American Signature Inc., with two stores in Jacksonville, is holding closing sales at its remaining 10 stores in Florida and Delaware as well as at 79 Value City Furniture stores in 13 states.
No Value City stores are in Florida.
The 10 American Signature Furniture stores comprise one in Delaware and nine in Florida consisting of one each in Altamonte Springs, Brandon, Fort Myers, Tampa and University Park and two each in Jacksonville and Orlando.
The shopvcf.com site says the company is “going out of business. Everything must go! No Exceptions, No Exclusions!”

The two American Signature Furniture stores in Jacksonville are at 9400 Atlantic Blvd. in the Regency Park shopping center and at 6001 Argyle Forest Blvd. in Argyle Village.
The site plans for the stores show the Regency store is 47,200 square feet and the Argyle store is 45,530 square feet.
RetailDive.com, an industry website, reported Jan. 12 that the stores will close permanently as part of the company’s November filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
It reported that a joint venture of SB360 Capital Partners, Hilco Global and Gordon Brothers, is conducting the sales.
It also said that five other locations will wrap up store-closing sales over the following few weeks.

It said the original plan, before bankruptcy, was to close 33 underperforming stores.
American Signature Inc. posts on its site that in November 2025, the company started a court-supervised process to facilitate a sale.
“As a result of this process, American Signature Inc. is winding down operations and closing all remaining American Signature Furniture and Value City Furniture locations. Closing sales will continue while inventory lasts.”
All sales are final at all locations.

Columbus, Ohio-based American Signature Inc., the parent company of Value City Furniture and American Signature Furniture, announced Nov. 23, 2025, that it filed voluntary petitions for Chapter 11 relief in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware.
“For nearly 75 years, American Signature has served as a family-owned furniture destination that communities could rely on to provide style, quality, and value,” said ASI co-Chief Restructuring Officer Rudy Morando upon the filing.
“In the face of the ongoing macroeconomic headwinds that have impacted the entire home furnishing industry, the Company has carefully evaluated its options to assess the best path forward in the current operating environment. Through that review, we determined that entering a court-supervised process will provide the best opportunity to maximize value.”
The company was founded in 1948.