The British Heart Foundation has announced it will shut 150 of its charity shops across the UK, a move that underscores the deepening crisis on the high street. The closures, which represent about a fifth of its 730 stores, are blamed on soaring costs, falling footfall, and the ongoing squeeze on household budgets. For many communities in the North, where the charity is a staple of struggling town centres, this is a fresh blow.
The charity has not yet released a full list of affected locations but confirmed that the redundancies will hit store staff, many of whom are volunteers. The decision comes as the retail sector grapples with rising energy bills, higher wages, and a shift to online shopping. Charity shops, long seen as a lifeline for low-income families, are now feeling the strain too.
This is part of a wider pattern. Since 2019, the UK has lost over 8,000 chain stores, according to the Centre for Retail Research. But the closure of charity shops is particularly poignant. They are not just places to buy cheap clothes or furniture. They are community anchors. For the unemployed, the elderly, or the working poor, they offer affordable essentials. They also provide volunteer opportunities and raise funds for vital medical research.
The British Heart Foundation said it needs to "adapt to the changing face of the high street" and will focus on larger stores and online sales. But for towns like Bolton, Middlesbrough, or Doncaster, where each closure leaves another empty unit, the news is grim. The decline of the high street is not just an economic problem. It is a social one. When the charity shop goes, so does a bit of the community's heart.
The union representing charity workers, Unite, called the move "devastating" and criticised the lack of consultation. It warned that other charities will follow suit if the government does not step in. But ministers have so far resisted calls for a retail-specific support package, preferring to point to general business rates relief.
For now, shoppers must brace for more empty windows in their local high street. And for those who rely on charity shops to make ends meet, the options are narrowing. This is the real economy: jobs lost, communities weakened, and a safety net fraying at the edges.








