The Kellogg’s plant on 96th and F Streets in Omaha, which has been producing boxes of Frosted Flakes and Froot Loops since 1942, when Americans were still eating cereal for breakfast without much thought, has a subtly depressing quality. It is spread across three buildings and is almost 900,000 square feet in size. It has survived decades of shifting consumer preferences, corporate mergers, and economic cycles. It will be empty by the middle of August.
The final layoff schedule for WK Kellogg Co.’s Omaha facility has been confirmed, and the figures are precise enough to be painful. Between July 20 and August 3, about 100 employees will lose their jobs. Between August 4 and August 18, the remaining workers—roughly 350 more—follow. Severance will be given, according to the company. The structure will be put up for sale. It becomes someone else’s problem after that.

The conclusion isn’t particularly shocking. In August 2024, Kellogg’s made the announcement, portraying it as a component of a larger supply chain modernization initiative. And that might be true in theory. However, businesses often use the term “modernization” when they don’t want to publicly acknowledge the more subtle aspect of the product’s structural decline. Sales of cold cereal have been declining for years; it’s not a slow decline, but a significant decline. In the 52 weeks that ended in July 2021, Americans purchased about 2.5 billion boxes. That had decreased by over 13% to roughly 2.1 billion boxes by the same time in 2025. It’s not a blip.
It’s caused by a change that seems more generational than seasonal. Eggs, Greek yoghurt, overnight oats, and other high-protein, low-sugar breakfasts are becoming more popular among consumers, and the societal acceptance of eating processed food guilt-free is gradually disappearing. Before allowing their children to approach the cereal section, parents who grew up on Froot Loops are now checking ingredient labels for artificial dyes and added sugars. The same is being pushed by federal nutrition guidelines. Retailers like Target have already promised to completely stop selling cereals with certified artificial colors, and the FDA has been pushing food companies away from petroleum-based synthetic dyes.
The industry may have anticipated all of this and just took too long to react. The fact that it’s not just Kellogg’s is what gives this moment a unique feel. 163 jobs will be lost when General Mills closes its TNT Crust pizza manufacturing facility in St. Charles, Missouri. Following the discontinuation of several granola lines and Honeycomb, Post Consumer Brands laid off 71 employees at its Battle Creek, Michigan, facility. Although the closures are dispersed throughout the Midwest and South, if you take a closer look, you can see a fairly obvious pattern.
The Omaha closure comes at a challenging time for Nebraska, in particular. Only the Tyson Foods closure in Lexington earlier this year, which resulted in the loss of over 3,000 jobs, will surpass the WK Kellogg layoffs, which are expected to be the second-largest in the state in at least three years. As of last August, the manufacturing sector in Nebraska had already lost over 5,000 jobs from the previous year. Economic press releases don’t fully address the questions raised by witnessing two major food manufacturers leave the same state within months of one another.
It is tempting to present all of this as inevitable, as the result of a market making logical adjustments. And that is most likely partially accurate. Nostalgia alone was never going to sustain an 84-year-old plant with a layout from the mid-20th century. However, the story isn’t abstract for the 451 workers in Omaha and the more than 100 who are currently facing uncertainty in Memphis. Both the summer and the final day are extremely particular.
FAQs
1. Why is WK Kellogg closing its Omaha plant?
Outdated infrastructure and years of declining cold cereal sales forced the closure.
2. How many workers are losing jobs at the Omaha facility?
451 employees will be laid off in two phases by mid-August.
3. Which other cereal companies are cutting jobs right now?
General Mills and Post Consumer Brands have also announced recent plant closures.
4. Why are Americans buying less cereal than before?
Consumers are shifting toward high-protein, lower-sugar breakfast options instead.
5. When will the Omaha Kellogg’s plant permanently shut down?
Operations are expected to cease completely by August 18, 2026.
