Foodservice
Solutions® Grocerant Guru®
Steven Johnson has been spotlighting restaurant customer migration toward
grocery stores and convenience stores since 1991, long before it became
a headline trend. Yet here we are in 2025, and the data has clearly
caught up with what our 125,000 regular readers have known for decades: C-stores
are now full-fledged foodservice competitors across breakfast, lunch, dinner,
snacking—and even coffee.
A
new wave of industry research confirms what the grocerant niche has been
signaling: convenience stores have evolved into primary destinations for
ready-to-eat, ready-to-heat, and fresh-prepared meals. The NPD Group,
Circana, Technomic, and multiple POS analytics platforms all point to one
undeniable fact:
Restaurant customers aren’t just defecting from QSR—they’re
replacing entire meal occasions at C-stores.
New 2025 Food Facts: How Convenience Stores Now Compete
Across Every Daypart
BREAKFAST: The New Power Meal for C-Stores
·
Since 2021, morning food and
beverage trips to convenience stores have grown 17%, driven by grab-and-go
handhelds, breakfast burritos, and morning bakery programs.
·
42% of Gen Z
now say they “frequently” get weekday breakfast from a C-store—up from 29% just
five years ago.
·
Fresh bakery cases and heat-and-eat
sandwiches are outperforming traditional QSR value menus by 10–14% in
unit sales.
Coffee:
·
C-store coffee volume is up 11% YoY,
with bean-to-cup brewing systems becoming a top differentiator.
·
Premiumization matters: customers will
spend up to $1.40 more for customized espresso or cold brew in upgraded
C-stores vs traditional gas-station blends.
LUNCH: The Daypart Where C-Stores Now Outperform QSR
The
migration that began a decade ago is now fully realized.
According
to 2025 Circana data:
·
C-stores hold 11.7% of all
quick-service lunch visits, up from 10% in 2016.
·
Millennials and Gen Z account for over
56% of all C-store lunch traffic.
·
Fresh-made pizza, chicken tenders,
salads, and snack bundles are driving double-digit growth, while QSR
lunch visits remain flat.
Pricing
remains a major advantage:
·
In 2025, lunch at a C-store averages $2.45
less than a QSR combo meal.
·
“Mix-and-Match Meal Deals” have
increased lunch basket spend by 22% over five years.
DINNER: The Surprising New Battleground
Dinner
was once untouchable for C-stores. Not anymore.
Key
2025 metrics:
·
Take-home prepared meals
from C-stores are growing at 3× the rate of QSR family bundles.
·
31% of shoppers now say C-stores are a
“reliable” or “frequent” source for rotisserie chicken, heat-and-eat
entrées, or fresh sides.
·
Urban C-store formats with hot bars
and fresh bowls are seeing 20–28% higher dinner sales than legacy
convenience formats.
Consumers
cite:
1. Speed
2. Price
transparency
3. Portion
control + customization (mix-and-match)
All
core to the grocerant niche.
SNACKING: The All-Day Driver Behind Higher Frequency
The
biggest performance gains for C-stores in 2025? Snacking.
·
All-day snacking trips to convenience
stores are up 19% over 2022.
·
Grab-and-go protein boxes, cut fruit,
sushi, premium jerky, and better-for-you snacks are growing 2–3× faster than
candy or chips.
·
Gen Z shoppers now make 3.1
convenience-store snacking trips per week, compared with 1.7 QSR snack
visits.
Snacking
is also where brand loyalty is highest:
·
22% of Gen Z
and 24% of Millennials say they “prefer a specific C-store chain” for
snacks.
·
Compare that to QSR where brand
loyalty for snacks sits below 13%.
Updated C-Store Loyalty Insights (2025)
Fresh
data continues to reinforce what your original article observed back in 2016:
1. C-stores
now capture nearly 1 in 5 Gen Z foodservice trips.
2. Millennials
remain the heaviest users—representing 34% of all C-store foodservice
traffic.
3. Loyalty
is rising: 20%+ of younger consumers go to C-stores specifically
because they prefer the brand.
4. Value
still leads—but quality, speed, and customization now tie for second place.
As
NPD’s Bonnie Riggs said years ago, “It’s something new, different.” In 2025,
that’s even more true—because C-stores now offer restaurant-quality
experiences at convenience speed and grocery-level price points.
FOURSIGHTS: 2025 Insights from the Grocerant Guru®
1. Mix-and-Match Is Now the Dominant Consumer Behavior
Customers
want components, not combos. Whether coffee + bakery item, protein box + fruit
cup, or bowl + beverage, convenience stores have mastered choice-based meal
construction better than QSR.
2. Price Elasticity Favors C-Stores
In
an inflation-fatigued environment, the ability to walk out with a full meal for
under $8 remains a major advantage—and C-stores execute that
consistently.
3. C-Store Coffee Is Now a Loyalty Anchor
The
“morning coffee run” has become the gateway to impulse breakfast, snack, and
beverage purchases—creating a dependable daily frequency loop that QSR
struggles to match.
4. Technology Has Closed the Quality Gap
Made-to-order
kiosks, AI-driven inventory, and better food-safe holding equipment mean that
C-store food is fresher, hotter, and more consistent. Convenience stores are no
longer the “alternative” to restaurants—they are the new mainstream meal
provider.
Think About This
Success
leaves clues. The ability to bundle meal components, customize flavor profiles,
and deliver value at speed sits at the heart of Foodservice Solutions® FIVE
P’s of Food Marketing. C-stores are executing on these principles with
precision—and consumers are rewarding them with loyalty across every daypart.
For
menu positioning, product placement, or foodservice ideation, contact:
Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us

















