Wren Kitchens’ showroom closure has moved fast, and the most important detail is also the clearest one: Wren’s U.S. showroom and studio operations are no longer open. The closure affects customers who were planning visits, waiting on appointments, or already had kitchen orders in progress.
The company’s U.S. website message told visitors that its “showrooms and studios are now closed,” and customers looking for order help were directed to submit an inquiry form.
Showrooms and Studios Are No Longer Open
The confirmed closure covers Wren Kitchens’ U.S. operations, including showrooms and studios. Wren had entered the U.S. market in 2020, starting with a showroom in Milford, Connecticut.
It later expanded into other locations, including Newington, Connecticut, and supported its U.S. plans with a manufacturing facility in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. Before the shutdown, reports said Wren had 15 U.S. showrooms across four states, along with design studios inside Home Depot stores.
That matters because Wren was not just running small display points. It had built a wider kitchen sales, design, and manufacturing setup for the U.S. market. So this closure is not just about a few locked showroom doors. It affects the full customer journey, from design appointments to placed orders and follow-up support.
Why the Bankruptcy Filing Matters for Customers
The closure is now tied to a Chapter 7 bankruptcy filing. Court record summaries show that Wren US Holdings, Inc. filed a voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware on April 24, 2026. The case number listed is 26-10581.
The same records show the case was still active with later docket activity on April 27, 2026.
The filing listed Wren US Holdings, Inc. as also known as Wren Kitchens. It also listed the debtor’s address in Barton-upon-Humber, United Kingdom, which connects the U.S. filing to the wider Wren business name.
For customers, the key point is not the legal wording.
The key point is that Chapter 7 usually means a company is moving into a liquidation process rather than trying to keep normal operations going. That makes clear communication, order records, receipts, payment proof, and written contact attempts especially important.
Wren’s Closure Reaches Home Depot Store Locations
Home Depot also addressed the closure because Wren operated kitchen studios in some Home Depot stores. In a statement reported by WFSB, Home Depot said Wren Kitchens had alerted it that Wren had ceased U.S. operations, including closing showrooms inside Home Depot stores.
Home Depot also said it had no previous notice of Wren’s intent to close and was evaluating how customers were affected.
This is an important detail for anyone who met Wren through a Home Depot location. Based on Home Depot’s statement, these were Wren operations inside the stores, not a normal Home Depot kitchen department closure.
How to Handle Payments, Orders, and Documents
The safest next step is to gather every document connected to the order. That includes the sales agreement, design plans, invoices, receipts, payment records, emails, text messages, delivery dates, and names of anyone involved in the sale. Customers should also keep a copy of any form submitted through Wren’s website.
WFSB reported that people waiting on orders were advised to contact their financial institution and keep records of communication with the company. That is a practical first move, especially for customers who pay by credit card, debit card, check, or financing.
Customers should avoid relying on phone conversations alone. Written records are stronger. If a bank, card provider, lender, installer, or contractor is involved, each conversation should be followed by a short written summary.
Important Details Are Still Missing
The confirmed information does not yet answer every customer question. It is not fully clear how pending orders, deposits, warranties, installations, or unfinished projects will be handled. It is also not clear from the confirmed public information whether Wren’s U.K. operations are affected by the U.S. closure.
For now, the known facts are narrow but serious. Wren’s U.S. showrooms and studios are closed. Wren US Holdings, Inc. has filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy in Delaware. Home Depot says Wren also closed the showrooms it operated inside Home Depot stores. Customers with active orders should move quickly, keep records, and contact their payment provider for guidance.





