Sunday, March 15, 2026

Walk-In Restaurants, Drive-Thru Dominance, Grocery Prepared Foods, and the Rise of the Meal Platform Economy

 

The U.S. food industry has evolved into a nearly $4 trillion annual consumer marketplace, spanning restaurants, grocery retail, convenience stores, digital ordering platforms, and institutional foodservice. Now, wonder no longer what Steven Johnson Grocerant Guru® at Tacoma, WA based Foodservice Solutions® thinks about the ‘State of the Foodservice Industry’:

Despite its size and complexity, the central competitive question remains simple according to Johnson:


Where does the meal begin—and which platform owns it?

Today, consumers decide whether dinner originates from a drive-thru lane, a walk-in restaurant, a grocery prepared foods counter, a convenience store kitchen, or a digital pickup order. That decision determines market share.

The industry is no longer defined by channel boundaries. It is defined by meal platforms.

The Scale of the Modern Food Economy

By 2026:

·       Total U.S. consumer food spending approaches $3.9–$4.0 trillion annually.

·       Food-at-home retail sales exceed $2.2–$2.4 trillion.

·       Foodservice (restaurants and institutional dining) represents $1.5–$1.7 trillion.

·       Convenience store foodservice exceeds $100 billion annually.

·       Grocery prepared foods now generate $50–$65 billion and remain one of retail’s fastest-growing categories.

Food spending is distributed across multiple access points, but consumption remains centered around one core behavior:

People want meals—delivered with convenience, control, and value.

 


The Drive-Thru Economy

Drive-thru service has become the operational backbone of limited-service restaurants.

Industry-wide:

·       64–75% of quick-service transactions occur off-premise.

·       Drive-thru represents the majority of those transactions.

·       Digital ordering and pickup continue to expand year-over-year.

Major brands such as McDonald's and Chick-fil-A rely heavily on drive-thru throughput for revenue stability.

Drive-thru succeeds because it delivers:

·       Speed

·       Predictability

·       Efficiency

However, it is structurally optimized for transaction velocity—not deep customization or experiential dining.

When complexity increases, operations often require customers to pull forward or wait, which can weaken service engagement.

Drive-thru wins on time.
Walk-in wins on interaction.

 


The Grocerant Revolution

One of the most important transformations in food retail is the rapid expansion of Ready-2-Eat and Heat-N-Eat prepared foods, often described as the Grocerant niche.

This hybrid category blends grocery retail efficiency with restaurant-style meal preparation.

Retail leaders including Kroger and Whole Foods Market have significantly expanded prepared meal programs.

Key trends:

·       Prepared foods deliver 2–3x the gross margin of center-store packaged goods.

·       Over 40% of grocery shoppers purchase ready-to-eat meals weekly.

·       Meal solutions drive increased trip frequency and basket size.

Consumers increasingly purchase dinner where they shop, not where they traditionally dine.

The meal is no longer confined to restaurants.

 


Convenience Stores as Food Destinations

Convenience store operators such as:

·       7-Eleven

·       Wawa

·       Casey's

have transformed their stores into competitive foodservice destinations.

Food now represents up to 40% of total store revenue in leading locations and often accounts for over half of store profit.

Unlike traditional drive-thru systems, convenience stores typically:

·       Emphasize walk-in customization

·       Encourage incremental purchases

·       Support made-to-order menus

·       Blend retail and foodservice experiences

They combine immediacy with personalization.

 


Where Americans Actually Eat

Meal consumption patterns show that:

·       Approximately 50–55% of meals are eaten at home.

·       Roughly 15–20% are eaten inside restaurants.

·       25–30% originate from takeout, drive-thru, pickup, or delivery.

Critically, many meals consumed at home are no longer cooked from scratch. Instead, they originate from:

·       Restaurant off-premise orders

·       Grocery prepared foods

·       Convenience store meals

·       Digital pickup platforms

The kitchen remains the location—but not necessarily the origin.

 


Ten Data Points Every Food Executive Must Understand (2026)

1.       Total U.S. food spending approaches $4 trillion.

2.       Food-at-home remains larger than foodservice.

3.       Off-premise dominates limited-service restaurant transactions.

4.       Drive-thru represents the majority of QSR sales.

5.       Convenience store foodservice exceeds $100 billion.

6.       Prepared foods are one of grocery’s fastest-growing segments.

7.       Prepared meals carry significantly higher margins than center-store goods.

8.       More than half of meals are eaten at home—but often purchased prepared.

9.       Customization and flexibility drive loyalty across generations.

10.   Hybrid food platforms outperform single-channel models.

The Competitive Reality

The battle is no longer:

Restaurant vs. Grocery.

It is:

Drive-thru efficiency
versus
Walk-in experience
versus
Retail meal platforms
versus
Digital ecosystems.

Each platform owns part of the meal journey.

The winners will integrate all of them.

 


Four Integrated Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. The Meal Is the True Unit of Competition

Companies that organize strategy around meal occasions—not product categories—will capture incremental share.

2. Speed Alone Is Insufficient

Drive-thru dominance proves efficiency matters. But long-term loyalty requires customization, quality, and experience.

