How many Coca-Cola plants are closing and which cities are affected?

Checked on December 3, 2025
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Executive summary

Coca‑Cola has closed or announced at least five U.S. bottling and distribution sites since 2024 — affecting roughly 900 workers in total — with reported closures or pending shutdowns in Modesto (CA), American Canyon/Napa County (CA), Salinas (CA), Dunedin (FL) and Northampton (MA) (near‑term) [1] [2] [3] [4] [5]. Local reporting shows smaller, separate closures such as a 25‑person bottling plant in Mapunapuna, Hawaii, announced in December 2025; available sources do not mention whether that Hawaii closure is counted in the five‑site total above [6].

1. Five closures across California, Florida and Massachusetts — the numbers

Multiple outlets report that Coca‑Cola’s recent wave of U.S. site shutdowns totals five production and distribution locations and that the combined job losses approach 900 workers: Yahoo and Geekspin both summarize the five‑site tally and the near‑900 worker impact [2] [7]. Reporting breaks those job counts into site‑level figures cited by local outlets — Modesto: 101 jobs; American Canyon (Napa County): about 135 jobs reported; Northampton: reports vary but local coverage cites up to roughly 300 positions in limbo — together contributing to the near‑900 total [3] [4] [7].

2. Which cities and facilities are specifically named

News items and local reports identify Modesto, American Canyon (Napa County), Salinas and Northampton as affected by closures or consolidation; Dunedin, Florida, is also listed among closures since 2024 in aggregated reporting [1] [2] [5]. Modesto’s closure and the 101 job losses were publicly filed in late 2024 [3]. American Canyon’s shutdown and the 135 affected workers were reported in mid‑2025 [4]. Salinas’ longtime warehouse closed after seventy years and was consolidated with San Jose operations [5]. Northampton’s long‑deferred closure has been repeatedly reported and remains a major local concern [7].

3. Timeline and status: closed vs. announced vs. delayed

Sources show a mix of completed closures, active shutdowns and delayed plans. Modesto’s closure and layoffs were executed with notices filed in late 2024 [3]. American Canyon’s main phase began mid‑2025 with full closure expected by end of 2025 per industry reporting [8] [4]. Salinas’ warehouse operations were reported closed in August 2025 after a consolidation decision [5]. Northampton has been under a multiyear closure plan with repeated postponements; some outlets report final operations slated to cease by end of 2025 while other pieces frame it as “in limbo” with hundreds of jobs at risk [9] [7]. Aggregators and news sites treat these as part of a single restructuring wave spanning 2024–2025 [1] [2].

4. Company rationale and industry context

Reporting attributes the closures not to outright financial distress at Coca‑Cola but to an “asset‑right” strategy: increased automation, efficiency drives and outsourcing bottling to third‑party co‑packers so Coca‑Cola can focus on brand management, according to multiple accounts [1] [4] [7]. Industry summaries emphasize that Coca‑Cola still operates roughly 950+ facilities globally, framing the five closures as small numerically but significant locally [1] [7].

5. Local impacts and political consequences

Local reporting highlights severe community effects: dozens to hundreds of jobs lost at single sites, municipal revenue implications (for Northampton in particular), and acute worry among long‑tenured workers who have served at facilities for decades — Salinas’ warehouse closure after 70 years is reported with personal stories of affected employees [5] [2] [8]. Sources show municipal leaders are weighing responses and that displaced workers are being steered toward other positions within Coke’s network or partner firms, but details and outcomes vary by location [4] [5].

6. Disputed totals and reporting caveats

Not every source lists the same five sites or the exact job totals; some local reports focus only on single closures and give different headcounts [3] [4] [5]. Aggregators that report the “five sites, ~900 workers” figure rely on combining disparate local filings and company statements [2] [7]. Available sources do not provide a single Coca‑Cola corporate press release enumerating all five locations together; that consolidated corporate confirmation is not found in current reporting [1] [2].

7. What to watch next

Follow local news in Northampton, American Canyon and other named cities for final closure dates, severance and placement programs, and any state or municipal interventions; industry outlets indicate additional timing changes remain possible as closures have been postponed previously [9] [8] [7]. Reporters and residents should also track statements from individual bottlers (e.g., Reyes, Liberty) and third‑party co‑packers, since the company’s outsourcing strategy is central to how production will be shifted [3] [4].

Limitations: this summary uses only the supplied articles; available sources do not list a complete Coca‑Cola corporate roster confirming every closure as a single package, nor do they reconcile every differing job count across local filings [1] [2] [3].

Want to dive deeper?
How many Coca-Cola bottling plants closed in 2025 and where were they located
Which Coca-Cola facilities are scheduled for closure and what jobs will be lost
Why is Coca-Cola closing plants — corporate strategy, automation, or demand shifts?
How will plant closures affect local economies and supply chains in the affected cities?
What incentives or responses are city and state officials offering to retain Coca-Cola operations?