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Wren Kitchens Abrupt U.S. Shutdown: Showrooms Close, Layoffs Hit Pennsylvania
24 April 2026
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Wren Kitchens Abrupt U.S. Shutdown: Showrooms Close, Layoffs Hit Pennsylvania

Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, April 24, 2026, 07:06 (EDT)

  • Wren US Holdings announced all its U.S. showrooms and studios have closed.
  • Layoffs hit retail and manufacturing-related locations across northeastern Pennsylvania, according to local reports.
  • This pulls back on the 2020 expansion, which had pledged 360 jobs in Luzerne County and attracted state incentives.

Wren Kitchens has shut the doors on its U.S. showrooms and studios, abruptly halting its American expansion and putting Pennsylvania workers out of jobs—without much of a public statement. On the company’s U.S. contact page, a note reads that it “regretted that showrooms and studios are now closed” and sends customers to an online form for assistance. Wren Kitchens

Luzerne County’s timeline is notable, since Wren wasn’t simply a standard mall tenant. The company arrived in northeastern Pennsylvania in 2020, unveiling plans for its North American headquarters and a cabinet manufacturing facility in Hanover Township and Sugar Notch—a project pitched as bringing 360 jobs to the area.

WOLF/FOX56 said the Wilkes-Barre Township Commons showroom at 3330 Wilkes-Barre Twp Commons was among those shuttered, noting Wren operated 15 standalone showrooms in the U.S. According to the station, Wren’s website posted the closure notice, and its media phone line also had a recorded message about the shutdown.

Late Thursday, The Times Leader said Wren Kitchens pulled the plug on its entire U.S. business, pointing to comments from at least one ex-employee and the now-inactive U.S. site. WNEP also confirmed Wren US Holdings shuttered Pennsylvania showrooms and cut jobs, after talking with someone who recently worked at the Sugar Notch warehouse.

How many workers are impacted? Still uncertain. FOX56 reported it wasn’t clear if the roughly 300 people working in Hanover Township would be affected, pointing out that location handled manufacturing and corporate operations—not showroom sales.

When Wren announced the move back in 2020, manufacturing and logistics director Rafal Klimek billed it as a push into “the largest home improvement market in the world.” Klimek pointed to Luzerne County, saying its workforce and strategic spot put much of the U.S. population just a short drive away. Woodworking Network

Wren’s Pennsylvania incentives package stacked up to a $1.25 million Pennsylvania First grant, $392,400 in workforce training funds via WEDnet, plus as much as $720,000 in job creation tax credits pegged to new hires. The Governor’s Action Team and state international business officials handled the project coordination.

The shutdown comes on the heels of a rough stretch for Wren’s parent company. Back in October, KBBreview noted that West Retail Group, which owns Wren Kitchens, reported a net loss topping £15 million for 2024. More than 500 jobs were cut over the same period. The company also said Wren US Holdings was “investing heavily in anticipation of future growth.” kbbreview

With Wren stepping back, there’s less competition in a kitchen-remodel field already packed with players: Home Depot and Lowe’s both handle cabinet installs, and IKEA is in the mix with its U.S. cabinet lines. The distinction? Wren’s approach was all about showrooms, design consults, and custom cabinet sales—a sharp contrast to the big-box style of doing things.

The next hurdle is legal and logistical. Employees are going to ask if the federal Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act—known as the WARN Act—kicks in. The WARN Act typically obligates employers with at least 100 workers to provide 60 days’ advance notice before any mass layoff or plant shutdown covered by the statute.

The April 2026 WARN notices for LNS Chipblaster and Bowhead Logistics Management appeared on Pennsylvania’s official WARN notice page, but searching the same site turned up nothing for Wren. That doesn’t clarify whether Wren ever needed to file or eventually did; it just reflects what the state’s list showed as of Friday morning.

Customers face a more pressing issue: the fate of their deposits, orders, and upcoming installations. Wren directed questions to an online form, but local coverage has yet to turn up a detailed company response on the reasons for its U.S. shutdown or its plans for incomplete orders.

Khadija Saeed is a financial markets reporter at TS2.tech, specializing in stocks, technology and emerging industries. She studied economics and finance at the London School of Economics and previously worked in market research before moving into financial journalism. Her coverage focuses on the companies, innovations and economic trends influencing global investors.

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