Thursday, April 23, 2026

Consumer Migration to Convenience Stores: How C-Stores Are Winning While Restaurants and Grocery Lose Visits

 


The shift is no longer subtle. American consumers are reallocating food dollars, meal occasions, and daily routines toward convenience stores at a measurable and accelerating pace. What was once a channel built on fuel and packaged goods has evolved into a foodservice powerhouse that is steadily capturing share from both restaurants and grocery retailers.

According to the National Association of Convenience Stores, U.S. convenience store foodservice and merchandise sales reached 341.2 billion dollars in 2025, marking the twenty third consecutive year of growth. Total industry sales climbed to 817.5 billion dollars. While fuel still represents the majority of top line revenue, it is foodservice that is driving profitability and repeat visits.

Foodservice Is the Margin Engine

Foodservice now accounts for 28.5 percent of in store sales but nearly 39 percent of gross profit dollars. That spread explains everything. Prepared food alone represents 73.9 percent of foodservice sales, up significantly from just a few years ago. Convenience stores are no longer competing on snacks alone. They are competing meal for meal.

At the same time, many traditional grocery retailers are seeing flat to declining center store sales and shrinking margins in perimeter departments due to labor costs and shrink. Restaurants, particularly quick service brands, are facing transaction declines in the low single digits in many markets due to pricing fatigue and longer wait times.

Consumers are not abandoning foodservice. They are reallocating it.


Speed of Service Is the New Battleground

Convenience stores have engineered a value proposition built on time. The average store processes approximately 1,484 transactions per day. That level of throughput is only possible because of operational simplicity.

Compare that to many quick service restaurants where:

·       Drive thru times often exceed four to six minutes

·       Order accuracy issues increase friction

·       Labor shortages slow throughput

Convenience stores have flipped the model. Food is prepped, packaged, and ready. The transaction is measured in seconds, not minutes.

Time has become the dominant currency, and convenience stores are pricing it better than anyone else.


Price Perception and Bundle Economics

Restaurants have pushed price increases aggressively over the past three years, in some cases raising menu prices by twenty to thirty percent. Grocery retailers have also raised prices while simultaneously reducing promotional depth.

Convenience stores have taken a different path. They are winning through bundle economics:

·       Two item meal deals under a fixed price point

·       Coffee plus breakfast sandwich bundles

·       Pizza plus beverage combinations

These offers create a perception of control and affordability. The consumer may not be spending less per trip, but they feel they are getting more value.

Basket sizes increase because the decision is simplified.



Coffee, Pizza, and Habit Formation

Coffee is the cornerstone of morning traffic. Industry data shows that more than half of daily c-store transactions include a beverage, with coffee leading the way in the breakfast daypart. Private label programs deliver margins that often exceed sixty percent.

Pizza has emerged as a dominant lunch and dinner solution. It offers:

·       High production efficiency

·       Strong hold times

·       Broad consumer appeal

Many convenience store operators report double digit growth in pizza sales year over year, particularly in suburban and rural markets where restaurant options are limited or slower.

Then there are legacy items like the Big Bite hot dog and frozen dispensed beverages such as the Slurpee. These are not just products. They are brand anchors that create familiarity, drive impulse purchases, and reinforce identity.

The Slurpee, in particular, demonstrates the power of proprietary branding. It generates repeat visits, especially among younger consumers, and delivers high margin returns with minimal labor.


Snacking Is Being Redefined

The alternative snacks category grew 7.9 percent in 2025, driven largely by protein based products. This is tied in part to the rise in GLP 1 medication usage, which is influencing how and what consumers eat:

·       Smaller, more frequent eating occasions

·       Increased focus on protein and satiety

·       Reduced interest in large, indulgent meals

Convenience stores are responding faster than grocery retailers by curating assortments that include protein packs, meat snacks, and functional beverages.

This agility matters. Grocery planograms are often set months in advance. Convenience stores can pivot in weeks.

Local Relevance Drives Traffic

National chains are integrating local flavors to increase relevance. Regional menu items are driving incremental visits because they feel tailored rather than standardized.

Examples include:

·       Spicy chicken variations in southern markets

·       Breakfast burritos and Hispanic inspired items in western regions

·       Asian influenced grab and go meals in urban centers

Localization increases trial and builds loyalty. Restaurants often struggle here due to operational complexity, while grocery lacks immediacy.


Where Restaurants Are Losing Ground

Restaurants are not collapsing, but they are conceding key advantages:

·       Price increases have outpaced wage growth, reducing frequency

·       Speed of service has declined due to labor constraints

·       Menu complexity has increased decision time

In many cases, consumers are replacing a restaurant visit with a convenience store visit because it is faster, easier, and perceived as a better value.

