How many more fast food chain will close in 2027?
Direct Answer
Nobody can give you a precise count of fast food closures in 2027 because the number depends on interest rates, refranchising decisions, and unit-level economics that haven't happened yet. The honest forecast: expect net U.S. Restaurant unit growth to stay roughly flat to slightly negative in the QSR segment, with the heaviest closures concentrated in legacy brands like Subway, Burger King, Wendy's, and Denny's that are pruning underperforming locations.
Realistic range for *announced* large-chain closures in 2027 is 2,000–4,000 gross units, partially offset by new openings — making net closures far smaller than the headline number.
1. Why "How Many" Is the Wrong Question
The question assumes a single knowable figure exists. It doesn't. Closures are a lagging output of refranchising cycles, lease expirations, and franchisee balance sheets — not a number a corporate planner publishes in advance. What we *can* model is the pipeline of leading indicators.
In 2024, Subway closed roughly 600+ net U.S. Locations, continuing a multi-year decline from its ~24,000-unit peak. Burger King's parent, Restaurant Brands International (RBI), ran its "Reclaim the Flame" program, explicitly closing 300–400 underperforming U.S.
Units while remodeling stronger ones. Wendy's and Denny's both announced closures of 50–150 locations tied to weak-volume restaurants. Boston Market functionally collapsed, dropping from ~300 to under 30 stores.
For 2027, the operator's move is to build a range forecast with explicit assumptions rather than chase a false-precision integer. The drivers — labor costs, the price of a Big Mac vs. A frozen pizza, commercial-real-estate refinancing — are the variables.
Model those, and the closure count falls out as a *consequence*, not a guess. That's the difference between a number you can defend in a board meeting and a number you Googled.
2. The Unit Economics That Actually Drive Closures
A fast-food location closes when four-wall EBITDA goes negative and the franchisee can't refinance or exit. The mechanics matter more than the brand logo.
Key levers: average unit volume (AUV), prime cost (food + labor as a percent of sales, healthy at ~60%), and occupancy cost (rent as a percent of sales, dangerous above 10%). When minimum-wage increases like California's $20/hour fast-food law (AB 1228, effective April 2024) hit, marginal stores tip underwater.
McDonald's franchisees publicly warned that California stores raised menu prices 8–10% to absorb that cost.
The 2027 stress test: commercial real estate loans maturing. Many franchisees financed buildouts at 2020–2021 rates. As those refinance at higher rates, the debt-service coverage ratio (DSCR) breaks on weaker units.
That, not consumer disinterest, is the quiet closure accelerant. A store doing $1.1M AUV with thin margins survives a remodel; the same store can't survive a refinance that doubles its interest expense.
3. Brand-by-Brand: Who's Actually Pruning
Use a closure-risk tier system rather than treating "fast food" as one block:
- Tier 1 (active shrinkers): Subway, Boston Market, Denny's, IHOP, TGI Fridays (Fridays filed Chapter 11 in late 2024, closing ~50+ locations). These are *deliberately* contracting.
- Tier 2 (refranchise-and-trim): Burger King, Wendy's, Pizza Hut. RBI and Yum! Brands prune the bottom 5–10% while growing net.
- Tier 3 (net growers): Chick-fil-A, Raising Cane's, Chipotle, Wingstop. Chipotle plans 8–10% annual unit growth; Wingstop is opening hundreds of net new stores yearly.
The aggregate 2027 number is the *sum* of Tier 1 contraction plus Tier 2 trimming, minus Tier 3 expansion. That's why "net" matters so much: gross closures of 4,000 against 3,000 openings is very different from a 4,000-unit collapse.
4. Building the Forecast Model
Here's the operator framework — call it the Closure Pipeline Model. You build it the way RevOps builds a sales forecast: stages, conversion rates, and a weighted output.
- Identify the at-risk pool: units below a defined AUV threshold (e.g., bottom quartile of each brand).
