Kroger Co. agreed to acquire Giant Eagle Inc., adding about $9 billion in annual sales and more than 200 stores as the largest US supermarket operator by revenue doubles down on the Midwest and Mid-Atlantic.
The transaction, announced Wednesday, adds 197 supermarkets and 11 standalone pharmacies across northern Ohio, western Pennsylvania, West Virginia, Maryland and Indiana to Kroger's portfolio of roughly 2,800 stores. Kroger's board unanimously approved the deal, the companies said in a statement.
"This acquisition strengthens our presence in key geographies where we see strong customer loyalty and growth potential," Kroger Chief Executive Officer Greg Foran said in the statement. "Giant Eagle's family-owned heritage and commitment to quality align closely with our own values."
The purchase price and payment structure were not disclosed. Giant Eagle is privately held, and the companies did not specify whether the consideration would be cash, stock or a combination. The deal is expected to close in the second half of 2027, subject to regulatory approvals from the Federal Trade Commission and state antitrust authorities.
Grocery consolidation accelerates
The acquisition comes as the US grocery industry undergoes a wave of consolidation. Kroger itself has been pruning underperforming locations — the company said in June 2025 it would close 60 stores over 18 months — while simultaneously seeking scale to compete with Walmart Inc., Costco Wholesale Corp. and Amazon.com Inc.'s Whole Foods.
Foran acknowledged the pressure on operating costs during Kroger's first-quarter earnings call, saying "our operating costs have been growing faster than our sales. That's not sustainable."
Giant Eagle, founded in 1931, has also been shrinking its footprint. The chain closed stores in North Versailles, Pennsylvania, and Columbus, Ohio, earlier this year, and plans to shutter a Lancaster, Ohio, location this summer. The company operates more than 200 food and pharmacy retail locations across five states.
The deal gives Kroger access to Giant Eagle's pharmacy operations, a growing margin driver as supermarket chains expand health-care services. Kroger already operates nearly 2,200 pharmacies and 224 clinics.
Antitrust risks loom
The combination would concentrate grocery market share in overlapping markets such as northern Ohio and western Pennsylvania, where both chains operate. The FTC under the Biden administration has taken an aggressive stance on grocery mergers, challenging Kroger's proposed $24.6 billion acquisition of Albertsons Cos. in 2024 before the deal was abandoned.
"Any deal that reduces competition in local grocery markets will face intense scrutiny," said Sarah Miller, executive director of the American Economic Liberties Project, a Washington-based antitrust advocacy group. "The FTC has made clear that supermarket consolidation drives up prices for consumers."
Kroger and Giant Eagle said they expect to work with regulators to address any concerns. The companies noted that the combined entity would still trail Walmart, which controls roughly 22% of the US grocery market, according to data from IBISWorld.
The transaction requires approval from the FTC and state regulators in Ohio and Pennsylvania. The companies said they would begin the regulatory review process immediately.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.