Wendy’s to Close 300 Restaurants
Wendy’s to Close 300 Restaurants
Wendy’s plans to close hundreds of US restaurants over the next few months in an effort to boost its profit and make its remaining stores more appealing.
The Dublin, Ohio-based chain said during a conference call with investors Friday that it planned to begin closing restaurants in the fourth quarter of this year. The company said it expected a “mid-single-digit percentage” of its US stores to be affected, but it didn’t give any more details.
Wendy’s ended the third quarter with 6,011 US restaurants. If 5% of those locations were impacted, it would mean 300 store closures.
The new round of closures comes on top of the closure of 240 US Wendy’s locations in 2024. At the time, Wendy’s said that many of the 55-year-old chain’s restaurants are simply out of date.
Ken Cook, Wendy’s interim CEO, said Friday the company believes closing locations that are underperforming — whether it’s from a financial or customer service perspective — will help improve traffic and profitability at its remaining US restaurants.
Cook became Wendy’s CEO in July after the company’s previous CEO, Kirk Tanner, left to become the president and CEO of Hershey Co.
“When we look at the system today, we have some restaurants that do not elevate the brand and are a drag from a franchisee financial performance perspective. The goal is to address and fix those restaurants,” Cook said during a conference call with investors.
Cook said in some cases, Wendy’s will make improvements to struggling stores, including adding technology or equipment. In other cases, it will transfer ownership to a different operator or close the restaurant altogether.
US fast food chains have been struggling to attract lower-income consumers in the past few years as inflation has raised prices. Cook said he expects lower-income consumers to remain pressured for the rest of this year.
In the first nine months of this year, Wendy’s said its US same-store sales, or sales at locations open at least a year, fell 4% compared to the same period last year. Wendy’s revenue fell 2% to $1.63 billion in the same period, while its net income fell 6% to $138.6 million.
Cook said $5 and $8 meal deals — which have been matched by McDonald’s — have helped bring some traffic back to its US stores. But Wendy’s isn’t doing a good job of bringing in new customers, Cook said, so the company plans to shift its marketing to emphasize its value and the freshness of its ingredients.
Wendy’s shares dropped 7% Friday. On Monday, they were down 5% in afternoon trading.
BLM Leader Indicted for Fraud, Money Laundering
Dec 12, 2025
2 min
Indiana GOP Rejects Trump's Map
Dec 12, 2025
4 min
Abrego Garcia Freed from ICE Custody
Dec 12, 2025
4 min
Trump Pardons Tina Peters
Dec 12, 2025
2 min
DOJ Fails to Reindict Letitia James
Dec 12, 2025
<1 min
Alleged Kirk Assassin Smirks in Court
Dec 12, 2025
3 min
OMG: Georgetown Professor Calls Black Conservatives ‘Coons’
Dec 12, 2025
1 min
US Seizes Oil Tanker Off Venezuela
Dec 11, 2025
2 min
Dem Files Impeachment Articles Against RFK Jr.
Dec 11, 2025
1 min
Erika Kirk Slams Owens for Spreading Conspiracies
Dec 11, 2025
2 min
Minnesota: Most Somali Household on Welfare
Dec 11, 2025
2 min
Fed Cuts Rates by 25 Points
Dec 11, 2025
4 min
House Passes $901B Military Defense Bill
Dec 11, 2025
2 min
UK: 2 Teen Migrants Jailed for Rape
Dec 11, 2025
4 min
Dem Wins Miami Mayor Race After 28 Years
Dec 10, 2025
2 min
Trump to Zelensky: Accept Peace Deal by Christmas
Dec 10, 2025
3 min
Ellison Wants to Turn CNN Into Fox Competitor
Dec 10, 2025
4 min
1 Killed, 1 Injured in Kentucky State University Shooting
Dec 10, 2025
1 min
Tony Dokoupil Named CBS Evening News Anchor
Dec 10, 2025
3 min
Appeals Court Upholds Trans Military Ban
Dec 10, 2025
3 min

