A Winn-Dixie storeA Winn-Dixie store
Southeastern Grocers is rebranding itself as The Winn-Dixie Co. | Jessica Palombo, Jacksonville Today

Winn-Dixie scales back to focus on Florida

Published on October 21, 2025 at 12:21 pm
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Southeastern Grocers, the Jacksonville-based parent company of Winn-Dixie supermarkets, announced Tuesday that it will rebrand the company next year as The Winn-Dixie Co. and renew its focus on Florida.

Dozens of remodeled and new stores are planned or underway, the company said. Among the changes, the company will:

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  • Expand its liquor store portfolio.
  • Open new stores in North Florida but pull back from several states.
  • Grow its Own Brand products and return its iconic Lip Lickin’ Chicken.
  • Pilot new features such as third-party online grocery delivery and return kiosks. (Southeastern announced in September that customers could now order Winn-Dixie groceries on Amazon.)
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The changes will expand Winn-Dixie’s presence in North Florida and chart a course for the company’s second century, the company said in a news release.

“As we enter our next century as The Winn-Dixie Company — a brand-new 100-year-old company — we are accelerating growth where our roots run deepest while staying true to our purpose of
feeding and enriching the communities, families and neighbors who have supported us for generations,” Anthony Hucker, chairman and CEO of Southeastern Grocers, said in the release.

Winn-Dixie history

Winn-Dixie was founded in 1925, while Harveys was started a century ago by Iris and J.M. Harvey. At least 70 Winn-Dixie and Harveys supermarkets, liquors stores and pharmacies operate in Northeast Florida, many clustered in Jacksonville and northeastern Clay County as well as St. Johns County.

The company has had its financial ups and downs in recent years.

Southeastern was formed in 2012 after Winn-Dixie Stores Inc. merged with Bi-Lo LLC. Both Winn-Dixie and Bi-Lo went through Chapter 11 restructurings before their merger.

Southeastern also filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization in 2018, saying it planned to close 94 underperforming stores, including six in North Florida and Southeast Georgia. It continued operating 582 other stores in seven states under the brands Winn-Dixie, Bi-Lo, Harveys and Fresco y Mas.

In 2021, Southeastern officially pulled the plug on plans to take the company public. It did not cite a specific reason but noted that “the company will continue to evaluate the timing for the proposed offering as market conditions develop.”

German grocery store company Aldi bought Winn-Dixie and Harveys grocery stores last year from Southeastern in a $9 billion plan to expand Aldi’s nationwide footprint.

Then in February, a consortium of private investors acquired Southeastern from Aldi. Hucker and C&S Wholesale Grocers, a long-time supplier for the company, spearheaded the deal.

New Winn-Dixie stores

As part of its Florida focus, Southeastern has finalized an agreement to acquire Hitchcock’s Markets in Alachua, Keystone Heights and Williston. Those stores will be converted to Winn-Dixie and opened in phases beginning in late 2025.

The new Williston Winn-Dixie, at 434 E. Noble Ave., is expected to open in early December, ahead of the scheduled closing of the nearby Winn-Dixie at 727 W. Noble Ave. Associates from the nearby Williston location will have the opportunity to continue serving customers in the new store.

The Alachua and Keystone Heights Winn-Dixie stores are slated to open by summer 2026.

Southeastern said it has decided to “transition ownership” of most of its locations outside Florida. It has reached agreements or is advancing plans with multiple grocers, including 32 Winn-Dixie
stores and eight Harveys Supermarkets in Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana and Mississippi.

Southeastern will continue to serve southern Georgia with stores in Brunswick, Folkston, Lake Park, St. Simons Island and Valdosta. Store closings are expected to be completed by year’s end.

After those transactions, The Winn-Dixie Company will move forward with about 130 conventional grocery stores and 140 freestanding and grocery-adjacent liquor stores in Florida and southern Georgia.

Hucker will remain as chairman and CEO of The Winn-Dixie Co.


author image Senior News Editor

Randy comes to Jacksonville from the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, where as metro editor, he led investigative coverage of the Parkland school shooting that won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for public service. He has spent more than 40 years in reporting and editing positions in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Ohio and Florida.