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Chipotle Just Reversed Its Sales Slide. Wall Street Wasn't Expecting That

Published May 1, 2026
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A foil-wrapped burrito sits on a counter in front of a white paper takeout bag in a restaurant.
Summary:
  • Same-store sales rose 0.5% in Q1 2026 versus a 0.7% drop expected by Wall Street.
  • Revenue hit $3.09 billion, up 7.4%, with traffic up 0.6% after a 2.3% drop a year earlier.
  • Net income fell to $302.8 million as wage inflation and higher beef prices weighed on margins.

Chipotle was the fast-casual problem child last year. Customers stayed home, same-store sales slid into the red, and the stock took a beating.

Then Q1 happened. Same-store sales actually grew, while traffic ticked up for the first time in a while.

The win is small at 0.5% same-store growth. But Wall Street had penciled in a 0.7% drop, sending shares up about 3% in extended trading.

CEO Scott Boatwright said momentum has carried into Q2. That's a much better setup than the company had three months ago.

Younger Customers Are Coming Back

Chipotle has been pulling on two levers. New menu items like cilantro lime sauce, plus limited returns of fan favorites like Chicken Al Pastor.

Pair that with a loyalty push, and the brand is winning back younger diners. That group started packing lunch in 2024 to save cash, and the dropoff was visible in last year's traffic numbers.

Revenue rose 7.4% to $3.09 billion, slightly above the $3.07 billion estimate. Adjusted earnings came in at 24 cents per share, in line with what analysts had projected.

Traffic increased 0.6% after dropping 2.3% in the same quarter last year. That swing is the cleanest sign the fixes are working.

Same-store sales - the comparison of sales at stores open at least a year - is the metric Wall Street watches most for restaurants. Q4 went negative for the first time in years, so the Q1 rebound matters.

The company also named Fernando Machado as its newest chief brand officer this week. He came over from Restaurant Brands International, the parent of Burger King and Tim Hortons.

The Margin Story Is Less Pretty

Net income fell to $302.8 million, or 23 cents a share, from $386.6 million, or 28 cents, a year earlier. Three things ate into margins: a heavier tax rate, more expensive labor, and beef prices that keep climbing.

The whole industry is paying more on both ends. That means the cost squeeze isn't only Chipotle's problem.

CFO Adam Rymer kept the full-year call for flat same-store sales, calling the outlook careful given how jumpy the consumer has gotten. Most rivals have not raised their full-year outlook either.

Boatwright said sales softened in March after the U.S. war with Iran started lifting fuel prices. The conflict could also slow store openings tied to a deal with Alshaya Group, which runs Chipotle locations in the region.

What to Watch

The Q1 print says Chipotle's fixes are working faster than Wall Street thought. The harder question is whether margins recover with sales.

The full-year guide is flat for a reason, since beef and wages keep getting more expensive while the consumer keeps getting jumpier. Watch the next print to see whether the traffic gain holds when gas prices stay high.

That's the real test of the comeback. A second straight quarter of positive traffic would be the green light for the rest of the year.

For now, the stock is back in the conversation. That's a place it hadn't been in a while.

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