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Starbucks workers to strike in 40 cities, targeting ‘Red Cup Day’ thumbnail

Starbucks workers to strike in 40 cities, targeting ‘Red Cup Day’

A customer walks out of a Starbucks store with a drink as employees participate in an open-ended strike, part of a nationwide push for improved wages and benefits, in New York City, US, November 13, 2025.

A customer walks out of a Starbucks store with a drink as employees participate in an open-ended strike, part of a nationwide push for improved wages and benefits, in New York City, US, November 13, 2025.
| Photo Credit:
Eduardo Munoz

Unionised Starbucks baristas are launching a wave of walkouts Thursday, a work stoppage they say could grow to become their biggest strike to date.

Workers United, which represents staff at about 550 of Starbucks Corp’s roughly 10,000 company-owned US cafes, plans to strike on Thursday in at least 40 cities, including New York, San Diego, Dallas, Philadelphia and the company’s hometown of Seattle. The protests are open-ended and could expand if there isn’t progress towards finalising a union contract and resolving legal disputes, according to the union. 

The strike, involving more than 1,000 baristas at 65 cafes, is pegged to Starbucks’ annual “Red Cup Day” promotion, when the company draws big crowds by giving away reusable holiday-themed cups. The work stoppage is the latest escalation in the union’s efforts to amp up pressure on the coffee chain, which it accuses of refusing to fairly negotiate. Employees began voting to unionise Starbucks cafes in late 2021, but have yet to secure a collective bargaining agreement.

“We’re prepared to do whatever it takes,” said Jasmine Leli, a barista in Buffalo, New York, and one of the delegates representing the union in negotiations, in an interview last week. “Starbucks not finalising this union contract is failing its baristas and customers alike.”

Starbucks has denied wrongdoing and has accused the union of abandoning negotiations. “We’re disappointed that Workers United has called a strike instead of returning to the bargaining table,” company spokesperson Jaci Anderson said Wednesday. She said “nearly all” of Starbucks’ cafes would be ready to serve customers regardless of any strike.

Workers United delegates voted in April to reject Starbucks’ latest contract proposal. Organisers said it fell short because it only guaranteed annual raises of at least 2 per cent and didn’t ensure that employees would get enough hours of work to qualify for benefits. Starbucks has said it already offers “the best job in retail,” with barista pay averaging over $19 per hour, and total compensation that’s greater than $30 an hour when counting benefits.

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

Published on November 13, 2025

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