Nationwide Retail Collapse Reaches Disney World as 4 Locations Permanently Close
For years, Disney Springs has felt like the safest bet on Walt Disney World property. Even when parks change, attractions close, or crowds thin out, the shopping district always seemed stable. Familiar storefronts stayed put. Dining favorites felt permanent. It was easy to assume that if something worked at Disney Springs, it would keep working.
That assumption is getting harder to make.
Over the past two years, four well-known locations have permanently closed at Disney Springs — and one of them is the direct result of a nationwide retail collapse that has finally reached Disney World.

Francesca’s Signals a Much Bigger Problem
The most impactful closure right now is Francesca’s, a women’s boutique brand that once thrived in shopping centers across the country. Unlike other Disney Springs exits, this one isn’t tied to changing guest tastes or a quiet lease ending. Francesca’s is shutting down entirely.
The company announced plans to liquidate and close all remaining stores nationwide, including its Disney Springs location. For guests, this closure feels different. It’s not sudden, but it’s unavoidable. Clearance signs and shrinking inventory make it clear the end is near.
What makes this moment stand out is what it represents. A national retail collapse — the kind that’s emptied malls across the country — has now reached one of Disney’s most successful commercial spaces. That alone has caused some longtime visitors to pause.
Sanuk Disappears Without Much Warning
Before Francesca’s shutdown entered the picture, Disney Springs had already lost Sanuk. The casual footwear brand quietly closed its location in August 2024, ending a long run that stretched back nearly a decade.
Sanuk always felt like a perfect Disney Springs fit. Comfortable vacation shoes. A laid-back vibe. The kind of store guests popped into without planning. And then, suddenly, it was gone.
There was no major announcement. No farewell. Just an empty storefront where a familiar name once stood.

A Piece of Disney Springs History Ends
Some closures hurt because of nostalgia, and Sosa Family Cigars falls squarely into that category. The family-owned shop had been part of Disney’s entertainment district in some form for more than 25 years, dating back to the Pleasure Island era.
Its closure in early 2023 didn’t come with drama, but it marked the end of one of the last independent holdovers from a very different Disney Springs. For longtime fans, it wasn’t just a store closing — it was the loss of a connection to Disney World’s past.
Sprinkles Closes Overnight
Then came one of the most jarring exits of all. On January 1, 2026, Sprinkles Cupcakes abruptly shut down its Disney Springs location as part of a nationwide shutdown of the entire brand.
One day it was open. The next day it wasn’t.
Guests arrived to locked doors. Employees were reportedly caught off guard. The cupcake ATM — once a novelty stop for visitors — went dark without warning. It was a sharp reminder that popularity doesn’t always guarantee longevity.
What This Means for Disney Springs
Taken together, these closures feel less like coincidence and more like a shift. Francesca’s represents the national retail crisis finally touching Disney World. Sanuk shows how quickly established brands can exit. Sosa Family Cigars reminds fans that even long-standing traditions aren’t immune. Sprinkles proves how sudden change can be.
Disney Springs will move forward. New tenants will arrive. Empty spaces will fill. But the idea that this district is immune to broader retail struggles no longer holds.
And that realization may change how guests look at Disney Springs — not as a permanent fixture, but as a space that’s evolving faster than ever.



