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4 Major Restaurant Chains Closing Their Doors in Florida: June 2026

Elwin Flatley
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Food Travel LogoFLORIDA - The economic squeeze of the last few years has finally reached a boiling point for the American restaurant industry. Between skyrocketing commercial rents, shifting consumer habits, and a customer base exhausted by wallet-affecting inflation, 2026 has become the year of the "Great Contraction."


 

4 Major Restaurant Chains Closing Their Doors in Florida
4 Major Restaurant Chains Closing Their Doors in Florida

 



The ongoing retail apocalypse is brutally reshaping the hospitality sector nationwide, and Florida is not immune. While the Sunshine State boasts a massive, thriving culinary scene driven by heavy tourism and rapid population growth—from the bustling, high-density dining corridors of Miami and Orlando to the coastal seafood hubs of the Panhandle—several national heavyweights are quietly packing up their dining rooms. As corporate chains and massive regional franchisees scramble to protect their bottom lines, four major chains are shutting their doors this June, leaving Florida communities with fewer dining options.

1. Popeyes: The Massive Franchise Collapse

Popeyes is experiencing a sudden, dramatic contraction across its southern footprint, and Florida is at the epicenter of the fallout. Recently, Sailormen Inc., a massive Miami-based operator running over 130 Popeyes locations across Florida and Georgia, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. Staggering under roughly $130 million in debt, the operator cited rising inflation and declining customer traffic as the driving forces behind the collapse.



Dozens of locations have already been abruptly shuttered across the state in multiple waves of closures. While the corporate entity remains strong globally, the localized fallout from this franchisee collapse means several older, community-staple locations across Florida are permanently turning off their fryers and locking their doors heading into the summer.

Why it's leaving:


2. Applebee's: The Neighborhood Shuttering

Applebee's has long been a staple of suburban and rural dining, but the casual-dining giant has been aggressively trimming its footprint nationwide. For Florida, the contraction is taking a heavy toll in 2026. Earlier this spring, Neighborhood Restaurant Partners Florida—a massive regional franchisee that operated dozens of locations across Florida, Georgia, and Alabama—filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy.

Reporting tens of millions in liabilities, the franchisee had been attempting to downsize for years following post-pandemic sales declines. As a result, over a dozen Florida locations have already gone dark. As the massive franchisee operator liquidates and a court-supervised sale moves forward, several underperforming neighborhood locations are opting to lock their doors this June rather than attempt to restructure expensive leases.



Why it's leaving:


3. Wendy's: The "Project Fresh" Purge

Wendy's might seem invincible, but the square-burger giant is actively shrinking its massive U.S. footprint. After reporting significant drops in domestic sales, the company initiated its "Project Fresh" turnaround plan to eliminate up to 6% of its lowest-performing restaurants in the first half of 2026.

Florida has been one of the hardest-hit states during this corporate purge, suffering over two dozen net location losses in recent months across cities from Jacksonville and Tallahassee to Tampa and Miami. Franchisees operating older, "legacy" brick-and-mortar buildings that cannot be easily retrofitted for digital-first, high-efficiency drive-thrus are squarely on the chopping block heading into this June.

Why it's leaving:


4. Hardee's: The Franchise Fallout

Hardee's has historically maintained a strong presence across the South, serving as a morning staple for scratch-made biscuits. However, a catastrophic legal and financial dispute severely disrupted its footprint heading into this year. Following a major fallout over unpaid royalties with a massive multi-state franchise operator, ARC Burger, dozens of locations abruptly shuttered their doors—including several right here in Florida.

While the corporate entity has desperately tried to reopen a handful of the most profitable spots by converting them into corporate-owned stores, many aging locations in smaller Florida communities were permanently abandoned during the legal crossfire and subsequent Chapter 7 liquidation. These once-bustling morning hubs remain entirely vacant heading into this summer.

Why it's leaving:


The Bottom Line

The restaurant industry is highly cyclical; where one door closes, a new hyper-local concept usually takes its place—especially in a state with a culinary footprint as massive as Florida's. But for now, as corporate chains aggressively recalibrate for a tighter economy in 2026, Floridians will have to say a fond farewell to these familiar favorites.