Cult-favorite doughnut chain closes more locations without warning
While corporate giants are winning over the typical morning coffee consumer, many popular independent food spots are secretly struggling.
The numbers suggest that the pastry business is doing well, with Dunkin’ currently dominating in the United States with more than 10,000 locations and a strong position in the coffee space.
Placer.ai found that Dunkin’s customer traffic, though slightly declining, remained largely stable in 2024, with nearly 40% of visits occurring during the early morning hours, underscoring the chain’s strength in the breakfast market.
At the same time, the chain’s master franchisee in India, Jubilant FoodWorks, confirmed it will not renew the franchise agreements due to weak sales, declining store counts, and ongoing financial losses.
Industry-wide, smaller chains are facing similar pressure across the United States, where Dunkin’ remains profitable. The data suggest larger chains have generally weathered recent cost pressures better than many regional operators.
Large quick-service restaurant (QSR) chains can easily absorb massive supply chaininflation, but “a small restaurant will be far less able to absorb those costs without raising menu prices,” hospitality expert Izzy Kharasch explained to the Food Institute in January 2026.
Now, a cult-favorite brand famous for its viral, boundary-pushing sweet treats offered across 10 states, has begun quietly shutting down locations without warning.
Voodoo Doughnut quietly closes more locations
The Voodoo Doughnut chain has closed two of its Houston-area stores, one located at 1214 Westheimer Rd. in Montrose and the other at 1301 N. Fry Rd. in Katy.
Though the company’s official website still lists these locations as open, visits to the stores confirmed they have closed, reported Que Onda Magazine and Chron.
Google Maps now lists the locations as permanently closed.
The latest closure comes about two years after the brand abruptly shuttered its Cypress location, catching residents by surprise, Chron reported at the time.
Following these most recent closures, the Portland-based company has only one remaining location in the Houston area, located at 3175 Washington Ave., which was the first location to open in the city.

Voodoo Doughnut remaining locations:
- Arizona
Tempe: 1324 S Rural Rd., Tempe, AZ 85281 - California
Universal CityWalk: 100 Universal City Plaza, Hollywood, CA 91608Venice Beach: 66 Windward Ave., Venice, CA 90291
West Hollywood: 7101 Melrose Ave., Los Angeles, CA 90046
- Colorado
Boulder: 3210 Arapahoe Dr., Boulder, CO 80303Broadway (Denver): 98 South Broadway, Denver, CO 80209
Colfax (Denver): 1520 East Colfax, Denver, CO 80218
Denver International Airport: B Concourse, Upstairs, Denver, CO
- Florida
Universal Orlando Resort: 6000 Universal Blvd., Orlando, FL 32819Wynwood: 2401 NW 2nd Ave., Miami, FL 33127
- Illinois
Fulton Market (Chicago): 945 SW Randolph St., Chicago, IL 60607 - New York
Union Square (New York City): 41 Union Square W., New York, NY 10003 (listed as coming soon) - Oregon
Davis (Portland): 1501 NE Davis St., Portland, OR 97232Eugene: 20 East Broadway, Eugene, OR 97401
Oak Grove (Milwaukie): 14620 SE McLoughlin Blvd., Milwaukie, OR 97267
Old Town (Portland): 22 SW 3rd Ave., Portland, OR 97204 (The Original Shop)
- Tennessee
Nashville International Airport: International Terminal, Nashville, TN - Texas
6th Street (Austin): 212 E 6th St., Austin, TX 78701Burnet Road (Austin): 5408 Burnet Rd., Austin, TX 78756
Lower Greenville (Dallas): 1806 Greenville Ave., Ste. 120, Dallas, TX
San Antonio: 400 E. Houston St., San Antonio, TX 78205
Washington & Waugh (Houston): 3715 Washington Ave., Houston, Texas 77007 (sole remaining Houston location)
- Washington
Bellevue: 10713 Main St., Bellevue, WA 98004Capitol Hill (Seattle): 1201 Pine St., Seattle, WA 98101
Vancouver: 8203 NE Vancouver Mall Dr., Vancouver, WA 98662
Source: Voodoo Doughnut
Why Voodoo Doughnut suddenly closed 2 Houston locations
The company neither announced the closures nor provided any official statements following them. Both Que Onda Magazine and Chron reached out to the company for comment, but Voodoo Doughnut hasn’t responded.
