More than 10% of restaurants in the United States have closed permanently since the coronavirus pandemic began last March, foodservice research firm Datassential said Monday.
According to Firefly, Datassential’s proprietary database, 79,438 restaurants in the United States have closed, which is 10.2% of the total of 778,807 restaurants that were in operation at the outset of the public health crises. That includes full-service and limited-service restaurants as well as food trucks.
Food trucks were hardest hit, with 22.5% of them having gone out of business, while quick-service restaurants, the largest segment in the industry, had the lowest percentage of closures at 9.8%.
The largest chains, with more than 501 units, did better than independent restaurants and smaller chains, Datassential reported.
However, independent restaurants actually did better than chains of 500 or fewer units. Those chains with between 51 units and 100 units were hardest hit, with 16.2% of their restaurants having closed permanently.
In terms of cuisine, burger concepts fared the best, with 7.3% having closed permanently. Restaurants categorized as French by Datassential had the highest closure rate at 15.3%.
Despite the undeniably challenging year, Datassential CEO Jack Li said that the nearly 90% of restaurants that remain open have a good chance of staying open.
“This last year has been one the toughest the restaurant industry has ever faced,” Li said in a statement. “But the good news is that the rate of closures is slowing, and the future is bright for those restaurants who have learned to adapt to the host of new challenges facing them in our new normal.”
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