Pizza Hut UK to close 68 restaurants amid restructure

Pizza Hut UK to close 68 restaurants amid restructure

Pizza Hut will close 68 restaurants across the United Kingdom. The move follows the collapse of its UK franchise operator, placing around 1,210 jobs at risk. Parent company Yum! Brands will acquire part of the estate through a pre-pack deal designed to keep selected sites operating under direct control.


Pizza Hut’s UK restaurant network is facing one of its largest restructures in decades after its franchise operator, DC London Pie Limited, entered administration. FTI Consulting, appointed as administrator, confirmed that 68 dine-in restaurants and 11 delivery-only sites will close, resulting in about 1,210 job losses.

In a pre-pack arrangement, Yum! Brands, Pizza Hut’s US-based parent company, has agreed to acquire 64 restaurants and retain roughly 1,276 employees. The remaining sites are to close permanently, marking a significant contraction of the company’s dine-in footprint.

“This targeted acquisition aims to safeguard our guest experience and protect jobs where possible. Our immediate priority is operational continuity at the acquired locations and supporting colleagues through the transition,” said Nicolas Burquier, managing director of international operating markets at Yum! Brands.

Pizza Hut has not published a full list of affected venues, but several have already been marked “temporarily closed” online. In the West Midlands, restaurants in Stratford-upon-Avon, Dudley, and Solihull are among those understood to be impacted. In Scotland, the group operates 13 dine-in restaurants across Aberdeen, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Dundee and Inverness, though it remains unclear which will close.

The closures come amid persistent cost pressures in UK hospitality. Rising wages, national insurance contributions, rent, and energy bills have eroded margins, while inflation continues to weigh on consumer spending. Companies built on large-format dining have been particularly affected as customers favour smaller venues and delivery-based options.

Pizza Hut first entered the UK market in 1973. The dine-in business has been restructured several times since, but this latest contraction underscores the shifting economics of high-street hospitality and the ongoing realignment of consumer habits in post-pandemic Britain.


Stories for you

  • TotalEnergies and Colas team up to decarbonise

    TotalEnergies and Colas team up to decarbonise

    TotalEnergies and Colas renew partnership to decarbonise construction. The collaboration focuses on multi-energy solutions, electric charging infrastructure, and solar power facilities to reduce carbon emissions in the construction sector, supporting TotalEnergies’ and Colas’s decarbonisation goals by 2030….


  • Morrisons to close 103 outlets nationwide

    Morrisons to close 103 outlets nationwide

    Morrisons to close 103 UK outlets to streamline operations. Morrisons will close cafés, florists, pharmacies, and convenience stores to optimise operations amid rising costs and focus on core growth areas. Profit recovery noted, but challenges persist with energy, staffing, and regulatory expenses.


  • Allica Bank acquires firm to boost SME lending

    Allica Bank acquires firm to boost SME lending

    Allica Bank acquires fintech Kriya to boost SME lending capacity. The acquisition, announced on Wednesday, is Allica’s third, following its purchase of Allied Irish Bank’s SME portfolio and Tuscan Capital. Allica aims for £1bn in working capital finance.