The axe has finally fallen. After months of quiet closures and corporate spin,
Papa John’s has admitted it has shut 74 UK outlets as losses spiral into the tens of millions.
Jobs, communities, and high streets are all on the line.
Behind the bland statements lies a brutal story of risk,
miscalculation and a shrinking, cash‑strapped cust… Continues…
Papa John’s UK now finds itself in a harsh new reality: a shrinking footprint,
falling revenue and a public left wondering how many livelihoods have quietly vanished with those 74 closed doors.
The numbers tell a stark story – a £21.8 million pre-tax loss, revenue sliding from £95.9 million to £88.6 million, and no profit since 2021 – but they don’t capture the staff left waiting for clarity, or the towns that lost yet another lit shopfront on already struggling high streets.
Executives blame global turmoil, rising costs and more cautious, cash-strapped customers, while insisting the pain is “strategic”: shutting underperforming stores, pouring money into data, tech and new formats like holiday parks, and opening a handful of new branches as proof of future promise. For now, though, Britain’s Papa John’s story is one of survival, not expansion – a chain betting it can cut its way back to growth before the next bill comes due.