3. Grocery and Restaurants Are Converging

Prepared foods, digital ordering, and hybrid store formats have erased traditional channel lines.

Retailers must think like restaurants.
Restaurants must think like retailers.

4. Choice Is the New Loyalty Mechanism

Consumers return to platforms that provide:

·       Personalization

·       Convenience

·       Value alignment

·       Low friction

·       Consistent quality

In the modern food economy, choice drives participation—and participation drives revenue.

 


Think About This

The U.S. food industry is not contracting. It is restructuring.

Drive-thru lanes, walk-in dining rooms, grocery prepared foods counters, convenience store kitchens, and digital pickup platforms are not competing in isolation.

They are operating inside a unified meal economy.

The companies that understand this shift—those that design around consumer choice, platform integration, and meal participation—will define the next decade of food retail and foodservice growth.

 Ready to Find Your Next Success Clue?

We specialize in outsourced food marketing and business development ideations—helping brands seize opportunities in food retail, technology, and menu innovation.

Reach out today: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us
Follow us:
Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter



Saturday, March 14, 2026

How the Grocerant Niche Is Reshaping the $1.5 Trillion U.S. Foodservice Industry



Portability, Fresh Prepared Foods, and the Power of the 5 P’s

Fresh prepared foods, Ready-2-Eat meals, and Heat-N-Eat solutions have quietly become one of the most disruptive forces in the modern food industry.

What once lived inside the supermarket deli department has evolved into a cross-channel foodservice ecosystem that spans grocery stores, warehouse clubs, convenience stores, and restaurants.

Today consumers are no longer deciding between grocery stores, convenience stores, and restaurants. Instead, they are asking a much simpler question:

Where can I get the most convenient, portable, high-quality meal right now?

That behavioral shift validates what the Grocerant Guru® identified decades ago: the Foodservice Solutions® 5 P’s of Food Marketing — Product, Packaging, Placement, Portability, and Price — are the structural drivers of modern food retail success.

Operators who align those five factors with modern lifestyles consistently outperform competitors across the entire $1.5 trillion U.S. food-away-from-home marketplace.

 


The Macro Shift: Fresh Prepared Foods Are Now a Core Industry Growth Engine

Fresh prepared foods are no longer a niche category — they are a strategic growth driver across retail food channels.

Key industry indicators illustrate the magnitude of the shift:

·       U.S. supermarket deli departments generate over $48 billion annually, with prepared entrées representing the fastest-growing segment.

·       Roughly 67% of Americans purchase fresh prepared foods from grocery stores at least twice per month.

·       Ready-to-eat foods account for over 40% of fresh prepared food purchases.

·       Convenience stores now account for more than 12% of fresh prepared food sales, and that share continues to expand.

Globally, the ready-meal market exceeded $190 billion in 2025 and is projected to surpass $350 billion by 2034, driven by urbanization, time-starved consumers, and demand for convenient meal solutions.

At the same time, restaurant inflation has accelerated consumer migration. Since 2020, restaurant menu prices have risen roughly 25–30%, pushing many consumers to search for restaurant-quality meals at retail prices.

 


Costco Fresh Foods: A Retailer Rivaling the Largest Restaurant Chains

Few companies illustrate the Grocerant transformation better than Costco Wholesale.

Costco’s Fresh Foods category — including deli, bakery, meat, produce, and prepared foods — generated approximately $38.9 billion in FY2025 sales.

To put that into perspective, compare it with the largest restaurant chains in America:

Brand

U.S. Sales

McDonald's

~$53B

Starbucks

~$28.7B

Costco Fresh Foods (equivalent)

~$38.9B

Chick-fil-A

~$21.6B

Taco Bell

~$15B

If Costco’s Fresh Foods division were classified as a restaurant brand, it would rank among the top three foodservice operators in the United States.

Signature items like Costco’s $4.99 rotisserie chicken, fresh deli meals, bakery items, and pizza demonstrate a powerful Grocerant principle:

Restaurant-quality food at retail prices drives extraordinary consumer loyalty and repeat purchases.

 


Convenience Stores: America’s Fastest-Growing Foodservice Channel

The convenience channel may be the fastest-growing foodservice platform in the country.

More than 95% of U.S. convenience stores now offer prepared foods, and industry foodservice sales exceed $70 billion annually.

Several chains are leading the transformation.

Casey’s: A Pizza and Prepared Food Powerhouse

Casey's General Stores

Key metrics:

·       Inside store sales: ~$4.8B

·       Prepared food margins approaching 60%

·       Same-store prepared food growth exceeding 6%

Casey’s is now considered one of the largest pizza sellers in America, with pizza representing a major share of its foodservice revenue.

Prepared foods have helped Casey’s surpass $1 billion in EBITDA, illustrating the profitability of well-executed Grocerant programs.

 


Wawa: Built-to-Order Foodservice at Massive Scale

Wawa

·       Estimated revenue: ~$18.8B

·       Over 1 billion customer visits annually

·       Built-to-Order hoagies, breakfast sandwiches, and beverages dominate multiple dayparts.

