The UK operator of TGI Fridays has gone into administration as the hospitality firm scrambles to sell its chain of 87 restaurants.
Hostmore said it had appointed joint administrators from Teneo.
TGI Friday’s only Northern Ireland outlet closed in Belfast during 2021.
The Victoria Square restaurant had operated for 12 years.
Hostmore is in the process of trying to sell its remaining UK restaurants to new owners, which it hopes to complete by the end of September.
This would keep the TGI Fridays brand alive on UK high streets and save thousands of jobs.
But it said earlier this month that it was not expecting to “recover any meaningful value” from the sale of sites, meaning it would earn less from the sale than it owes to creditors and banks.
It is also not clear whether it will secure a buyer for the entire chain, or whether it will manage to sell some but not all of the restaurants.
The American-inspired restaurant chain is open as normal while the administration process starts.
The collapse of the London-listed hospitality business comes after plans to buy the US restaurant chain for £177 million fell through earlier this month.
It would have merged with US-based TGI Fridays Inc, to create a larger firm that would remain listed in London.
But the takeover plans were dropped after a management change which would have meant it could not collect royalties from the TGI Fridays brand.
Hostmore shares tanked by more than 90% after the news earlier in September, as shareholders took the brunt. Its shares are now worth less than 0.2 pence per share.
Its shares have now been suspended from the London Stock Exchange and the public company will be delisted and wound up.
TGI Fridays’ biggest market is in the US where there are 128 restaurants, including franchised sites, and it operates more than 270 in countries around the world.