KFC to become Texas fried chicken in HQ move to low-tax state
The chain’s parent company, Yum! Brands, told investors it would move about 100 employees from its corporate office in Louisville, Kentucky, more than 800 miles to the city of Plano in Texas, where the group’s Pizza Hut chain is headquartered.
The employees are expected to move in the next six months and will receive relocation support. An additional 90 remote workers will be expected to move to Texas or other Yum! Brands corporate offices during the coming 18 months.
The governor of Kentucky, Andy Beshear, said in statement: “I am disappointed by this decision and believe the company’s founder would be, too. This company’s name starts with Kentucky, and it has marketed our state’s heritage and culture in the sale of its product.”
The mayor of Louisville, Craig Greenberg, also expressed his disappointment, US media reported, saying the brand “was born here and is synonymous with Kentucky”.
Yum! Brands said moving KFC’s headquarters was a “strategic decision”to allow it to “foster greater collaboration among brands and employees”.
Once the move from Kentucky is complete, Yum! Brands will have two corporate headquarters, in Texas and in California, where its brands Taco Bell and Habit Burger & Grill are based.
David Gibbs, Yum! Brands chief executive officer, said: “These changes position us for sustainable growth and will help us better serve our customers, employees, franchisees and shareholders. Ultimately, bringing more of our people together on a consistent basis will maximise our unrivalled culture and talent as a competitive advantage.”
Yum! Brands said it and the KFC Foundation would retain corporate offices in Louisville.
Several companies have moved to Texas from other states in recent years, attracted by its low corporate taxes.
moved Tesla’s corporate headquarters
from Palo Alto in California to the Texas city of Austin in 2021, after criticising California’s regulations and taxes. The billionaire also moved the state of incorporation of the rocket company SpaceX to Texas from Delaware in 2024,after a Delaware judge
ruled against his pay package.The corporate move takes KFC away from its home state, where
its founder, “Colonel” Harland Sanders
, – whose face is still immortalised on the brand’s logo – began selling fried chicken from a roadside restaurant outside the city of Corbin in 1932.Sanders believed in restaurant franchises, and took his “finger lickin” secret blend of 11 herbs and spices to Salt Lake City, Utah, where he
opened the first franchise location
in 1952.KFC is now sold at more than 30,000 restaurants in fat least 145 countries and territories around the world.
KFC fans shared their views of the planned move on social media, with some joking that the company could be rebranded as “Texas Fried Chicken”.