Morning traffic at food-forward c-stores like Wawa has grown faster than traditional QSR breakfast traffic, highlighting the importance of accessibility and convenience.

 


Sheetz: 24-Hour Foodservice Innovation

Sheetz

·       Estimated revenue: ~$11B

·       More than 750 locations

·       Fully integrated Made-to-Order® food platform

Sheetz generates substantial late-night foodservice traffic, a daypart where many traditional restaurants are closed.

Accessibility plus portability equals competitive advantage.

 


Grocers Becoming Restaurants

Supermarkets are increasingly competing directly with restaurants.

Wegmans

Wegmans Food Markets

Estimated annual revenue: $12–13.5B

Wegmans stores feature:

·       Market Café dining areas

·       Sushi stations

·       Wood-fired pizza

·       Global entrées

·       Chef-prepared meals

Prepared foods in premium grocery stores can represent 10–20% of total store sales.

 


H-E-B

The Meal Simple platform includes hundreds of:

·       Ready-to-Eat meals

·       Heat-and-serve entrées

·       Oven-ready dinners

·       Fresh bowls and protein meals

Meal Simple has become one of the most successful retail meal programs in the United States.

 


Walmart, Aldi, and the Private Label Prepared Food Battle

Prepared foods are also becoming a private label innovation battlefield.

Retailers including:

·       Walmart

·       Kroger

·       Target

are expanding store-brand meal solutions.

Private label now represents over 21% of U.S. grocery sales, with many retailers using prepared foods to differentiate their offerings.

Discount grocers are also entering the space.

Aldi

Aldi’s refrigerated prepared meals, protein bowls, and heat-and-serve items are helping the chain attract younger shoppers looking for restaurant-style meals at discount prices.

 


Trader Joe’s

Trader Joe’s continues to dominate the portable meal and global flavor segment with ready meals, handheld snacks, and globally inspired prepared foods.

The retailer’s private label innovation has helped it become one of the highest-sales-per-square-foot grocery chains in the United States.

 


Restaurant Traffic Migration: Retail Is Capturing More Meal Occasions

The expansion of fresh prepared foods is also reshaping restaurant traffic.

Industry research shows:

·       Restaurant traffic growth has remained relatively flat since 2019.

·       Grocery prepared food purchases continue to grow as consumers replace restaurant visits with heat-and-serve meals at home.

·       Convenience stores are increasingly capturing breakfast and late-night meal occasions traditionally dominated by QSR chains.

The result is a blurring of channel boundaries.

Retailers are behaving like restaurants — and consumers are responding.

 


Why Portability Wins: The 5 P’s in Action

The Grocerant Guru’s Foodservice Solutions® 5 P’s explain why these programs outperform traditional restaurant models.

Product

Winning formats include:

·       Protein bowls

·       Global street foods

·       Fresh salads with added protein

·       Handheld sandwiches and wraps

These formats travel well and align with modern lifestyles.

 

Packaging

Packaging innovation now drives purchase decisions:

·       Microwave-ready containers

·       Tamper-evident lids

·       Heat-and-serve trays

·       Delivery-ready packaging

Packaging has evolved from operational necessity to consumer marketing tool.

 

Placement

High-velocity placement areas include:

·       Front-of-store grab-and-go coolers

·       Self-service hot bars

·       Digital pickup shelves

·       Curbside pickup staging areas

The closer the food is to the entrance, the faster it sells.

 

Portability

Portability has become the most powerful behavioral driver in modern foodservice.

Consumers want meals that can be:

·       eaten in the car

·       taken to work

·       reheated later

·       consumed anywhere

Portable meals eliminate the need for traditional dining occasions.

 

Price

Retailers deliver restaurant-quality meals 30–60% cheaper than restaurant equivalents.

Examples include:

·       Costco rotisserie chicken

·       Wawa hoagies

·       Casey’s pizza

·       H-E-B Meal Simple dinners

Price advantage accelerates consumer migration.

 


Four Insights from the Grocerant Guru®

1. Portability is the new value equation

Consumers increasingly define value by how easily a meal fits into their lifestyle, not simply by the lowest price.

 

2. Retailers who behave like restaurants win share from restaurants

Companies like Costco, Wawa, Casey’s, Wegmans, and H-E-B are now among the most influential foodservice operators in America.

 

3. The 5 P’s remain the most predictive model of foodservice success

Operators who align Product, Packaging, Placement, Portability, and Price with consumer behavior consistently outperform both grocery and restaurant competitors.

 

4. The Grocerant niche is no longer emerging — it is defining the future of food retail

The real competition in foodservice is no longer restaurant vs grocery vs convenience store.

The real competition is who can deliver the most convenient, portable, high-quality meal solution fastest.

And increasingly, the winners are retailers who think like restaurants.

Are you ready for some fresh ideations? Do your food marketing ideas look more like yesterday than tomorrow? Interested in learning how our Grocerant Guru® can edify your retail food brand while creating a platform for consumer convenient meal participationdifferentiation and individualization?  Email us at: Steve@FoodserviceSolutions.us or visit: us on our social media sites by clicking one of the following links: FacebookLinkedIn, or Twitter