--- title: "Arcos Dorados Delivers Record Q1 Amid Mixed Volumes" type: "News" locale: "en" url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/287132523.md" description: "Arcos Dorados reported record Q1 results with over $1.2 billion in revenue, a 13% year-over-year increase. Adjusted EBITDA reached $118–$119 million, the highest for a first quarter. Despite volume pressures in Brazil, the company emphasized strong comparable sales growth of 16% and improved cash flow of nearly $110 million. Digital sales surged 21%, and loyalty memberships increased by 62%. However, management noted a slowdown in Brazil's restaurant volumes post-March, indicating challenges ahead." datetime: "2026-05-21T00:03:38.000Z" locales: - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/287132523.md) - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287132523.md) - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/287132523.md) --- # Arcos Dorados Delivers Record Q1 Amid Mixed Volumes Arcos Dorados ((ARCO)) has held its Q1 earnings call. Read on for the main highlights of the call. ### Claim 55% Off TipRanks - Unlock hedge fund-level data and powerful investing tools for smarter, sharper decisions - Discover top-performing stock ideas and upgrade to a portfolio of market leaders with Smart Investor Picks Arcos Dorados’ latest earnings call struck an upbeat tone as management detailed robust revenue growth, record first‑quarter profitability and a sharp turnaround in cash generation. While acknowledging volume pressure in Brazil, cost headwinds and some one‑time tailwinds, executives emphasized disciplined execution on pricing, costs and capital allocation, arguing that structural improvements outweigh near‑term challenges. ## Top-Line Growth and Record Quarterly Revenue Total revenue climbed about 13% year over year to more than $1.2 billion, marking the first time Arcos Dorados crossed that threshold in a first quarter. Management linked the gain to strong systemwide comparable sales and favorable currency moves, underscoring that demand held up despite macro uncertainty in key Latin American markets. ## Strong Comparable Sales Performance Systemwide comparable sales rose roughly 16% versus the prior year, powered primarily by higher average check with improving traffic trends in several countries. The company highlighted balanced growth between price, mix and guest counts, suggesting its value proposition remains compelling even as consumers face cost‑of‑living pressures. ## Highest First-Quarter Adjusted EBITDA Adjusted EBITDA reached about $118–$119 million, the highest first‑quarter level in U.S. dollars, and consolidated margin expanded by 120 basis points. Management stressed that this performance reflects both commercial strength and cost efficiencies, positioning the business to better absorb future volatility in volumes or input costs. ## Adjusted Free Cash Flow Turnaround Over the 12 months ended March 31, adjusted free cash flow swung to nearly $110 million from a negative $3 million in the prior period. The improvement was attributed to stronger operating results and tighter capital discipline, giving the company more flexibility for investment and shareholder‑friendly actions. ## Margin Improvements from Cost and G&A Actions Consolidated margin expansion was driven by roughly 60 basis points of improvement in food and paper costs and another 60 basis points from lower G&A as a share of sales. Executives credited restructuring efforts and disciplined cost management for the gains, while noting that sustaining these savings will be critical as wage and occupancy pressures persist. ## Regional Division Strength — SLAD and Brazil In the SLAD division, U.S.‑dollar results showed solid growth and EBITDA margins expanded by about 120 basis points. Brazil stood out with more than 20% adjusted EBITDA growth in U.S. dollars and a roughly 30‑basis‑point margin increase to 12.7%, reinforcing its role as the company’s key profit engine despite recent volume softness. ## Digital and Loyalty Momentum Digital channels, including the mobile app, delivery and self‑ordering kiosks, expanded around 21% and represented about 64% of systemwide sales. Loyalty membership surged 62% to roughly 30 million users, driving a 20–25% boost in visit frequency among active members and deepening customer engagement across the network. ## Disciplined CapEx and Store Growth Efficiency Capital expenditures fell to $36.8 million from $48.8 million a year earlier, even as the company increased new openings to 19 restaurants, including 13 freestanding units. Management highlighted lower average investment per store thanks to more efficient formats and execution, reflecting a sharper focus on