halls and concessions run by their ‘specialist partners’ had grown in popularity.

As part of the shake up, the retailer will also close its remaining patisserie, hot food and pizza counters in-store and shift the most popular items from there into regular shopping aisles.

The supermarket boss added: ‘As we accelerate into year two and beyond of our strategy, we are facing into a particularly challenging cost environment which means we have had to make tough choices about where we can afford to invest and where we need to do things differently to make our business more efficient and effective.

‘The decisions we are announcing today are essential to ensure we continue to drive forward our momentum but have also meant some difficult choices impacting our dedicated colleagues in a number of parts of our business.’

Sainsbury's has announced it will cut more than 3,000 jobs and plans to shut its remaining in-store cafes as part of a major overhaul

Sainsbury’s has announced it will cut more than 3,000 jobs and plans to shut its remaining in-store cafes as part of a major overhaul

The announcement comes as the British retail industry braces itself for the impact of the Labour budget.

Many companies have warned they could be forced to cut thousands of jobs and raise prices this year due to the increase in employer national insurance contributions by £25bn from April and a 6.7 per cent rise in the national minimum wage.

In late 2024, Sainsbury’s bosses said the tax increases from the October Budget would hit it with an extra £140 million in costs, warning that the changes would also lead to higher inflation.

Their revamp will see about 20 per cent of their senior management roles axed as part of plans to simplify the head office and management teams.

The company also hoped to ‘explore redeployment opportunities where this is possible’ for people affected.

The latest closures come nearly three years after Sainsbury’s closed 200 in-store cafes and 34 hot food counters as part of a shake-up that put 2,000 jobs at risk.

And last year, it announced it was cutting about 1,500 roles, mostly from a contact centre in Cheshire.

Last Saturday, angry shoppers at a Sainsbury’s branch in the Southampton district of Portswood took out their frustration on animal rights activists blocking their way by trying to barge through with their trolleys.

Simon Roberts, chief executive of the supermarket group, said he was making the cuts as part of the company's attempts to slash spending by a £1billion a year

Simon Roberts, chief executive of the supermarket group, said he was making the cuts as part of the company’s attempts to slash spending by a £1billion a year

Customers were praised online for their defiant response to Animal Rising campaigners staging a sit-in protest in the meat aisle of the busy store.

Calls of ‘Who do you think you are?’ and ‘You move – well, I’ll just knock you out of the way’ are heard in TikTok videos of the confrontation which been shared online.

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