Food

Wendy's new Breakfast Burrito is loaded with bacon

The fast-food chain, continuing to push breakfast, is offering a burrito with as much bacon as its Baconator. But it’s only available in select markets.
Wendy's Breakfast Burrito
Wendy's new Breakfast Burrito. | Photo courtesy of Wendy's.

Wendy’s is putting its Baconator in a tortilla. Sort of.

The Dublin, Ohio-based burger chain on Monday started selling a new Breakfast Burrito in select markets, which is notable as much for what’s in it: An awful lot of bacon.

The burrito features two eggs, six strips of bacon—as much, apparently, as the chain’s famous Baconator burger—along with potatoes and two slices of cheese. It's topped with a cheese sauce. Customers also get two Cholula hot sauce packets to go with it.

The burrito is in most, but not all, of the chain’s U.S. locations. Wendy’s said the item will be available at 4,500 of the chain’s 6,000 domestic restaurants.

The burrito gives the company another premium item—and a substantial one at that—for its morning daypart.

Wendy’s began offering breakfast in the late winter of 2020, and the daypart has maintained steady sales growth in the years since then, despite the pandemic and the impact it’s had on breakfast sales.

The company, which last week announced that it plans to replace its CEO, has been focused on innovation in the morning. It last year launched English Muffin Sandwiches, taking a direct shot at competitor McDonald’s, to go along with a new Frosty Cream Cold Brew.

“We knew it was time to roll out a breakfast burrito option, starting in select markets,” Lindsay Radkoski, U.S. chief marketing officer for Wendy’s, said in a statement.

Members help make our journalism possible. Become a Restaurant Business member today and unlock exclusive benefits, including unlimited access to all of our content. Sign up here.

Multimedia

Exclusive Content

Financing

Surprise, surprise: California kept its full-service restaurants in the dark for months

Reality Check: The state attorney general had refused to clarify the scope of the state's pending anti-junk-fee law. It's one more smack in the face to the trade.

Financing

Why social media, and not price, is behind Starbucks' sales problems

The Bottom Line: The coffee shop chain lost momentum quickly in November. That was too fast to be explained by consumer reaction over the prices of its beverages.

Financing

Franchisors who want faster remodels should reach into their pocketbooks

The Bottom Line: Burger King is spending $550 million to get more of its restaurants remodeled, not counting its own upgraded restaurants. More brands should do this.

Trending

More from our partners