
Bimbo Bakeries USA is packing up its U.S. corporate headquarters in Horsham, Pennsylvania, and moving the operation to Irving, Texas, where it is taking office space at 5525 MacArthur Blvd. Senior leadership and a large share of the corporate staff are already working out of the Dallas-area hub, bringing the baked-goods heavyweight closer to its Texas facilities and to its parent company in Mexico City.
In a press release via GlobeNewswire, Bimbo Bakeries USA said the shift is meant to strengthen alignment across U.S. operations and support the company’s long-term growth strategy. The company added that it plans to keep hiring for additional corporate roles based at the new Irving address.
Business wires quickly amplified the news, and StreetInsider and other financial outlets noted that Bimbo pointed to Dallas' central location, the concentration of bakeries and distribution centers in the region, and the local talent pool as key reasons for the move. The company traced its Texas presence back to its 1998 acquisition of Mrs. Baird’s and said it will keep a sales center in the Philadelphia area even as corporate functions migrate south.
Why Dallas-Fort Worth?
Commercial real estate watchers say North Texas has become the default destination for companies ready to change their mailing address. CBRE found that the Dallas-Fort Worth area posted a net gain of 11 interstate or international headquarters relocations in 2025, more than any other U.S. metro, a trend that helps explain why firms keep landing in Irving and Las Colinas.
What This Means For North Texas
Bimbo Bakeries USA employs more than 20,000 people in the United States and operates over 50 manufacturing locations, according to Wikipedia. In the company’s release via GlobeNewswire, President Greg Koehrsen said, "Relocating our headquarters to Dallas positions us to operate more efficiently as we continue to invest in our brands and our communities."
The company plans to work with Dallas business organizations and local universities to bolster early-career recruiting, and hiring for additional corporate roles in the Irving office is already underway, according to Investing.com. Local economic-development boosters and commercial landlords are likely to hold up the Bimbo move as more proof that DFW can still attract major headquarters even as the broader office market reshuffles.