returns rather than sheer expansion. ## Operational Footprint and Market Position Arcos Dorados added 19 restaurants while keeping its roughly 70% company‑operated and 30% sub‑franchised split intact. The group reported continued market‑share gains and stronger brand metrics, noting that visit share in Brazil reached its highest level since 2022, a key indicator for long‑term competitive strength. ## Short-Term Volume Pressure in Brazil Despite strong financial metrics, management flagged a notable slowdown in Brazil’s restaurant volumes after mid‑March, with industry traffic down mid‑ to high‑single digits. Comparable sales remained under pressure early in the quarter, prompting targeted initiatives aimed at recapturing traffic without undermining the brand’s profitability focus. ## NOLAD Margin Weakness The NOLAD division faced margin compression, and excluding income from specific franchise and restaurant transactions, EBITDA margin declined by about 40 basis points. Executives cited payroll and other operating costs as drivers of temporary deleverage, though they characterized the issues as manageable within the broader company context. ## Payroll and Occupancy Cost Pressure Payroll expenses increased as a percentage of revenue in both Brazil and NOLAD, reflecting higher hourly wages and minimum‑wage hikes across the region. Occupancy and other operating costs also ticked higher, underscoring the need for continued productivity gains to protect margins as structural cost inflation persists. ## One-Time Contributions Masking Underlying Results First‑quarter adjusted EBITDA included about $5.8 million in income from franchisee and restaurant transactions, split between SLAD and NOLAD. Management acknowledged that these one‑off items boosted reported margins and may not repeat, encouraging investors to focus on underlying trends when assessing profit momentum. ## Food Cost Dynamics and Beef Price Uncertainty Food and paper costs, especially in Brazil, improved and were a key driver of recent margin expansion, aided by more favorable beef trends. Still, management described the outlook as cautiously optimistic given the potential for global demand shifts to reignite beef price volatility, reinforcing the importance of disciplined menu pricing and procurement. ## Currency and Inflation Nuances Reported U.S.‑dollar revenue benefited from appreciation in several local currencies, including the Brazilian real and Mexican peso. However, Argentina and Venezuela continued to experience currency devaluation paired with high inflation, creating a complex backdrop where headline figures can mask divergent performance in local‑currency terms. ## G&A Improvements Partly from Restructuring Lower G&A as a share of sales reflected savings from last year’s restructuring and ongoing efficiency initiatives. Management noted that further efforts will be needed to sustain these gains, as one‑time severance and restructuring expenses are not fully recurrent and other structural cost pressures persist in the system. ## Forward-Looking Guidance and Outlook Looking ahead to 2026, Arcos Dorados aims to sustain top‑line growth while enhancing profitability and keeping adjusted free cash flow positive, with net leverage roughly stable. Management highlighted a strong start to the second quarter, plans to modernize around 10% of the estate annually toward 90% Experience‑of‑the‑Future penetration, and a continued focus on disciplined pricing, capex efficiency and cautious management of food costs. Arcos Dorados’ earnings call painted a picture of a company balancing robust growth and margin gains with realistic acknowledgment of cost and volume headwinds. With record first‑quarter EBITDA, a notable free‑cash‑flow rebound and accelerating digital engagement, management argued that the franchise is structurally stronger, leaving investors to watch whether trends in Brazil and cost inflation stay manageable over the rest of the year. ### Related Stocks - [ARCO.US](https://longbridge.com/en/quote/ARCO.US.md) ## Related News & Research - [McDonald's Franchisee Arcos Dorados Is Cashing In On Convenience, Value](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287103821.md) - [Key facts: Arcos Dorados Q1 $1.2B revenue, $36.1M net; $975.1M debt](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287174263.md) - [Coffee Prices Pressured by an Improved Brazil Coffee Crop Outlook](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286795965.md) - [Obamacare Enrollment Expected To Drop By Nearly Five Million As Costs Surge](https://longbridge.com/en/news/287132684.md) - [Wendy’s to open up to 1,000 China stores amid US cuts](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286621705.md)