A total of 16 Wetherspoons pubs including two Lloyds No.1 bars across the UK are closing, with one in Merseyside affected.
The pub chain has said the decision was made after "long consideration" with all affected sites now open for bids.
In Merseyside, The Dee Hotel Wetherspoons in West Kirkby is now up for sale.
For the time being, sites will continue trading as normal but if they're sold they will most likely be rebranded with a new name, menu and prices, reports WalesOnline.
Wetherspoons hasn't said if any potential buyers are lined up or why it has chosen to sell the 16 outlets named below.
Eddie Gershon, Wetherspoon spokesman, said: "It is a commercial decision taken by the company taken after long consideration. The pub will continue to trade as normal until a buyer is found.
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“We have told our staff that if the pub is sold and they do not transfer to the purchaser, then we would look to redeploy our employees at other Wetherspoon pubs in the region.”
The Dee Hotel pub on Grange Road in West Kirby has been on and off the market for around four years.
It was first placed on the market in November 2015 as one of the 34 Wetherspoon pubs the company was trying to sell off.
However, owners had a change of heart and in March 2017 called time on selling the 'Spoons' frequented by regulars in the area.
Minor improvements to the site have been made in recent years, including new carpets, however it hasn't had any major refurbishment since it was taken over by the chain in 2001.
Is my local Wetherspoon pub or bar up for sale?
List of all the affected branches:
- Chapel an Gansblydhen, Bodmin, Cornwall
- Brun Lea, Burnley, Lancashire
- Vulcan, Coatbridge, North Lanarkshire
- Time Piece, Dewsbury, West Yorkshire
- Bourtree, Hawick, Scottish Borders
- Last Plantagenet, Leicester, East Midlands
- Queens Hotel, Newport, Wales
- Isaac Merritt, Paignton, Devon
- The Cross Keys, Peebles, Scottish Borders
- St George's Hall, Redfield, Bristol
- Pennsylvanian, Rickmansworth, Hertfordshire
- Rhinoceros, Rotherham, South Yorkshire
- Butler's Bell, Stafford, Staffordshire
- Friar Penketh, Warrington, Cheshire
- Dee Hotel, West Kirkby, Merseyside
- Alexander Bain, Wick, Caithness
Wetherspoons bosses have been quite vocal about its pubs reopening on July 4 after the Government gave all pubs, bars and restaurants the green light to do so.
Under the new safety measures , staff will have to take part in temperature checks on arrival and hundreds more workers will be hired to help keep branches sanitised.
A total of £11m will be invested to introduce safety screens at counters - while two new full time workers will be hired per branch.
All Wetherspoons pubs will have screens fitted at the till point, while customers will be encouraged to pay via its smartphone app.
There will also be screens to create seating areas where it is not possible to separate the tables to the social distancing requirement.
Wetherspoon will also provide staff with gloves, masks and protective eyewear, which will be made compulsory, subject to government guidelines.
There will be an average 10 hand sanitiser dispensers around each pub, including at the entrance for customers and staff to use. Guests will be asked to use them when entering.