Frisch’s Big Boy closes 3 Tri-State locations, cutting a third of restaurants in 9 years

The Frisch's Big Boy in North College Hill was closed in early April 2024. It was one of three...
The Frisch's Big Boy in North College Hill was closed in early April 2024. It was one of three locations in the Tri-State to be shut down. Since a 2015 takeover, the company has dropped from around 100 restaurants to below 80.(Alexander Coolidge/The Enquirer | Alexander Coolidge/The Enquirer)
Published: Apr. 3, 2024 at 4:32 PM EDT
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CINCINNATI (Enquirer) - Frisch’s Big Boy has shuttered at least three Greater Cincinnati locations this week with store officials padlocking doors and posting “permanently closed” signs, according to a report from our media partners at the Cincinnati Enquirer.

The new closures are only the latest wave, with the iconic local eatery cutting more than 40 restaurants, or one-third of its total locations since it was acquired by an Atlanta-based investment firm in 2015.

The summer before it was sold, Frisch’s Big Boy owned and operated 95 restaurants and also licensed 26 restaurants to other operators that paid franchise or other fees to the company. The company now lists about 80 stores in Ohio, Kentucky and Indiana on its website. Frisch’s does not specify which of its current listed locations are owned by the company versus licensed or franchised to other operators.

Frisch’s officials declined to comment on the closures on Wednesday as did representatives of NRD Capital Partners, the private equity firm that bought out the chain of 121 restaurants for $175 million.

The latest closures are:

  • 4016 Dixie Highway, Erlanger
  • 1575 W. Galbraith Road in North College Hill
  • 4645 Spring Grove Ave., Spring Grove Village

Enquirer journalists visited each location Wednesday morning to confirm the closures.

Frisch’s has seen several changes and confronted industry turmoil since it changed ownership.

In 2022, Frisch’s hired a new CEO James Walker to steady operations after the company was rocked by the COVID-19 pandemic. The Walnut Hills-based company still boasted more than 100 locations at the time. The company’s website shows 79 restaurants now.

In the years after the takeover, Frisch’s overhauled menu offerings,  modernized (and slimmed down) the iconic Big Boy mascot and updated the look of restaurants with a more open design. The company also reversed a 2013 switch from Coke to Pepsi products.

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