Here’s the latest you asked for on 801 Chophouse and its parent company’s restructuring.
Key update
- 801 Restaurant Group, the parent company of 801 Chophouse, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in April 2026 to restructure about $18.7 million in debt. The company said it intends to keep operating and serving customers while it works through the restructuring process [sources indicate court proceedings began in mid-April 2026 with continued operations at most locations, though a Minneapolis location had already closed].[1][3][6]
What this means for locations
- The Chapter 11 filing is at the parent-company level. The restaurants themselves are expected to remain open and continue normal operations as part of the restructuring plan, with the court overseeing the process and creditors involved in negotiating a path forward. Several outlets note that two locations (Denver’s 801 Fish and Minneapolis’ 801 On Nicollet) had already closed prior to the filing; other locations remain active during restructuring.[3][5][6][8]
Context and potential developments
- The debt burden and shifting consumer patterns (rising costs, changes in foot traffic post-pandemic, and remote-work trends) are cited as factors contributing to the financial pressures leading to bankruptcy protection.[6][1]
- Next steps typically involve creditors voting on a reorganization plan and court approvals in the coming weeks to months, with hearings scheduled as part of the Chapter 11 process; outcomes are contingent on negotiations and court rulings.[4][1]
Related coverage you might want to review
- Parallels in business discussions about luxury dining and Chapter 11 restructurings, including analyses of what Chapter 11 protection means for ongoing operations and lenders' expectations.[7][4]
- Public-facing statements from 801 Restaurant Group about the restructuring and impact on locations, with emphasis on preserving operations at open sites and continuing reservations and employment where possible.[3]
If you’d like, I can summarize a few specific articles in more detail, or pull the most recent official court docket updates and creditor schedules to give you a timeline of hearings and key milestones. I can also track for any new developments (e.g., exit from bankruptcy, revised business plan, or closures) and provide you with a concise update.
Sources
801 Restaurant Group filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, aiming to restructure its financials after two restaurant closures while maintaining operations at its other locations
people.comFans of popular steakhouse chain 801 Chophouse are reeling from the news that the restaurant's parent company filed for bankruptcy. Here's what to know.
parade.comThe parent company of the high-end steakhouse restaurant chain filed for bankruptcy sparking concerns about the future of some locations nationwide.
www.fox9.comThe parent company of the high-end steakhouse restaurant chain filed for bankruptcy sparking concerns about the future of some locations nationwide.
www.fox26houston.comThe parent company of the high-end steakhouse restaurant chain filed for bankruptcy sparking concerns about the future of some locations nationwide.
www.ktvu.comThe parent company of 801 Chophouse, a high-end steakhouse chain known for Wagyu beef and entrees priced well into the triple digits, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection — though the individual restaurants remain open and are not part of the filing.
www.washingtontimes.com801 Restaurant Group, owner of 801 Chophouse, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy to manage growing debt and business pressure. The sudden closure of its Minneapolis location highlights challenges in downtown dining. Rising costs, fewer office crowds, and changing customer habits are hurting sales. The company plans to stay open and fix its finances.
economictimes.indiatimes.com