March-May Independent Restaurant Development Report

Restaurantdata identified 2,370 restaurant projects during March, April, and May 2026 involving single-unit operators, independent operators, and emerging restaurant groups with up to nine known locations.

This RestaurantPipeline.com report excludes larger 10+ unit restaurant chains and focuses on operators most likely to be in the planning, permitting, licensing, construction, transfer, or pre-opening stage.

Key Findings

  • 2,370 projects involved independent or emerging restaurant operators.
  • 1,868 projects came from single-unit operators or operators with no known restaurant affiliation.
  • 502 projects came from operators with 2-9 known locations.
  • 2,086 projects, or 88.1%, were new openings.
  • Mixed-use, free-standing, and shopping center locations accounted for 1,985 projects.
  • Casual/Family concepts accounted for 1,320 projects, or 59.9% of populated service-format records.
  • Texas, Florida, California, and New York accounted for 1,439 projects.

Independent and Emerging Operators Drove Most Pipeline Activity

The largest group in the dataset was single-unit operators or operators with no known restaurant affiliation. This group accounted for 1,868 projects, or 78.8% of the filtered RestaurantPipeline.com dataset.

Operator Segment Projects Share
Single-Unit / No Known Affiliation 1,868 78.8%
Emerging Operators (2-4 Units) 375 15.8%
Emerging Operators (5-9 Units) 127 5.4%

The 2-9 unit segment generated 502 projects. These operators are not large restaurant chains, but many are already proving a concept, opening additional units, or building a repeatable operating model.

For RestaurantPipeline.com, this is a key group to track. These projects often surface before opening through permits, business filings, liquor licenses, construction records, transfer activity, and local development signals.

New Openings Accounted for 88.1% of Projects

Most projects in the independent and emerging-operator pipeline were new restaurant openings.

Project Type Projects Share
New Opening 2,086 88.1%
New Owner / Operator / Transfer 191 8.1%
Reopening 34 1.4%
Possible New Owner / Operator 31 1.3%
Change of Location 27 1.1%

Project type was populated for 2,369 records.

Transfers and possible ownership changes accounted for 222 projects. These records matter because new operators often review vendors, equipment, food suppliers, beverage programs, payroll, insurance, POS, and marketing support soon after taking control of a location.

Mixed-Use, Free-Standing, and Shopping Center Sites Led Development

Location type was populated for 2,357 records. Three real estate categories accounted for most of the pipeline.

Location Type Projects Share
Mixed Use 908 38.5%
Free Standing 541 23.0%
Shopping Center 536 22.7%
Mixed Residential 205 8.7%
Hotel 55 2.3%

Mixed-use, free-standing, and shopping center locations accounted for 1,985 projects, or 84.2% of populated location-type records.

Mixed-use projects were the largest location category. That points to continued restaurant demand in residential, retail, office, entertainment, and redevelopment corridors. Free-standing sites and shopping centers also remained active, especially for operators seeking visibility, parking, signage, drive-thru potential, or second-generation restaurant space.

Casual/Family Concepts Dominated Independent Restaurant Development

Service format was populated for 2,204 records. Casual/Family concepts accounted for nearly six out of ten populated service-format records.

Service Format Projects Share
Casual/Family 1,320 59.9%
Fast Casual 415 18.8%
Quick Serve 336 15.2%
Upscale Dining 121 5.5%

Casual/Family concepts generated more than three times the project count of Fast Casual concepts and almost four times the count of Quick Serve concepts.

For RestaurantPipeline.com, that matters because full-menu restaurants often have broader pre-opening needs, including equipment, furniture, tabletop, food distribution, beverage programs, staffing, payroll, insurance, signage, and local marketing.

American and Mexican/Latin Concepts Led Cuisine Activity

Cuisine was populated for 2,271 records. American and Mexican/Latin concepts were the two largest categories.

Cuisine Projects Share
American 527 23.2%
Mexican/Latin 322 14.2%
Coffee/Tea 132 5.8%
Pizza 108 4.8%
Bar Food 98 4.3%

American and Mexican/Latin concepts accounted for 849 projects, or 37.4% of populated cuisine records.

Coffee/Tea, Pizza, and Bar Food concepts added another 338 projects. Together, the top five cuisine categories represented more than half of populated cuisine activity.

The South Produced Half of Independent and Emerging Operator Activity

Regional classification was available for all 2,370 projects. The South generated the largest share of restaurant pipeline activity.

U.S. Region Projects Share
South 1,196 50.5%
West 540 22.8%
Northeast 389 16.4%
Midwest 245 10.3%

The South generated more projects than the West, Northeast, and Midwest individually. Texas and Florida were the largest state-level contributors.

Texas, Florida, California, and New York Led State Activity

State Projects Share
Texas 408 17.2%
Florida 385 16.2%
California 376 15.9%
New York 270 11.4%
North Carolina 64 2.7%

Texas, Florida, California, and New York accounted for 1,439 projects, or 60.7% of the independent and emerging-operator pipeline.

Most Active Restaurant Pipeline Markets

Restaurantdata Market Projects
Dallas-Fort Worth 130
Broward-Dade-Palm Beach 119
Austin-San Antonio-Corpus Christi 119
Houston-Galveston 119
Tampa-Gulf Coast 117
Los Angeles 106

Texas and Florida dominated the top market list, while Los Angeles remained the strongest West Coast market in the independent and emerging-operator pipeline.

Restaurant Pipeline Outlook

The March-May data highlights several important restaurant development signals.

  • Single-unit and no-known-affiliation operators remained the largest project group.
  • Operators with 2-9 known locations generated 502 projects.
  • New openings accounted for 88.1% of populated project records.
  • Mixed-use, free-standing, and shopping center locations accounted for 84.2% of populated location records.
  • Casual/Family concepts remained the largest service format.
  • American and Mexican/Latin concepts generated more than one-third of populated cuisine records.
  • Texas, Florida, California, and New York represented 60.7% of the filtered pipeline.

The strongest signal is that restaurant development remains fragmented. Large chains are active, but much of the opportunity sits with single-unit operators, early-stage groups, and owners expanding from one restaurant into a small local or regional platform.

Methodology

This analysis is based on 2,370 restaurant projects identified by Restaurantdata during March, April, and May 2026. The report includes single-unit operators, operators with no known restaurant affiliation, and restaurant owners with up to nine known locations. Larger 10+ unit restaurant chains were excluded. Percentages are based on populated records for each category.

Related Restaurant Industry Reports

For a broader look at long-term opening trends across both independent and multi-unit restaurants, see Restaurantdata.com’s Restaurant Opening Cross-Tab Analysis 2020-2025. That report compares restaurant opening activity by cuisine, geography, operator type, service format, and market trends across multiple years.

For the multi-unit side of the market, RestaurantChains.net published the Restaurant Chain Expansion Report: March-May 2026. That analysis focuses on 817 projects involving known multi-unit operators and separates chain growth from the independent and emerging-operator pipeline covered here.

Regional growth among smaller chains is covered in Regional Restaurant Chains Expanding Across the U.S.. That report provides additional context on how local and regional brands move from one market into nearby expansion territories.

Alcohol licensing remains one of the clearest pre-opening signals for full-service restaurants, bars, and transfer activity. See Independent Restaurant Openings Serving Alcohol in 2026 for more detail on restaurant projects where alcohol filings help identify operators before opening day.

For a shorter weekly signal report, review the May Week 3 Pre-Opening Restaurant Signal Report. It highlights active restaurant development signals from permits, licenses, filings, and public records before locations open to the public.