Foodservice

Fast-Casual Establishes Niche

Segment strongest during lunch daypart, says Mintel

CHICAGO -- The fast-casual restaurant category accounted for estimated sales of $23 billion in 2010, up nearly 30% since 2006, according to a recent Mintel foodservice report. Restaurants in this market claim to combine the quality of family casual with the convenience of fast food. At $6 to $12 per ticket, pricing falls between fast food and casual dining. Fast casual restaurants distinguish themselves from fast food through their modified table service, higher-food quality, greater attention to healthful foods and, in some cases, availability of beer and wine.

"The [image-nocss] relatively new fast-casual category has fared well through the recession as people can see the added value in the food and atmosphere, despite the slightly higher price point," said Eric Giandelone, director of foodservice research at Mintel. "The majority of restaurant-goers say quality is the most important determinant in their choice of a restaurant, which will continue to help this category grow."

Fast-casual restaurants have not yet displaced fast food, casual dining, pizza or family dining restaurants, but this fairly young category makes its strongest statement during the lunch hour, with patronage levels almost equaling that of casual dining (26% of respondents have visited a fast-casual restaurant in the past month and 28% a casual dining restaurant); however, fast food still holds a strong lead with nearly 60% of Mintel respondents frequenting a fast-food establishment for lunch within the past month.

According to Giandelone, the main reason fast-casual restaurants lag so far behind fast food is simply that there are not as many of them. One of the most successful fast-casual chains, Panera Bread, had 1,388 locations as of March 2010, meanwhile fast-food leader, McDonald's had 10 times that number of restaurants in the United States.

Nearly 30% of those surveyed cite the reason for not frequenting a fast casual restaurant in the past month as "there are no/not many fast-casual restaurants by me." Just over a quarter of respondents (26%) claim they are too expensive and 22% prefer a regular wait staff when they dine out.

Chicago-based Mintel is a leading global supplier of consumer, product and media intelligence. It has provided insight into key worldwide trends, offering exclusive data and analysis.

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