Massive winter storm triggers panic buying at grocery stores nationwide

Massive winter storm triggers panic buying at grocery stores nationwide

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Written by Jude Snowden

January 25, 2026

From Texas to Mississippi to Washington, D.C., shoppers have encountered bare shelves as extreme winter weather threatens more than 200 million people across 40 states. Photos and videos shared from multiple areas show staples disappearing as customers rush to stock up ahead of the storm.

Video from a grocery store in Oxford, Mississippi, shows several aisles picked clean, with milk and bottled water nearly gone. Other essentials, including eggs, sausage and hot dogs, also appeared scarce as shoppers hurried to prepare.

Empty bread shelves at a grocery store on Jan. 23, 2026 in Washington, DC.  (Al Drago/Getty Images)

Similar scenes are playing out in North Texas, where customers cleared out aisles at local supermarkets. Photos from a Kroger in North Richland Hills show depleted shelves in some sections.

The most picked over items included ground beef, vegetables, eggs, milk and canned goods.

One Texas shopper said he had already visited six stores while trying to prepare for the approaching winter storm.

“I’m just looking for a loaf of bread to get me through the weekend,” Lauryn Martin told. “This is my 6th store I’ve been to today. I started last night, but the shelves are all empty.”

Massive Winter Storm Creates Havoc Across Large Swath Of US

Sparsely filled shelves in the milk section at a grocery store on Jan. 23, 2026 in Shawnee, Kansas.  (Chase Castor/Getty Images)

Kroger’s director of corporate affairs, John Votava, said stores are seeing a significant surge in customers.

“We are busy, seeing an influx of customers, well above average, working hard to keep up with that demand,” Votava told. “We have loads of groceries coming from the distribution center in Keller to all 107 stores in North Texas.”

The apparent run on grocery stores comes as one of the most powerful winter storms in years is taking shape across the country.

The storm, which began Friday and lasts through Monday, is expected to stretch more than 2,000 miles and could bury some states under more than a foot of snow.

Freezing rain and sleet may also disrupt travel and knock out power for thousands.

US-WEATHER-STORM-WINDSTORMS

Near empty pasta shelves are seen as residents stock up on supplies ahead of a cold front expected in the area in Washington, DC, on Jan. 23, 2026. (Brendan SMIALOWSKI / AFP via Getty Images)

The phenomenon known as “panic buying” is not new. During the COVID-19 pandemic, items such as toilet paper and paper towels flew off shelves, prompting officials to urge Americans not to hoard supplies.

“Generally, urgent purchasing of necessities arises from a perceived threat of scarcity of resources, inability to obtain one’s essentials,” Amanda Spray, a clinical psychologist and director of the Cohen Military Family Center at NYU Langone Health, told at the time. “In the case of a crisis situation, it is human nature to want to prepare to have enough necessities to be prepared to feed and care for our families.”