Skip to main content

Digital Trends may earn a commission when you buy through links on our site. Why trust us?

Apple may reopen some of its stores in the first half of April

When Apple closed all of its retail stores outside of mainland China on March 15 due to the coronavirus pandemic, the tech giant said at the time it hoped to reopen them on March 28. But with the global health crisis escalating, that plan has now changed.

An FAQ page posted by Apple shortly after the closure began now says the stores will stay shut “until further notice.”

In a company memo seen by Bloomberg, Deirdre O’Brien, senior vice president of people and retail, said the stores will open as and when conditions permit, with the first ones accepting customers possibly in the first half of April.

“For all of our retail stores outside of Greater China, we will reopen our stores on a staggered basis,” O’Brien said in the memo. “At this time, we anticipate some stores may be able to open in the first half of April depending on the conditions in their community. We will provide updates for each store as soon as specific dates are established.”

Apple operates more than 500 stores globally, with half of them in the U.S. It earlier shuttered all 42 of its stores in China as the country grappled with the coronavirus, formally known as COVID-19, but all have now reopened as the nation appears to be over the worst of the outbreak.

The extended closure of Apple’s retail stores globally means some customers have to wait longer than expected to collect their device if it’s there for repair. Customers were given a two-day window — March 15 and 16 — to collect their devices during the early part of the store closure. Those that missed the opportunity had been hoping to pick it up on March 28, but they’ll now have to wait until at least April.

Apple has said that all of its hourly workers will continue to receive pay in alignment with business-as-usual operations. Recent reports also suggested that Apple Store workers will receive unlimited sick leave if they experience COVID-19 symptoms once the outlets are back in business. Its other employees at offices around the world have been asked to work remotely, if possible.

Digital Trends has reached out to Apple for more information regarding its store closures and we will update this article when we hear back.

Editors' Recommendations

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
Apple may be struggling with its next Mac chips — here’s why that matters
Apple's Tim Millet presents the Apple silicon A14 Bionic chip.

Apple’s chip manufacturer is “straining to meet demand” for the chips that will power future Macs, according to a report from EE Times. If these difficulties continue, it could have worrying implications for Apple with just months to go before the 3-nanometer M3 chip is set to debut.

TSMC is currently manufacturing Apple’s 3nm chips (which TSMC calls N3), and the EE Times report notes that TSMC’s “tool and yield struggles have impeded the ramp to volume production.” Aside from Samsung, TSMC is the only company that has the ability to make these chips, so any kind of delay could be of grave concern for Apple execs.

Read more
Apple’s latest store opening is one of its most significant in years
Apple opens its first retail store in India.

Previous

Next

Read more
Apple may kill one of its most important iPhones with iOS 17
Apple iPhone X screen upright on a table.

Apple’s WWDC 2023 is just a few weeks away, which is when we expect the company to unveil new software updates for iPhone, Apple Watch, iPads, Mac, and more. This means we’ll be seeing a preview of iOS 17, watchOS 10, iPadOS 17, and macOS 14 during the conference. However, a new report seems to hint that iOS 17 and iPadOS 17 will drop support for devices that were released between November 2015 and November 2017.

According to MacRumors, a source with a proven track record for upcoming software updates reports that iOS 17 will drop support for the following devices: iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus, iPhone X, the first generation 9.7-inch and 12.9-inch iPad Pro, and fifth-generation iPad.

Read more