Monday, 22 June 2026

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Slop bowls are getting their groove back

Slop bowls are getting their groove back

Chipotle and Cava are thriving as consumers shift spending to perceived restaurant winners, focusing on quality over cost amid a "K-shaped" economy.

cava slop bowl
Fast-casual chains like Chipotle and Cava are gaining ground amid the K-shaped economic recovery.
  • Americans are dining out less, favoring quality and value over cheaper choices.
  • Fast-casual chains like Chipotle and Cava are gaining ground amid the K-shaped economic recovery.
  • The Slop Bowl chains thrive with menu innovation, while other fast-casual brands see softer sales.

The old recession playbook said consumers under financial pressure would trade down to the cheapest meal they could find.

That's not what's happening these days.

Instead, Americans are eating out less often, scrutinizing every restaurant purchase, and concentrating their spending among a shrinking group of perceived winners. And increasingly, those winners look a lot like Chipotle and Cava.

A year ago, fast-casual chains built around customizable bowls and salads were among the restaurant industry's biggest casualties thanks to stretched consumers. Diners balked at lunch tabs creeping past $20, traffic slowed, and executives spent much of 2025 talking about value.

Now, those same chains are pulling away from the rest of the pack.

The shift reflects a broader K-shaped economy that has upended traditional restaurant wisdom. Bank of America analyst Sara Senatore previously told Business Insider that restaurant chains have been dealing with softer demand among lower-income consumers for years, while spending among higher-income households has remained resilient. That dynamic has helped casual dining outperform parts of the quick-service sector and complicated the assumption that consumers under pressure automatically migrate to the cheapest options.

A worthwhile splurge

Consumer Edge's 2026 restaurant outlook describes a "barbell-shaped recovery" in which consumers are increasingly either trading down into value-oriented quick-service restaurants or trading up for experiences they believe are worth the money, while the middle gets squeezed. In that environment, brands like Chipotle and Cava are "regaining momentum through innovation and improved value perception," the report says.

The report found consumers are allocating a larger share of food spending to groceries while becoming more deliberate about restaurant visits. When they do spend, they're rewarding brands that offer a compelling combination of quality, convenience, portion size, and perceived value.

An employee adds sour cream to a Chipotle bowl.
Chipotle's recent menu innovations include its traffic-driving high-protein menu, chicken al pastor, cilantro-lime sauce, and the return of its Chipotle Honey Chicken limited-time offer.

That distinction matters — because it isn't that Chipotle and Cava suddenly became cheap. It's that diners increasingly see them as a better use of their restaurant budget than many alternatives.

Consumer Edge found that for transactions above $30, Chipotle and Cava were among the brands gaining share, while pizza chains and chicken chains lost ground. The report said consumers are reallocating larger-ticket spending away from traditional shareable formats and toward "healthier, higher-quality customizable fast casual options."

Executives at both companies are leaning into that shift.

Chipotle CEO Scott Boatwright said during the company's Q1 earnings call that Chipotle's "recipe for growth" strategy is gaining traction, helped by a steady drumbeat of menu innovation, including the high-protein menu, chicken al pastor, cilantro-lime sauce, and the return of Chipotle Honey Chicken.

He said Chipotle continues to price below inflation because "reinforcing our value proposition is the right thing to do in this environment."

During Cava's Q1 call, CEO Brett Schulman pointed to broad-based demand and said lower-income customer cohorts continue to outperform "as we bridge this K-shaped economy."

The Mediterranean chain raised its full-year outlook after first-quarter same-restaurant sales rose 9.7%, driven primarily by traffic growth.

Consumer spending is still soft

Not every fast-casual chain is sharing in the rebound.

A worker scoops an ingredient for an order from the salad bar inside a Sweetgreen restaurant.
Other fast-casual chains like Sweetgreen are not seeing the same boost as Chipotle and Cava.

Consumer Edge found stronger performance at Chipotle and Cava, offset by softer results at Sweetgreen, Panera Bread, and smaller concepts. While the category overall remained roughly flat, the report said larger players had managed to "rehabilitate perceived value" through menu innovation and pricing discipline, while weaker brands continued losing traffic.

Customer-satisfaction data tells a similar story. The American Customer Satisfaction Index said consumers are spending "more selectively" and placing greater emphasis on "consistency, reliability, and perceived value" rather than simply chasing the lowest price. Brands that consistently deliver are gaining ground; those that don't are getting left behind.

The consumer hasn't bounced back, and restaurant traffic hasn't magically returned. Americans are still cutting back.

However, in an industry where diners are questioning every meal away from home, the customizable bowl has become one of the few splurges that still feels justified.

Read the original article on Business Insider