7 Major Restaurant Chains Closing Doors in Minnesota: March 2026

Food Travel LogoMINNESOTA STATE - The "Land of 10,000 Lakes" is seeing a significant thinning of its dining options this March. As the first quarter of 2026 comes to a close, Minnesota’s restaurant industry is navigating a period of intense "portfolio optimization." Driven by a shift toward leaner, digital-first footprints and the high cost of maintaining legacy "Red Roof" and casual dining spaces, several national giants and local staples are shuttering their doors.


The "Hut Forward" Retreat: Pizza Hut

Minnesota is feeling the weight of Pizza Hut’s national "Hut Forward" strategy. As part of a plan to close approximately 250 underperforming locations across the U.S. in the first half of 2026, several legacy dine-in restaurants across the state are being phased out.

  • The Transition: These closures primarily target the older "Red Roof" models that once served as community hubs in suburban and rural Minnesota.
  • The Future: The brand is pivoting toward smaller, high-tech "Hut Lane" kiosks that prioritize delivery and mobile ordering, moving away from the high-overhead cost of large, underutilized dining rooms.

Fast Food’s "Project Fresh": Wendy’s Trims the Fat

Following a challenging 2025, Wendy’s has moved into an aggressive restructuring phase known as "Project Fresh." The chain plans to shutter up to 358 locations nationwide by mid-2026.

  • The Strategy: The closures focus on older units that are not equipped with the brand's latest digital ordering and high-speed drive-thru technology.
  • Minnesota Impact: While a specific list hasn't been released, several older drive-thrus in the Twin Cities and Duluth metro areas are being flagged for closure as the brand shifts toward "Global Next Gen" units.

Casual Dining Under Review: Red Robin and Red Lobster

Two staples of the American mall-adjacent dining experience are facing a reckoning this month:

  • Red Robin: Following a period of sluggish growth, Red Robin is currently reviewing its portfolio for further "optimization." Locations in Apple Valley and Plymouth have been part of ongoing discussions regarding lease renewals and performance benchmarks as the brand attempts a 2026 turnaround.
  • Red Lobster: Still navigating the fallout of its 2024 bankruptcy, Red Lobster’s CEO recently confirmed that more closures are likely this spring. The company is evaluating its real-estate footprint and could shutter dozens more restaurants nationally to focus on its top performers.

Local Heartbreaks: The Loss of Minnesota Icons

While the national chains make headlines for "restructuring," the closure of local favorites is hitting communities in the Twin Cities particularly hard:

  • D’Amico & Sons: In a major shift for the local Italian dining scene, the brand has closed its final two Minnesota locations as of late February 2026, marking the end of an era for the once-prolific casual-gourmet chain.
  • Burrito Loco: The Dinkytown staple, which served as a social hub for University of Minnesota students for decades, has officially been boarded up and sold, leaving a void in the heart of the U of M campus.
  • Local Rumor (St. Paul): This beloved Selby Avenue spot closed its doors in February after failing to reach a sustainable agreement with its landlord, citing the "increasingly difficult landscape" for small businesses.

Why Now? The Minnesota Economic Squeeze

Economic analysts point to a "triple threat" making March 2026 a breaking point for the state's service industry:

  1. The Labor & Wage Gap: With Minnesota’s labor market remaining historically tight, the cost of staffing full-service dining rooms has outpaced the margins for many mid-tier chains.
  2. The Digital Dividend: App-based ordering and delivery now account for over 40% of revenue for many fast-casual brands, making large, expensive dining halls an unnecessary liability.
  3. The Shipping "Tax": Rising logistics and freight costs in the Upper Midwest have increased the "landed cost" of ingredients, forcing restaurants to either hike prices or close their least profitable outposts.

Looking Ahead

Despite these closures, Minnesota’s dining scene is far from dead; it’s evolving. Many of the spaces vacated by Pizza Hut and Wendy’s are already being reimagined as high-efficiency "micro-kitchens" or "eat-ertainment" venues like indoor pickleball hubs and high-tech golf simulators. The message of March 2026 is clear: the era of the generic, sprawling chain is ending, replaced by leaner, more specialized experiences.

