Clearwater, Florida, May 21, 2026, 08:03 EDT
Hooters’ founder-led group is making a push to revamp the brand after buying it out of bankruptcy. The owners want to shift Hooters back to being a beach-themed neighborhood spot, aiming for more family business. Hooters Inc. said changes are rolling out now — updates to older uniforms, fresher food, and upgrades underway at about 140 of its 198 U.S. stores as well as 60 abroad. CEO Neil Kiefer said the group is “taking back the Hooters name.” Hooters
Hooters is racing the clock to use a court restructuring to boost its business at a tough time for casual dining. Higher food and labor costs, inflation, and weaker spending are hurting the sector. Reuters said the chain filed for Chapter 11 in March 2025 with $376 million in debt. That process lets Hooters keep running as it works out its finances, with Reuters pointing to TGI Fridays and Red Lobster feeling similar pressure.
Florida’s Hooters at Lake Deaton Plaza was in the local news this week after Villages-News said a bystander tailed a tan Toyota minivan from Lake Deaton Recreation Center to the restaurant, reporting a fight inside the van to 911. Mogaz said on Thursday that 23-year-old Michaella Rose Brown of Leesburg was picked up on a misdemeanor domestic battery charge after a deputy watched cellphone video. Reports did not say there was any wrongdoing by Hooters or its employees.
The case isn’t key to Hooters’ turnaround, but it brings a type of attention the company doesn’t want. Hooters is trying to shift the narrative from its past image to food, service and drawing more family customers.
Hooters has been working on a planned reset for months. Last year, Bloomberg said the founders wanted to stop bikini nights and bring families back. Kiefer described the push as “re-Hooterization,” now used inside the chain for efforts to revive the old image without changing the Hooters name. Bloomberg
Food is key to the plan, not just a branding tool. Kiefer told Newsweek the company needed to “get the food right,” but also said some acquired stores might close if they aren’t profitable. Newsweek
Hooters faces a test on whether it can keep its loyal crowd and draw in women, families and younger customers, who might reject the classic approach. Jordan Lee at The PR Group told Fox Business that younger people focus more on “authenticity, inclusivity, and the dining experience itself” instead of old sexual branding. FOX 2 Detroit
A cleaner image alone may not fix struggling stores. Hooters needs to show the new uniforms, menu tweaks, and more local events can actually drive traffic across its franchise-heavy chain, where operations differ and customers can pick easier or cheaper spots for wings.
Right now, the chain is betting diners won’t mind going back to the old name if it’s a little softer. Changing the slogan may not matter as much as whether families actually notice a difference when they come in.