Canada is on track to lose 4,000 restaurants in 2026
The restaurant sector is shrinking under rising costs, thinning margins and closures delayed by pandemic-era support
According to official figures, Canada’s restaurant sector appears remarkably resilient. The number of food service establishments has climbed steadily since the pandemic, surpassing pre-2020 levels and suggesting a sector that has not only recovered, but expanded. On paper, the industry looks stable.
On the ground, it does not.
Based on current cost trajectories, balance-sheet conditions, and consumer behaviour, we expect Canada to lose roughly 4,000 restaurants on a net basis in 2026. This adjustment is already underway, even if it is not yet visible in headline statistics.
The lived reality of Canada’s restaurant economy tells a very different story, one defined by margin compression, rising fixed costs, softening demand, and mounting financial fatigue. Speak with operators, suppliers, landlords, insurers or lenders and a consistent picture emerges: closures are accelerating, balance sheets are deteriorating, and survival increasingly depends on short-term coping strategies rather than long-term viability.
On paper, the sector is stable. On the ground, many restaurants are just scraping by.
Image by Nick Karvounis
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