As of April 2026, the Portland Metro wage floor is $15.45, while standard counties are $14.20. These labor costs, combined with a significant shift toward digital-only ordering by consumers, are leading several major chains to prune their Oregon locations. Here are the four major restaurant chains closing doors or downsizing in the Beaver State this month.
1. Papa John’s ("Strategic Review")
In a major blow to the regional pizza scene, Papa John’s is moving forward with plans to close 300 underperforming locations across North America by 2027, with roughly 200 scheduled for 2026.
- The Oregon Impact: Following a "strategic review" of its restaurant fleet, the brand is targeting older, franchise-owned sites. Local reports from KGW in Portland have highlighted that these closures will affect approximately 9% of the chain’s total North American footprint this spring.
- The Reason: CFO Ravi Thanawala noted that the closures target sites that are more than a decade old and generating annual revenues under $600,000. In Oregon’s competitive pizza market, many suburban franchises are being phased out in favor of centralized delivery hubs.
2. Wendy’s ("Project Fresh" Phase II)
The most widespread impact on Oregon’s fast-food landscape this month comes from Wendy’s. Under its national "Project Fresh" turnaround strategy, the company is shuttering roughly 350 locations in the first half of 2026.
- The Oregon Target: With a significant presence in the Willamette Valley and Southern Oregon, Wendy’s is evaluating older "legacy" buildings.
- The Strategy: Interim CEO Ken Cook has stated the chain is exiting sites that cannot be easily retrofitted with the AI-enabled kiosks and delivery-optimized kitchens required for the 2026 market. Sites in suburban Portland and Salem that lack these modernizations are at the highest risk this April.
3. Denny’s ("Portfolio Rationalization")
The iconic "America’s Diner" is finalizing plans to close 150 underperforming restaurants nationwide by early 2026.
- The Local Fallout: Oregon has already seen the impact of this "surgical" approach, with sites like the Ontario location on Airport Way recently exiting the market.
- The Reason: Denny’s leadership cited "aging infrastructure" and a decline in late-night foot traffic as primary drivers. As the company moves toward a "Next Gen" model under new private equity ownership, older units in traditional commercial corridors are being shuttered as their leases expire this month.
4. Pizza Hut ("Hut Forward")
Following a reported decline in U.S. sales, Pizza Hut’s parent company, Yum! Brands is executing its "Hut Forward" initiative, which involves shuttering roughly 250 locations in the first half of 2026.
- The Shift: The brand is aggressively moving away from its "Red Roof" legacy dine-in units toward smaller, leaner "Delco" (Delivery/Carry-out) models.
- The Impact: Traditional sit-down locations in Central Oregon and the Coast that lack a high-density delivery radius are at the highest risk for a "locked door" notice this April. The goal is to maximize the brand's value by stripping away the overhead of large, underutilized dining rooms.
The "Beaver State" Economic Squeeze
Why is April 2026 proving so difficult for these chains in Oregon?
- The Three-Tier Wage Wall: Oregon’s minimum wage is indexed to inflation and varies by region. For chains with locations in both the Portland Metro ($15.45) and Standard Counties ($14.20), managing labor costs across different jurisdictions is becoming an administrative and financial burden that many "legacy" models can no longer sustain.
- The Digital Divide: The 2026 market favors restaurants with the smallest possible physical footprint. Large, aging buildings with high utility costs—typical of old-school Denny's or Pizza Hut locations—are increasingly viewed as liabilities in an era dominated by app-based delivery and quick-service kiosks.