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Home»Business

3 McDonald’s rivals are closing up and one filed for bankruptcy

Wendy's, The Habit Burger & Grill and Hardee's franchisee ARC Burger are all pulling back U.S. locations in 2026, for reasons ranging from strategy to bankruptcy.
Destiny PhilipsBy Destiny PhilipsMay 3, 2026 Business No Comments4 Mins Read
McDonald's
PhotoCredit : Shutterstock/Robert Way
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The fast-food burger sector is having a rough year. Three well-known chains are trimming their U.S. footprints in 2026, and the circumstances behind each set of closures tell a different story about what is actually happening to the industry right now. One chain is making a calculated bet on fewer, better-performing restaurants. Another is quietly retreating from markets where the math stopped working. A third is gone entirely, taken down by a franchise dispute and a bankruptcy filing.

1. Wendy’s cuts between 292 and 350 restaurants nationwide

Wendy’s announced during its fourth quarter earnings call on Feb. 13, 2026, that it planned to close between 5% and 6% of its 5,831 U.S. locations over the course of the year. That translates to somewhere between 292 and 350 restaurants. Twenty-eight had already been shuttered by the time the announcement was made.

The closures fall under a program called Project Fresh, an internal initiative focused on improving profitability and franchisee economics by cutting locations that are not pulling their weight. Wendy’s framed the move as system optimization rather than contraction, and that framing is not entirely without merit. Closing underperforming units to shore up the ones that remain is a different posture than a chain in freefall.

Still, closing up to 350 locations in a single year is not a small number, and it signals that Wendy’s is prioritizing margin over market presence in a way it has not done publicly before.

2. The Habit Burger & Grill exits markets with little notice

The Habit Burger & Grill, founded in 1969 in Santa Barbara, Calif., has been closing locations across multiple states with minimal public communication. The most recent closure came in mid-April 2026, when the chain shut its restaurant on W. Plaza Drive in Mooresville, N.C. The company cited a shift toward markets with stronger growth potential, though it offered no specifics.

The Mooresville closure left just three Habit Burger locations in the broader Charlotte region, down from six when that particular restaurant opened in 2023. Before North Carolina, the chain closed a Parsippany, N.J., location in February 2026 after more than a decade of operation at the Morris Hills Shopping Center on U.S. Route 46. No reason was given for that one.

In early December 2025, the chain also shuttered its Hesperia, Calif., location, which had operated for roughly 10 years. Customers pointed to a familiar set of pressures including relatively high prices, no drive-thru option, and direct competition from an In-N-Out Burger nearby.

The Irvine, Calif.-based chain currently operates more than 380 restaurants across 14 states and several international markets. It has been directing customers to nearby locations through in-store signage and its mobile app.

3. Hardee’s franchisee ARC Burger closes all 77 locations

The most complete collapse among the three involves ARC Burger LLC, a Hardee’s franchisee that operated 77 restaurants. Hardee’s Restaurants LLC filed a lawsuit against ARC Burger in November 2025, alleging that the franchisee failed to pay franchise fees and meet other financial obligations under its agreement.

ARC Burger responded by filing for Chapter 7 bankruptcy liquidation on April 20, 2026. Chapter 7 is a full liquidation filing, not a reorganization, which means the company has no path back to operation. All 77 locations had already ceased operations before the bankruptcy filing was submitted.

What the closures say about fast food right now

Taken together, these three situations reflect a fast-food sector under real pressure in 2026. Operating costs are higher than they were two years ago. Consumer habits have shifted enough to hurt locations that were once reliably profitable. And competition in key markets, particularly in California where In-N-Out continues to hold enormous loyalty, has made it harder for mid-tier burger chains to justify keeping marginal locations open.

The chains that survive this stretch will likely be smaller and more selective about where they operate. The ones that do not adapt are already filing paperwork.

2026 ARC Burger bankruptcy fast food closures Hardee's McDonald's rivals Project Fresh restaurant industry The Habit Burger and Grill Wendy's
Destiny Philips

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