Business

Chick-fil-A: US fast food chain that faced LGBT protests confirm plans for new Belfast restaurant

Atlanta-based chicken food corporation retains some values of its founder, including not opening on Sundays

Chick-fil-A’s confirmation that Belfast will be among its first UK restaurants opening next year has been welcomed by DUP Deputy First Minister Emma-Little Pengelly (inset).
Chick-fil-A’s confirmation that Belfast will be among its first UK restaurants opening next year has been welcomed by DUP Deputy First Minister Emma-Little Pengelly (inset).

An American fast food chain that previously abandoned a move into the UK market after facing protests from gay rights campaigners, has confirmed plans to open in Northern Ireland.

Chick-fil-A has included Belfast in the first set of UK restaurants it will seek to open early next year.

The 78-year-old Atlanta-based company, which retains many of the values of its Christian founder S. Truett Cathy, previously opened a pop-up site in west London during 2019.

The site in Reading later closed following a backlash from LGBT protesters over the company’s donations to Christian organisations opposed to same-sex marriage.

The company, which later ended donations to anti-LGBT groups, is making another attempt at the UK market, with Belfast, London, Leeds and Liverpool first in line for new venues.

The move has been welcomed by DUP MLA and Deputy First Minister Minister Emma Little-Pengelly.

In a post on social media platform X, she wrote: “It was great to engage with the company and have the confirmation this morning that Northern Ireland is part of the first wave of UK restaurants.”

Chick-fil-A has more than 3,000 restaurants in the US, Canada and Puerto Rico.

The chain is known for its Chick-fil-A chicken sandwich, which is a breaded, boneless chicken breast served on a toasted bun with pickles, lettuce, tomato, and cheese.

In an unusual approach to business for a large fast food corporation, Chick-fil-A does not open on Sundays.

Chick-Fil-A founder Truett Cathy watches the action on the field during the Chick-Fil-A Bowl between the Virginia Tech Hokies and the Tennessee Volunteers at the Georgia Dome on December 31, 2009 in Atlanta, Georgia.
Chick-Fil-A founder S Truett Cathy, who founded the chicken food chain in 1946, believed his restaurants should close on Sundays. The devout Southern Baptist died in 2014. (Mike Zarrilli/Getty Images)

Its founder S. Truett Cathy, a devout southern Baptist who died in 2014, believed in closing all restaurants on Sundays to allow employees to attend church.

The US outlets also remain closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas and promote fish sandwiches during Lent.

It’s the latest North American fast food chicken specialist to make the move into the Northern Ireland market.

It follows Popeyes’ Belfast debut at Forestside last week and the opening of two Mary Brown’s Chicken outlets this year.

Chick-fil-A previously said it planned to invest more than $100 million in a ten year expansion project into the UK market.



Most of the sites are expected to be run and owned as franchises, with around 80 to 120 jobs typically created in each outlet.