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    50 Kommentare

    1. Why the density in Columbus lol? Buffalo and Detroit make complete sense with direct connection to Southern Ontario and the culture of hockey.

    2. Genocide_69 on

      There were at least 5-6 in Minnesota that have closed down since they dont do anything better than the other coffee chains. There was at least a dozen now that I think about it.

    3. verticalsidewall on

      What’s the difference between <1 Tim Hortons, and 0 Tim Hortons.

      Also, Louisville needs >0 Tim Hortons.

    4. I really appreciate these types of posts and much, much prefer them to world maps showing how much better/worse some countries are compared to others.
      Thank you for your service.

    5. Longjumping-Zone-724 on

      Illinois used to have one where I live around 10 years ago lasted about a year

    6. I love how Cleveland and Cincinnati have escaped the encroachment of timmies while Columbus has completely succumbed.

    7. Aggressive-Story3671 on

      America Runs on Dunkin (and Starbucks). It’s not a coincidence Michigan and Upper State New York have the most

    8. californiaboy2003 on

      So seems that Tim Hortons (a Canadian chain) is most prominent in states close to Canada. Makes sense.

      Especially the two major US cities on the Canadian border, Detroit and Buffalo.

      I wonder if there will ever be a Tim Hortons in California, particularly southern California.

    9. Disastrous-Hearing72 on

      Actually there are 0 Tim Hortons in the states because Tim Hortons was destroyed by Burger King when they went international. The Tim Hortons in Canada and the states now is not the same Tim Hortons Canadians praised. It’s a real shame.

    10. Wild to me that Tim Hortons is in Detroit, Columbus, Erie, and Buffalo but not Cleveland.

    11. iSeeXenuInYou on

      Fun fact: one of the Tim Hortons in KY is in Fort Knox. When I was a kid, we would often travel to the northern states for sports, and developed a love for their coffee and donuts.

      We found out there was a Tim’s in KY at Fort Knox. Fyi it’s a city, not only a fort, so we decided to hit it up. We get there and had to go through security just to get to the place. Turns out it was practically like a little kiosk. The coffee was bad and the donuts were stale. Don’t recommend.

    12. I_Am_Robert_Paulson1 on

      I live just outside Buffalo. I looked at all the Tim’s within a 10 minute drive of my house and I think it wound up being 15+

    13. eastcoastjon on

      The one near me in NJ is between a starbucks and a Dunkin. Small seating area with tables and couches, donuts and pastry in huge display, prepackaged coffee display.

    14. Charlie_Warlie on

      they built a bunch in Indianapolis maybe 10 years ago, and I think they opened for a month and all closed. Real bang-up business practices sounds like.

    15. I feel maps like this should make a distinction between Michigan’s upper and lower penninsulas.

    16. Accomplished-One7476 on

      The county (Rockland) were I live in New York is getting one early 2026. building is almost done being built.

    17. SparseGhostC2C on

      Timmy Hohos had a bit of a footholdhold on Maine for a while, but eventually Dunks won out… unfortunately. I’d much rather be slowly amalgamating into Canada, personally.

    18. They are building a tim hottons in college station texas

      Why in the world i have no idea

      don’t even have a damn waffle house but getting a tims

    19. YuckyStench on

      When I was a kid they seemed pretty good. Now they suck. So much worse than their competitors. They make Starbucks feel like a high quality experience by comparison

    20. runwkufgrwe on

      Weird there aren’t any in Minnesota, considering we’re the state with Little Canada

    21. Life_Bet8956 on

      That’s not accurate, or at least out of date. I went to one in Virginia recently.

      Edit: just saw White could mean exactly 1 location and apparently I went to that exact one lol.

    22. Surprised to see that we have one here in Austin. Not surprised that it’s way on the north side.

    23. InevitableCounter on

      I miss when Tim Hortons was in Central New York.

      I recall visiting friends in CT and there was a short lived stretch where they were in southern New England after acquiring (I think?) Bess Eaton but they all folded. I think New England is solid Dunkin territory as their home base.

    24. ~~There is only one in KY. The one outside Louisville closed.~~

      Never mind didn’t realize there were two in Ashland.

    25. Buffalo NY and Detroit MI are the only two big US cities that directly border Canada. Thats why New York and Michigan are 1 and 2. Ohio is third because of the Dave Thomas/ Wendys connection to Tim Horton as I learned from another commenter.

    26. Tim hortons needs to share some of the hate that Dunkin gets because it’s honestly even worse

    27. syncsynchalt on

      Interestingly there are no Timmies in the UP, if you broke MI into two it would be striped in the UP and potentially even redder in the lower peninsula.

    28. Err404-unknown-user on

      I didn’t even know we had a Timmies in Georgia, let alone like 5. Wtf I just had a Canadian buddy down here. I would’ve made the trip there just to mess with him

    29. MyBuddyBossk on

      How is there an effing Timmy’s in WEST FUCKING VIRGINIA but not in New Hampshire??

    30. RaiBrown156 on

      How can you have less than one but not zero Tim Hortons?

      EDIT: Nevermind, I’ve found my answer.

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