MW How Pizza Hut fell from stuffed-crust glory to corporate castoff
By Bill Peters
'They struggled to figure out what the next big thing was,' an analyst says in the wake of a recently announced private-equity buyout
Yum Brands on Tuesday said it had agreed to sell Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion.
Yum Brands' announcement that it is selling Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion follows years of struggles for the chain, which failed to keep up with rival Domino's Pizza and the broader rise of digital ordering.
The first Pizza Hut restaurant opened in 1958 in Wichita, Kan., and after 1980, its pan pizza carried the chain to nationwide popularity. Pizza Hut became a sit-down destination in the '80s and into the 1990s, when analysts note that it led the pizza industry in innovation - launching its stuffed-crust pizza in 1995, and maintaining a spot in popular culture with aggressive product placement in movies and elsewhere.
But Zak Stambor, an analyst at eMarketer, said Pizza Hut peaked around a decade ago.
"They struggled to figure out what the next big thing was," he said. "On the innovation front, Pizza Hut struggled. Then, on the value front, Domino's grabbed hold of the value baton and just ran with it, and continues to run at a full-out sprint."
Stambor said Domino's $(DPZ)$ efforts to add new items and deals to its menu - from its own take on stuffed crust or cheesy bread, to its free "Emergency Pizza" promotions - gave consumers a reason to keep ordering. Moreover, the rise of digital ordering technology helped Domino's solidify its lead after an aggressive, decade-plus investment. During the pandemic, delivery apps like DoorDash $(DASH)$ and Uber Eats $(UBER)$ became a bigger part of diners' ordering habits.
"Several years ago, Domino's started positioning the company as a technology company that happened to sell pizza, rather than a pizza company that needed to figure out technology," Stambor noted.
Yum Brands (YUM) on Tuesday said that under the terms of the sale agreement, the Pizza Hut business, excluding locations in China, would be bought by private-equity firm LongRange Capital. Yum China Holdings (YUMC) would buy the Pizza Hut business in China.
Chris Turner, the CEO of Yum Brands - which also owns KFC and Taco Bell - said the deal would make Yum Brands a more focused company. The transaction is expected to close in this year's third quarter.
Shares of Yum Brands finished 1.9% higher on Tuesday. The stock is up 4.2% so far this year, but off highs reached earlier this year.
System sales at Pizza Hut have fallen since 2023. Last year, Yum began a review of "strategic options" for Pizza Hut. In February, Yum Brands said it would close around 250 underperforming Pizza Hut stores. More closures could be likely under private-equity ownership.
The restaurant industry has been engaged in a protracted discount war, after many chains raised menu prices to cover pandemic-related costs and spooked increasingly value-conscious customers in the process. Pizza chains, including Domino's, haven't been spared.
In April, during Domino's most recent earnings call, CEO Russell Weiner said consumer sentiment had reached "COVID-level lows," adding that rivals were offering deals that were similar or identical to the ones offered by Domino's. He noted that even after recent store closures by rivals Pizza Hut and Papa John's International $(PZZA)$, more were still likely.
"Over time, we expect this pressure to contribute to more store closures on top of the roughly 450 closures our two public pizza competitors have already announced for 2026," Weiner said.
As of 2024, Domino's market share among fast-food pizza chains stood at around 30%, up from around 26% in 2019, according to Technomic data cited by Restaurant Business last year. Pizza Hut's share had shrunk to under 18% over that period.
BTIG analyst Peter Saleh said in a Tuesday note that the planned sale price for Pizza Hut was higher than he expected. The track record for similar deals wasn't exactly good, he added, saying he's not sure what a private-equity owner could do that hasn't been tried before.
"We've seen a succession of different leaders, turnaround efforts, closure activity and franchisee transfers at Pizza Hut over the last 20 years, and the brand is in roughly the same position and modestly smaller in the U.S. ($5.1 [billion] in system sales) than it was back then, so we struggle to identify something that hasn't been tried already," Saleh wrote.
PepsiCo $(PEP)$ bought Pizza Hut in 1977. Some 20 years later, it separated that chain, along with Taco Bell and KFC, into the company that eventually became Yum Brands.
In a callback to earlier times and in an effort to reignite its appeal, Pizza Hut recently rolled out retro restaurants featuring red cups and checkered tablecloths, echoing other chains' efforts to invest more in atmosphere.
"Nostalgia only goes so far, and Pizza Hut needs to figure out its future and offer a forward-looking vision of what it is and what it offers," Stambor said.
-Bill Peters
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June 17, 2026 07:00 ET (11:00 GMT)
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