In a stunning blow to Oregon’s business community, Dutch Bros — the homegrown coffee chain that grew from a single pushcart in Grants Pass into a $12 billion national powerhouse — has officially moved its corporate headquarters to Arizona, marking the first time in generations that one of the state’s most successful companies has chosen to leave entirely.The announcement, confirmed by the company late last week, ends 33 years of deep Oregon roots for the drive-thru giant. Dutch Bros will relocate the majority of its corporate roles — including executive leadership, finance, marketing, and technology teams — to a newly leased 136,000-square-foot office in Tempe, Arizona. The company’s roasting facility and some support staff will remain in Grants Pass, but strategic decision-making will now happen 1,000 miles away.

CEO Christine Barone, an Arizona native who took the helm in January 2024, framed the shift as a growth necessity:
“Our fastest-growing markets are in the Southwest, Texas, and the Southeast. Being closer to those regions and to a major airport makes sense for our team and our future. This is about positioning Dutch Bros for the next phase — 4,000 locations and beyond — not about leaving Oregon behind.”But for many Oregonians, the move feels like abandonment. Dutch Bros isn’t just a business success story; it’s a cultural one. Founded in 1992 by brothers Travis and Dane Boersma, the company built its identity on small-town generosity, community spirit, and a relentless drive-thru smile. The annual “Drink One for Dane” fundraiser — held every May in honor of co-founder Dane, who died of ALS — has raised millions for research. The blue windmill logo and upbeat energy became symbols of Oregon grit and kindness.Now, that symbol is leaving.The relocation comes amid a broader exodus that has Oregon business leaders and lawmakers sounding alarms. According to a January 2025 study by the University of Oregon Institute for Policy Research, 68% of Oregon companies recruited by other states eventually open new locations or move operations elsewhere — a retention crisis, not a recruitment one.
Oregon’s business rankings have collapsed in recent years. CNBC’s America’s Top States for Business list dropped Oregon from 21st in 2023 to 39th in 2025 — a slide of 18 places. The Tax Foundation ranks Oregon fifth in total tax burden nationwide, while land-use restrictions, overlapping regulations, and high construction costs have slowed development for years.Other major companies have already left or downsized:
Nike maintains its headquarters but has shifted significant operations out of state.
Adidas closed its Portland campus.
Keen Footwear shuttered its Swan Island factory.
REI abandoned its downtown Portland co-op.
Owens Corning closed its Prineville facility, eliminating 184 jobs.
Dutch Bros, once second only to Nike as Oregon’s most valuable homegrown company, was seen as a rare success story — proof that a local idea could scale nationally without losing its soul. Now, its departure is viewed by many as the clearest warning yet.State Senate Republican Leader Daniel Bonham did not hold back:
“Dutch Bros didn’t leave Oregon by accident. They were pushed out by a state that punishes success, burdens employers, and chases opportunity away. This is the cost of failed leadership.”Democratic lawmakers struck a more measured tone. Rep. Daniel Nguyen acknowledged the challenge:
“Oregon’s tradition of innovation remains strong, but retaining homegrown companies is getting harder. We need to redouble our efforts to create an environment where businesses want to stay and grow.”The numbers tell a grim story. Econ Northwest estimates more than $1 billion in high-income household wealth leaves Multnomah County alone each year — the equivalent of 1,000 millionaires exiting annually. That outflow drains not just tax revenue but also philanthropic contributions that once funded local charities and public projects.Downtown Portland now faces a 35% office vacancy rate, with once-bustling towers like the U.S. Bancorp Tower sitting half-empty. Each closure leaves behind silent manufacturing lines, empty storefronts, and a growing sense that Oregon’s economic stability is slipping away.For Dutch Bros employees in Grants Pass, the news is bittersweet. The company insists its Oregon footprint will remain strong, but the shift of leadership and strategy to Arizona feels like the end of an era.

Oregon’s business climate now stands at a crossroads: ranked 47th for friendliness, losing billions in investment each year, and watching its biggest homegrown successes look elsewhere for growth.Talent and opportunity follow environments that welcome them.
Dutch Bros just made that clear in the most visible way possible.The next chapter for Oregon businesses is unwritten — but the warning signs are impossible to ignore.
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