However, in a detailed review, Houstonia Magazine explicitly highlights Voodoo’s sudden downsizing as an example of a broader economic trend suffocating smaller, local chains.
“With rising labor and food costs and a dicey economy, the dining scene across the country is undoubtedly undergoing shifts, and Houston is no exception. This month has brought some crushing restaurant closures, with one noticeable pattern: small and local restaurant chains seem to be shrinking,” wrote Houstonia’s Brittany Britto Garley.
According to Huy Do, a market researcher and trendologist at Datassential, smaller restaurant chains, such as those with 50 or fewer storefronts, are downsizing, while the biggest national brands are doing “the heaviest of the lifting” on new openings, reported Restaurant Dive.
Moreover, preliminary data from Technomic show that chains grew by 3%, while small restaurants declined by more than 2% last year.
Oversaturated market, fierce competition and Texas’ culture
Smaller brands are failing to rise to the challenges of constant traffic declines, growing expenses, and an oversaturated market, according to experts. The competitive landscape also includes Texas-based Shipley Do-Nuts, one of the state’s dominant doughnut chains.
As documented by Mashed, local institutions like Shipley built their empires by offering a “local savory treat: kolaches… a sausage-filled pastry of Czech origin” right alongside fresh glazed rings, helping establish breakfast traditions that many industry observers say can be difficult for outside chains to compete with.
While Voodoo Doughnut hasn’t explained the Houston closures, local discussions offer some insight into the competitive landscape.
In one Reddit thread, Houston residents debated why national doughnut chains such as Dunkin’ and Tim Hortons have never achieved the same ubiquity in the area as they have in parts of the Northeast.
Many commenters pointed to several key reasons:
- Shipley’s dominance: Houstonians possess immense loyalty to Shipley Do-Nuts, a deeply rooted local institution that heavily shapes the region’s pastry market.
- Mom-and-pop saturation: The city is packed with independent, family-owned bakeries making fresh, low-cost pastries daily.
- The savory ritual: Industry observers say many Texas consumers prioritize hot, savory staples like breakfast tacos and local kolaches over mass-produced chain doughnuts.
Voodoo Doughnut once sold medicinal doughnuts that were banned by the FDA
Founded in Portland, Oregon, in 2003, the unconventional and stylish doughnut chain Voodoo Doughnut became popular for more than 50 types of doughnuts, both yeast and cake versions.
What also made it stand out — besides its vibrant pink interiors featuring murals of its Voodoo loa mascot, Baron Samedi — were the original creations that pushed major boundaries.
Related: Another iconic mall retailer quietly closes 13 stores
While you may be familiar with its chocolate-covered, raspberry jelly-filled voodoo doll doughnut (complete with a pretzel stake through the heart), the brand also once served medicinal flavors, writes Mashed.
These medicinal pastries, targeted at the late-night drinking crowd, allegedly included a doughnut dipped in Pepto-Bismol and sprayed with Tums, alongside another laced with NyQuil, before the FDA quickly put a stop to their production.
What customers should know about the Voodoo Doughnut closures
Those who crave Voodoo Doughnut treats in the Houston area still have one remaining option on Washington Ave. The chain’s presence in the city might be smaller, but it is not completely gone.
While Voodoo Doughnut’s expansion in Texas coincides with a market shaped by deeply rooted local breakfast traditions and intense competition, the company hasn’t explained what prompted the Houston closures.
This pullback doesn’t necessarily signal broader problems for the company and could reflect an effort to concentrate on stronger-performing locations, a common tactic among larger food chains.
Trimming underperforming assets helps ensure corporate capital is deployed efficiently, allowing a chain to “build on an already strong system,” Wendy’s CEO Kirk Tanner explained when navigating a similar structural cleanup in the QSR space, Restaurant Business reported.
For cult favorites like Voodoo Doughnut, scaling back from oversaturated markets might be just the move it needs to continue building its unique brand.
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