Quick service restaurants are also facing competition on core items like chicken sandwiches, pizza, and breakfast sandwiches, where convenience stores now offer comparable quality with less wait time.

Where Grocery Is Losing Relevance

Grocery retailers are losing immediate consumption occasions. Their model is built around planned shopping, not impulse eating.

Challenges include:

·       Longer trip times

·       Checkout friction

·       Limited ready to eat options that compete on speed

Even as grocery invests in prepared foods, the experience often lacks the simplicity and speed of a convenience store. The result is fewer incremental trips.


The Economics Support the Shift

Fuel sales declined in dollar terms due to lower prices, but gallons sold actually increased slightly. This means traffic remains strong. The opportunity is converting that traffic into higher margin in store purchases.

At the same time:

·       Credit card fees reached 21.3 billion dollars

·       Operating expenses increased 4.2 percent

·       The industry supports 2.75 million jobs

Despite these pressures, foodservice margins continue to offset rising costs. That is why every major convenience retailer is doubling down on food.


Grocerant Guru® Insights: Capturing Incremental Consumers by Daypart

Breakfast: Build Daily Dependency
Own the morning routine with coffee programs, subscription models, and bundled breakfast offers. Speed must be under two minutes from entry to exit. Pair coffee with protein rich handheld items to align with evolving dietary behavior.

Lunch and Dinner: Replace the Restaurant Visit
Focus on hot, ready to eat meals with clear value bundles. Pizza, sandwiches, and bowls should be positioned as complete meal solutions. Use aroma and visibility to trigger impulse decisions. Make the store feel like a kitchen in motion.

Snacking: Win the In Between Occasion
Curate assortments that balance function and indulgence. Protein snacks drive frequency, while iconic items like frozen beverages drive margin. Merchandise them together to encourage trade up within the same visit.

Think About This
Convenience stores are not just growing. They are taking share because they have aligned their model with how consumers actually live today. Restaurants are losing on time and price perception. Grocery is losing on immediacy. Convenience stores sit in the middle, capturing both need states with precision.

The winners in the next decade will not be defined by channel. They will be defined by who best delivers food when, where, and how the consumer wants it. Right now, that is the convenience store industry.

Tap into the Foodservice Solutions® team for greater understanding of New Electricity or for a Grocerant Program Assessment, Grocerant ScoreCard, or for product positioning or placement assistance, or call our Grocerant Guru®.  Since 1991 www.FoodserviceSolutions.us  of Tacoma, WA has been the global leader in the Grocerant niche. Contact: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or 253-759-7869



Wednesday, April 22, 2026

The U.S. Pizza Sector: A Historical Powerhouse Facing a Structural Reset

 


From Immigrant Food to Industrial Scale

Pizza in the United States evolved from a localized ethnic staple into one of the most systematized and scalable segments in foodservice. Post–World War II suburban growth, combined with advances in refrigeration, distribution, and franchising, enabled rapid expansion. Driven again by the adoption of hand held food for immediate consumption according to Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions®.

Brands like Pizza Hut, Domino’s, Little Caesars, and Papa John’s built national footprints by optimizing three core economic drivers:

·       Low-cost, high-margin base ingredients

·       Franchise-led capital expansion

·       Standardized operating systems

By the early 2000s, pizza had become a top-tier food category in the U.S., generating more than 40 billion dollars annually, with chain operators controlling a disproportionate share due to scale efficiencies and marketing reach.

 


The Delivery Boom and Margin Compression

From 2005 to 2020, pizza chains benefited from a delivery-driven growth cycle. The rise of online ordering fundamentally changed the category.

Domino’s set the pace with a digital-first strategy that now results in more than 75 percent of its U.S. sales coming through digital channels. This shift produced measurable advantages:

·       Higher average check sizes, often 10 to 15 percent above phone orders

·       Improved order accuracy, reducing remake costs

·       Lower labor intensity per transaction

However, the same period introduced structural margin pressure across the sector:

·       Deep discounting became normalized, with 40 to 60 percent of transactions tied to promotional offers

·       Delivery fees increased but failed to fully offset rising labor and logistics costs

·       Third-party delivery platforms captured 15 to 30 percent commissions, eroding profitability for operators who adopted them

The result was a paradox: strong top-line sales growth paired with weakening store-level margins.

 


The Current Inflection Point: Two of the Top Four Are in Play

Two of the four largest U.S. pizza chains are now in active or advanced sale discussions: Pizza Hut and Papa John’s. Meanwhile, Domino’s and Little Caesars are not pursuing sales, reflecting a widening performance gap within the category.

 


Pizza Hut: Scale Without Momentum

Owned by Yum Brands, Pizza Hut is formally being marketed to private equity firms including Apollo Global Management and Sycamore Partners.

