
Pizza Hut is getting a new owner after years of weak sales and growing questions about the future of one of America’s best-known pizza brands.
Yum! Brands said Tuesday it entered into agreements to sell Pizza Hut for $2.7 billion, splitting the business between two buyers. LongRange Capital, a private equity firm, will acquire Pizza Hut outside mainland China for about $1.5 billion, while Yum China Holdings will buy the chain’s mainland China business for about $1.2 billion.
The sale follows Yum’s strategic review of Pizza Hut, which began last year after the chain posted its eighth consecutive quarter of same-store sales declines, Business Insider previously reported. At the time, Yum CEO Chris Turner said Pizza Hut needed “additional action” to unlock its full value and suggested that work “may be better executed outside Yum! Brands.”
The deal is unlikely to come as a complete surprise to employees, said Kim Cerda, managing director and organizational change and culture practice lead at HudsonLake, a MikeWorldWide company that advises companies during mergers and organizational changes.
“This is really not the beginning, but a continuation of changes already underway,” she said. For years, she added, employees have likely “been living under lots of change and pressure” as the chain has struggled.
LongRange is pitching itself as a hands-on operator rather than a financial buyer. In a statement announcing the deal, the firm said it plans to invest in Pizza Hut’s growth and build on its franchise system and global footprint. Yum said Pizza Hut would be “well positioned for future growth” under LongRange and Yum China.
That message will be critical for workers and franchisees evaluating the chain’s new owner.
“People know it’s being bought by private equity, so they already know that means things are going to have to change,” Cerda said. The challenge for LongRange, she said, will be balancing those changes with a convincing case that the investment is meant to “re-energize and revitalize the brand.”
Across the two transactions, Yum expects to receive about $2.3 billion in net proceeds after taxes, closing adjustments, and transaction-related fees, excluding a potential $75 million earn-out by 2030. The company said it expects roughly $85 million in one-time costs to complete the separation.
The deal comes as Pizza Hut faces challenges beyond slowing sales. Business Insider previously reported that Yum planned to close 250 underperforming Pizza Hut locations during the first half of 2026. In May, a Pizza Hut franchisee sued the chain over its Dragontail restaurant management system, alleging it caused operational disruptions and customer service problems. Pizza Hut said at the time it was reviewing the claims and would respond through the appropriate legal channels.
For Yum, the sale sharpens its focus on its other brands: KFC, Taco Bell, and Habit Burger & Grill. For LongRange, it is a bet that operational improvements can revive a chain whose red roof remains iconic while its business has struggled to keep pace with rivals.
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Read the original article on Business Insider
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