- Apply a stress filter: which of those face lease expiry or refinance in 2027?
- Apply historical close rate: what percent of stressed units actually closed in 2023–2024? (Run ~15–25% for legacy brands.)
- Subtract net openings from Tier 3 growers.
- Output a range, not a point — e.g., 2,000 low / 3,000 base / 4,000 high gross closures.
This mirrors a weighted pipeline forecast: stage × probability = expected value. The discipline is in documenting assumptions so you can update when a new data point — say, a Yum! Earnings call — moves a variable.
5. The Data Sources That Beat Guesswork
Stop forecasting from headlines. The credible inputs:
- Technomic Top 500 and Nation's Restaurant News Top 500 — annual unit counts by chain.
- Public company 10-Ks and earnings calls — RBI, Yum!, McDonald's, Wendy's, and Restaurant Brands all disclose net unit growth and closure guidance.
- Black Box Intelligence / Revenue Management Solutions — same-store-sales and traffic trends.
- The NPD Group / Circana — foot-traffic and visit data.
- CBRE and JLL retail real estate reports — for lease and refinance exposure.
When Yum! Brands reports "net new units," that's harder data than any pundit's prediction. Build your model off filings, refresh quarterly, and your 2027 estimate stays grounded.
[Mermaid flowchart of the central model]
Frameworks at a Glance
- Closure Pipeline Model — staged at-risk pool → stress filter → weighted output
- Closure-Risk Tier System — Tier 1 shrinkers / Tier 2 trimmers / Tier 3 growers
- Four-Wall EBITDA analysis — unit-level profitability gate
- Prime Cost + Occupancy Cost ratios — the margin levers
- DSCR (Debt-Service Coverage Ratio) — the refinance stress test
- Weighted Pipeline Forecasting — stage × probability = expected value
[Mermaid flowchart of the operating loop]
FAQ
Will more fast food chains close in 2027 than 2026? Probably not dramatically — closures are tied to refinance and lease cycles, and the bigger wave of stressed-debt maturities likely peaks across 2025–2026. 2027 should look comparable, with legacy brands continuing steady pruning.
Which single chain will close the most locations? Subway remains the most likely volume leader for gross closures given its size and multi-year contraction, though TGI Fridays and other Chapter 11 cases can spike in a single year.
Is fast food as a category dying? No. The *category* is growing in total units because Tier 3 brands (Chick-fil-A, Raising Cane's, Wingstop, Chipotle) are expanding faster than legacy brands are shrinking. It's redistribution, not collapse.
Can I get an exact 2027 number anywhere? No legitimate source publishes one in advance. Anyone quoting a precise figure is guessing. Use a defensible range built from filings.
What's the biggest hidden risk factor? Commercial real estate refinancing. Stores that survived on cheap 2020–2021 debt face higher rates on renewal, which can flip a marginally profitable unit into a closure.
Bottom Line
Don't hand a board a single fabricated number. Build the Closure Pipeline Model, anchor it to 10-K filings and Technomic data, and present a 2,000–4,000 gross-closure range offset by Tier 3 growth — refreshed every quarter. The operator who shows their assumptions wins the room; the one who Googles a number gets challenged on the first follow-up.
Sources
- Technomic Top 500 Chain Restaurant Report 2024
- Nation's Restaurant News Top 500 (2024)
- Restaurant Brands International (RBI) 2023–2024 10-K and "Reclaim the Flame" investor materials
- Yum! Brands Q4 2024 Earnings Call and 10-K
- Black Box Intelligence Restaurant Industry Tracker 2024
- Circana (formerly The NPD Group) Foodservice Market Monitor
- CBRE U.S. Retail Real Estate Outlook 2024
- California AB 1228 Fast Food Council legislation and McDonald's franchisee statements
- TGI Fridays Chapter 11 filing coverage, Wall Street Journal (Nov 2024)
- Revenue Management Solutions QSR Pricing & Traffic Index 2024