That’s Delivered Podcast

The Disappearing 24 Hour Store

Trucking Ray Episode 139

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0:00 | 4:16

At 2:30 in the morning, I pull into town thinking a quick Walmart stop will be easy… only to find the doors locked. Then it happens again at another store. And another. Even restaurants that used to serve the night crowd are closed. What started as a simple late-night inconvenience turns into a much bigger question: Why are there so few 24-hour businesses now, and when did America stop staying awake?

We dig into what really happened. Yes, COVID changed everything, but it wasn’t the only reason. Businesses discovered that overnight hours often weren’t profitable enough to justify the extra labor, security, utilities, and theft prevention. Hiring overnight workers became harder, wages increased, and many companies realized they could operate fewer hours without losing much revenue. The overnight economy didn’t disappear overnight—it slowly got priced out.

Then we talk about the people who still live on a different clock. Truck drivers, nurses, police officers, firefighters, EMTs, factory employees, warehouse workers, airport crews, and countless others still work while most of America sleeps. When everything closes, simple errands become real problems: finding baby formula, cold medicine, groceries after a 12-hour shift, or even windshield wipers during a rainstorm. We also explore how online shopping, delivery services, and curbside pickup have permanently changed the way many people shop, making overnight retail less necessary for some—but not for everyone.

👇 Key Takeaways
✅ Why 24-hour stores largely disappeared after the pandemic
✅ The hidden costs businesses face operating overnight
✅ How staffing shortages, theft, and rising wages changed retail
✅ Why night-shift workers feel the impact the most
✅ How online shopping and delivery changed consumer habits
✅ Whether 24-hour stores could make a comeback
✅ Why locations near hospitals, airports, truck stops, and distribution centers may be the first to see overnight retail return

If you enjoyed this episode, be sure to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who works nights. I’d also love to hear from you: (email@truckingray.com) What’s something that’s disappeared or changed over the last decade that you still miss today?

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Welcome And The Road Question

SPEAKER_00

Welcome back to That's A Living. I'm your host, Trucking Ray, and I don't claim to know it all. I just want to learn about it all. So today we're chasing another question from the road. Why are there so few 24-hour stores?

The 2:30 A.M. Closed Store Run

SPEAKER_00

A few weeks ago, I found myself pulling into town around about 2:30 in the morning and was hungry. I needed a few things, and I figured, no problem, I'll just stop at Walmart. Except it was closed. So I tried another store, close. Another one, close. Even some restaurants that I were usually open all night were shutting their doors before midnight. Got me thinking, when did America stop staying awake? Because it wasn't always this way. There was a time when if you worked nights or drove a truck, you could count on finding a place to eat, buy groceries, or pick up medicine almost anywhere. So what happened?

COVID Was Not The Only Reason

SPEAKER_00

Well, I omit something. Before I started digging into this, I blamed COVID. I figured the pandemic changed everything. And while COVID certainly played a role, it wasn't the whole story. The more I researched, the more I realized that business had been quietly rethinking their 24 operations for years. The pandemic accelerated decisions many companies already were considering. When stores reduced overnight hours, many found something surprising. They weren't losing enough overnight sales to justify reopening all night. Then I asked another question.

Staffing Costs Security And Theft

SPEAKER_00

If stores are making money, why wouldn't they stay open? The answer wasn't as simple as profits. Several businesses experts pointed to an overnight staffing issue. Finding employees willing to work through the night has become even harder. Higher wages, security loss, theft prevention, and lower customer traffic all add up. And many stores staying open all night simply no longer made financial sense.

Who Gets Hurt When Nights Close

SPEAKER_00

But another question hit me. If it doesn't make sense for the business, who does it hurt? Truck drivers, nurses, police officers, factory workers, EMTs, firefighters, airport employees, warehouse workers, anyone whose day starts when everyone else is ends, those are the people who lost access the most. And it's not just about buying snacks. Think about this. You need diapers at 3 a.m. Need cold medicine? Need baby formula? Or maybe windshield wipers during a snowstorm? Need groceries after getting off a 12-hour shift? Those small inconveniences become big problems when there's nowhere open.

Online Convenience Replaces Late Runs

SPEAKER_00

I also started wondering have we become a society that simply is more comfortable doing everything online? Maybe instead of driving to the store at midnight, we order it tomorrow. Maybe instead of shopping after work, we have groceries delivered. Technology has changed our expectations as much as our habits. Then I asked myself one final question.

Will 24 Hour Stores Return

SPEAKER_00

Will 24-hour stores ever come back? Some might, especially in places with enough demand near hospitals, airports, busy interstate exits, and large distribution centers. But I don't think America is going back the way it was 20 years ago. The overnight economy has changed maybe permanently. The funny thing is, this episode started because I wanted a late-night sandwich, but it ended up with a much bigger realization. Sometimes the little things we notice on the road really are clues about bigger changes happening across the country.

Bigger Changes And Your Observations

SPEAKER_00

So now I want to ask you, what's something you've noticed that's different than it was 10 or 20 years ago? Maybe it's a truck stop, restaurant, maybe it's how people drive. Leave me a comment, send me a message, or drop an idea for a future episode because I don't claim to know it all. I just want to learn about it all. And today we chase another question from the road. And until next time, don't stress. Just do your best.

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