7 Major Restaurant Chains Closing Doors in Minnesota
7 Major Restaurant Chains Closing Doors in Minnesota

Food Travel LogoMINNESOTA STATE - The "Land of 10,000 Lakes" is seeing a significant thinning of its dining options this March. As the first quarter of 2026 comes to a close, Minnesota’s restaurant industry is navigating a period of intense "portfolio optimization." Driven by a shift toward leaner, digital-first footprints and the high cost of maintaining legacy "Red Roof" and casual dining spaces, several national giants and local staples are shuttering their doors.


The "Hut Forward" Retreat: Pizza Hut

Minnesota is feeling the weight of Pizza Hut’s national "Hut Forward" strategy. As part of a plan to close approximately 250 underperforming locations across the U.S. in the first half of 2026, several legacy dine-in restaurants across the state are being phased out.

  • The Transition: These closures primarily target the older "Red Roof" models that once served as community hubs in suburban and rural Minnesota.
  • The Future: The brand is pivoting toward smaller, high-tech "Hut Lane" kiosks that prioritize delivery and mobile ordering, moving away from the high-overhead cost of large, underutilized dining rooms.

Fast Food’s "Project Fresh": Wendy’s Trims the Fat

Following a challenging 2025, Wendy’s has moved into an aggressive restructuring phase known as "Project Fresh." The chain plans to shutter up to 358 locations nationwide by mid-2026.



  • The Strategy: The closures focus on older units that are not equipped with the brand's latest digital ordering and high-speed drive-thru technology.
  • Minnesota Impact: While a specific list hasn't been released, several older drive-thrus in the Twin Cities and Duluth metro areas are being flagged for closure as the brand shifts toward "Global Next Gen" units.

Casual Dining Under Review: Red Robin and Red Lobster

Two staples of the American mall-adjacent dining experience are facing a reckoning this month:

  • Red Robin: Following a period of sluggish growth, Red Robin is currently reviewing its portfolio for further "optimization." Locations in Apple Valley and Plymouth have been part of ongoing discussions regarding lease renewals and performance benchmarks as the brand attempts a 2026 turnaround.
  • Red Lobster: Still navigating the fallout of its 2024 bankruptcy, Red Lobster’s CEO recently confirmed that more closures are likely this spring. The company is evaluating its real-estate footprint and could shutter dozens more restaurants nationally to focus on its top performers.

Local Heartbreaks: The Loss of Minnesota Icons

While the national chains make headlines for "restructuring," the closure of local favorites is hitting communities in the Twin Cities particularly hard:



  • D’Amico & Sons: In a major shift for the local Italian dining scene, the brand has closed its final two Minnesota locations as of late February 2026, marking the end of an era for the once-prolific casual-gourmet chain.
  • Burrito Loco: The Dinkytown staple, which served as a social hub for University of Minnesota students for decades, has officially been boarded up and sold, leaving a void in the heart of the U of M campus.
  • Local Rumor (St. Paul): This beloved Selby Avenue spot closed its doors in February after failing to reach a sustainable agreement with its landlord, citing the "increasingly difficult landscape" for small businesses.

Why Now? The Minnesota Economic Squeeze

Economic analysts point to a "triple threat" making March 2026 a breaking point for the state's service industry:

  1. The Labor & Wage Gap: With Minnesota’s labor market remaining historically tight, the cost of staffing full-service dining rooms has outpaced the margins for many mid-tier chains.
  2. The Digital Dividend: App-based ordering and delivery now account for over 40% of revenue for many fast-casual brands, making large, expensive dining halls an unnecessary liability.
  3. The Shipping "Tax": Rising logistics and freight costs in the Upper Midwest have increased the "landed cost" of ingredients, forcing restaurants to either hike prices or close their least profitable outposts.

Looking Ahead

Despite these closures, Minnesota’s dining scene is far from dead; it’s evolving. Many of the spaces vacated by Pizza Hut and Wendy’s are already being reimagined as high-efficiency "micro-kitchens" or "eat-ertainment" venues like indoor pickleball hubs and high-tech golf simulators. The message of March 2026 is clear: the era of the generic, sprawling chain is ending, replaced by leaner, more specialized experiences.