Technology

Verizon to Sell 274 Stores and Cut 3,000 Jobs in Latest Restructuring

Verizon said on July 16, 2026 that it will sell 274 company-owned retail stores to franchise operators and cut about 500 corporate jobs, moves that together affect roughly 3,000 employees. The store sale takes effect August 16 and will leave the carrier with about 1,000 corporate-owned retail locations nationwide, part of a continued cost-cutting push under CEO Dan Schulman.

For customers, the practical change is who runs the store you walk into — not whether Verizon service keeps working.

What Verizon announced

The bulk of the 3,000 affected positions comes from the 274 stores being handed to franchise operators rather than from the corporate layoffs, which account for about 500 of the total. The stores themselves are expected to stay open under new ownership, and Verizon noted that in previous rounds of store divestitures, roughly 70% of employees at the sold locations took jobs with the companies that took over operations.

The 274-store sale is the latest step in a restructuring that has been running for months. Verizon confirmed an earlier wave of several hundred cuts in May, about six months after it eliminated more than 13,000 jobs in the largest single round of layoffs in the company’s history.

Verizon’s 2026 cuts at a glance

Action Scale Timing
Largest-ever single layoff round 13,000+ jobs Roughly late 2025
Earlier corporate cuts Several hundred May 2026
Store sale to franchise operators 274 stores, ~3,000 affected Effective Aug 16, 2026
Latest corporate cuts ~500 jobs Announced July 16, 2026

What it means for customers — including prepaid users

If your local Verizon store is one of the 274 being sold, it will likely keep operating as an authorized franchise location, so in-person account help, upgrades and trade-ins should continue. Service, billing and coverage are unaffected by a change in store ownership.

Prepaid and online-first customers feel the least impact. Verizon’s prepaid brand and its online-only Visible service don’t depend on corporate-owned storefronts, and much of the account management for budget plans already happens through apps and websites rather than a physical store. For anyone weighing a switch to a cheaper option, the store shake-up is a reminder that the value increasingly sits with the prepaid and MVNO plans running on these same networks.

Sources: Reuters via Yahoo Finance and Fierce Network; details drawn from Verizon’s disclosure.