According to www.supplychaindive.com, Levi Strauss & Co. is closing its Hebron, Kentucky, distribution center after a yearlong delay, with employee separations scheduled to begin in late August 2026.
Delayed closure amid demand surge
The company had originally planned to shutter the facility earlier but postponed the move due to heightened demand, according to the report. The Hebron site — located at 3750 North Bend Road — had served as a key node in Levi’s domestic logistics network. Its operations will be fully transferred to a third-party omnichannel fulfillment center operated by Maersk in Groveport, Ohio. This shift supports Levi Strauss’ broader effort to streamline distribution and align capacity with evolving retail channel requirements.
Workforce impact and timeline
A June 30, 2026, Worker Adjustment and Retraining Notification Act (WARN) notice filed with the Kentucky Labor Cabinet confirms the closure. The notice states that approximately 303 employees will be affected. Separations are set to commence around August 2026, following a transition period during which some functions remain active. No relocation or reassignment offers were extended to impacted staff, per the WARN filing.
Omnichannel strategy and operational rationale
Levi Strauss’ CFO Harmit Singh stated that the consolidation “will support omnichannel growth and drive efficiency.” The move reflects a strategic pivot toward outsourced, scalable fulfillment infrastructure — a trend increasingly adopted by apparel brands facing volatile demand and rising labor costs. Maersk’s Groveport facility, which already services Levi Strauss, offers integrated capabilities for e-commerce, store replenishment, and returns processing across multiple channels.
Broader industry context
This decision follows similar recent actions by major retailers: In Q2 2025, Walmart exited two legacy regional distribution centers in favor of automated hubs in Georgia and Texas; Amazon reduced its reliance on owned fulfillment space by 12% in fiscal year 2025 through expanded third-party logistics partnerships. According to industry data from Armstrong & Associates, third-party logistics penetration in U.S. apparel distribution rose to 68% in 2025 — up from 59% in 2022. For supply chain professionals, the shift signals growing pressure to balance cost discipline with responsiveness, especially as nearshoring and hybrid fulfillment models gain traction.
Practitioner implications
From an operational standpoint, the closure underscores the increasing importance of contract logistics governance. Managing performance, service-level agreements, and technology integration with providers like Maersk requires dedicated oversight — particularly when consolidating high-volume, time-sensitive flows such as denim replenishment. Practitioners must also anticipate workforce transition challenges: The 303 positions lost in Hebron represent one of the largest single-site reductions in the apparel sector this year, highlighting the need for proactive talent redeployment planning even in outsourced models.
Source: Supply Chain Dive
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










