Long-term indoor dining closures devastated the casual-dining industry in 2020, causing many restaurant groups in the sector to declare bankruptcy. Victims ranged from Ruby Tuesday to Sizzler to Souplantation.
While groups like Bloomin’ Brands, Brinker International and Dine Brands were able to expand or branch out into the virtual space, some other casual-dining groups restaurants didn’t survive the coronavirus pandemic as gracefully.
But it wasn’t only casual-dining that took the hit.
Krystal, a quick-service burger chain, actually declared bankruptcy before the pandemic hit — as did fast-casual chain Così, Bar Louie and American Blue Ribbon Holdings, parent to Village Inn Bakers Square.
Some franchisees also took a hard hit.
NPC International, one of the largest franchisees of Pizza Hut and Wendy’s, declared bankruptcy, as did IHOP franchisee CFRA Holdings, Applebee’s franchisee Wisconsin Apple LLC and Golden Corral franchise group 1069 Restaurant Group LLC.
Golden Corral and Souplantation – two restaurants that rely heavily on buffet-style dining – struggled heavily this year and the latter declared bankruptcy midway through the pandemic.
Several groups that declared bankruptcy, including Bar Louie, Sustainable Restaurant Holdings, TooJay’s, California Pizza Kitchen and more, were either bought out of bankruptcy or emerged out of Chapter 11 restructuring.
See which restaurant chains and franchisees declared bankruptcy this year.