Fast food chain Wendy's is planning to close hundreds more stores just a year after shuttering 140 locations.

Interim CEO Ken Cook told investors in a Friday, Nov. 7, quarterly earnings call that the company would be closing a “mid single-digit percentage” of locations. With around 6,000 locations still operating nationwide, this would amount to roughly 240 to 360 stores. One investor estimated the number at about 300 locations during the call. "When we look at the system today, we have some restaurants that do not elevate the brand and are a drag from a franchisee financial performance perspective," said Cook. "The goal is to address and fix those restaurants."

In some cases, that will mean making improvements to technology or equipment or transferring struggling locations to new operators. In others, he said, it will mean closing the restaurants altogether.

The closures are expected to begin in the fourth quarter of this year, Cook said. A list of exact locations slated for closure has not been announced.

Wendy's has struggled with sales compared to some of its competitors recently, reporting a 4.7% decrease in same-store sales —revenue generated by stores open for at least a year —and a 2.6% loss in global systemwide sales in Q3.

USA TODAY has reached out to Wendy's for comment.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Wendy's to close roughly 300 stores nationwide starting in late 2025

Reporting by Mary Walrath-Holdridge, USA TODAY / USA TODAY

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