The decision is grounded in hard performance metrics:

·       Systemwide sales declined more than 8 percent year over year

·       Approximately 250 U.S. locations are being closed or refranchised

·       Average unit volumes trail Domino’s by roughly 600,000 dollars per store

From a food marketing standpoint, Pizza Hut faces a positioning problem:

·       Historically anchored in dine-in occasions, which now represent less than 20 percent of its sales mix

·       Slower digital adoption relative to competitors, limiting data-driven personalization

·       Lower brand frequency among Gen Z consumers, who prioritize speed, customization, and perceived value

Pizza Hut’s legacy real estate footprint also creates inefficiencies. Larger-format stores carry higher fixed costs, while the market has shifted toward delivery-optimized, smaller footprints.

 


Papa John’s: Brand Erosion Meets Traffic Decline

Papa John’s is in advanced acquisition discussions with Irth Capital, backed by Brookfield Asset Management.

Performance data highlights sustained pressure:

·       Same-store sales have declined in seven of the last eight quarters

·       Systemwide sales decreased approximately 1 percent, with additional contraction expected

·       Traffic declines are outpacing pricing gains, indicating weakening demand elasticity

The brand continues to deal with residual impact from the departure of founder John Schnatter, which disrupted its core “better ingredients, better pizza” positioning.

From a marketing perspective:

·       The premium message has lost clarity in a value-sensitive environment

·       Competitive overlap with Domino’s on delivery convenience dilutes differentiation

·       Promotional reliance has increased, with limited success in driving incremental traffic

 


Structural Pressures Across the Pizza Sector

1. Demand Shifts

Consumer behavior is changing in measurable ways:

·       Delivery usage has declined from 61 percent of occasions in 2022 to 55 percent in 2025

·       Retail grocery is capturing share, with frozen pizza sales growing in both premium and private label segments

·       Meal fragmentation is increasing, with consumers opting for snacks and smaller meals rather than large group orders

2. Cost Inflation

The cost structure for pizza operators has materially shifted:

·       Cheese prices remain volatile and represent up to 30 percent of food cost

·       Labor costs have risen between 5 and 9 percent annually in key markets

·       Delivery and packaging costs continue to increase, particularly with third-party integration

3. Value Perception Gap

Consumers are more price sensitive, yet still expect convenience and quality:

·       The average pizza ticket has increased, but perceived value has declined

·       Discount-driven behavior dominates, with many consumers unwilling to pay full menu price

·       Bundling strategies are critical but often compress margins further

4. Competitive Divergence

The category is splitting into clear winners and laggards:

·       Domino’s leads in digital, operational efficiency, and delivery density

·       Little Caesars leads in entry-level price positioning and simplicity

·       Pizza Hut and Papa John’s are caught between value and premium, without a dominant advantage in either

 


Why Private Equity Is Interested

Private equity firms see operational upside rather than terminal decline. Key levers include:

·       Closing underperforming locations to improve systemwide averages

·       Streamlining menus to reduce complexity and improve throughput

·       Investing in digital ecosystems to increase frequency and ticket size

·       Refranchising to shift capital burden and improve return on invested capital

Operating outside public market scrutiny allows for aggressive restructuring that would be difficult under quarterly earnings pressure.

 


The Bottom Line

The U.S. pizza sector remains one of the largest and most resilient food categories, but it is undergoing a structural reset.

Pizza Hut and Papa John’s are exploring sales because their current operating models are misaligned with evolving consumer behavior, cost realities, and competitive dynamics.

This is not a category in decline. It is a category where execution, positioning, and relevance now determine survival at scale.

Three Grocerant Guru® Insights

1. Occasion Expansion Is Critical for Growth
Pizza must move beyond dinner and group occasions. Data shows increased demand for single-serve, snackable, and daypart-flexible offerings. Brands that expand into lunch, late-night, and snacking occasions can increase visit frequency by double digits.

2. Data-Driven Personalization Will Separate Winners
Loyalty programs and digital ordering data are underleveraged assets. Targeted offers can increase conversion rates by 20 percent or more compared to mass promotions, while also protecting margins.

3. Retail and Foodservice Convergence Is Accelerating
Frozen and take-and-bake pizza are improving in quality and capturing share. Restaurant brands must respond with hybrid models that combine convenience, freshness, and value, or risk losing relevance to grocery channels.

Success Leaves Clues—Are You Ready to Find Yours?

One key insight that continues to drive success is this: "The consumer is dynamic, not static." This principle is the foundation of our work at Foodservice Solutions®, where Steven Johnson, the Grocerant Guru®, has been helping brands stay relevant in an ever-evolving market.

Want to strengthen your brand’s connection with today’s consumers? Let’s talk. Call 253-759-7869 for more information.

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