LOUISVILLE, Kentucky, June 22, 2026, 09:02 EDT
- Yum Brands is selling Pizza Hut in a pair of deals totaling $2.7 billion, bringing an end to the pizza brand’s time with the KFC and Taco Bell owner.
- Yum streamlines its portfolio with the move, as Pizza Hut’s U.S. business trails competitors and struggles against delivery-driven models.
- LongRange Capital has taken over Pizza Hut’s operations outside mainland China, while Yum China acquired the mainland business, where Pizza Hut has been expanding.
Yum Brands is offloading Pizza Hut in a split sale worth $2.7 billion, sending most of the pizza chain to LongRange Capital and selling the China business to Yum China Holdings. The move wraps up a strategic review started in November and shifts Pizza Hut out of the same group as KFC and Taco Bell.
Pizza Hut is dragging on Yum’s portfolio, so the deal is in focus now. Yum called the sale a move toward being a “more focused company.” The board also cleared another $4 billion for share buybacks with the transactions. SEC
Pizza Hut’s U.S. comparable-store sales have dropped for 10 quarters in a row, Reuters said. AP, pulling numbers from Technomic, reported an 8.2% decline in U.S. sales for Pizza Hut last year. U.S. pizza sales overall were flat or a bit down. Reuters
LongRange is set to acquire Pizza Hut outside mainland China in a deal valued at about $1.5 billion. Yum could get a $75 million earn-out by 2030 if certain targets are met. Yum China is agreeing to pay around $1.2 billion for the mainland China unit. After taxes, closing adjustments and fees, Yum expects net proceeds of roughly $2.3 billion, not including the potential earn-out payment.
Yum said it plans to keep supplying Byte by Yum, its in-house tech platform, to Pizza Hut markets outside China and will also handle some transition services. Once the deal closes—Yum expects that in the third quarter, pending the usual regulatory sign-off—it will stop breaking out Pizza Hut as its own division.
LongRange is picking up a big brand but not one without trouble ahead. The firm said Pizza Hut, outside mainland China, runs more than 15,500 locations in 108 countries, pulling in about $10 billion in annual systemwide sales across its company and franchised stores. Bob Berlin, LongRange’s founder and managing partner, called Pizza Hut a “beloved global brand” and said the firm plans to work with franchisees to push its “next phase of growth.” Business Wire
Berlin’s history is a key part of the story. Inc. said he played a big role in turning around Arby’s. The outlet quoted Brad Haller, a senior partner at West Monroe’s mergers and acquisition group, who said the move looks like a strategic play, not a distressed sale. Haller said Pizza Hut has had a hard time staking out the “quick and easy pizza” spot that Domino’s has dominated. Inc.com
Yum China is picking up a new asset. The company reported Pizza Hut China had 4,375 locations in over 1,100 cities as of March 31. For 2025, segment revenue came in at $2.3 billion, with operating profit at $183 million. The chain logged its 13th consecutive quarter of same-store transaction growth in Q1, Yum China said.
Yum China CEO Joey Wat described the move from licensee to brand owner as a “transformative milestone.” The company said taking over the brand will cut license fees that it used to pay to Yum, and expects it will get more flexibility for menus, store formats and operations in China. Yum China aims to push Pizza Hut past 6,000 stores by 2028. SEC
Pizza Hut’s legacy dine-in model faces pressure in a market now built around carryout, apps like DoorDash and Uber Eats, and independent pizzerias making it onto customers’ phones. Domino’s is not the only rival. With all of that, brand loyalty, fast service, and digital ordering are now just as critical as menu nostalgia.
Sam North, a market analyst at eToro, told Reuters LongRange is picking up a “globally recognised brand in need of sharper focus.” Yum China’s agreement, by contrast, hands more control to local operators in a market that’s still growing. That’s the main divide: private money moving in on an established global revamp, while local hands steer a Chinese brand that’s not done expanding. Reuters
There’s risk that new owners won’t solve the old problems fast enough. Yum flagged in its SEC filing that the deals could miss the timeline or fall apart completely, and said the benefits might not show up. The filing pointed to competition, shifting consumer habits, inflation, and franchisee health as other risks. Franchisees still don’t know how much money LongRange will put into stores, service and marketing—or how long it will take for customers to see any change.