As we move through April 2026, Australia appears to be operating in a technically balanced growth environment, with GDP tracking at approximately 2.0%. Beneath the numbers, however, a more complex reality is playing out across foodservice, hospitality, and leisure: a clearly defined two-speed consumer economy.
At Brand Partnerz, we believe strongly in people, relationships, and the value of staying connected. Over recent months, we’ve seen a noticeable increase in calls and conversations across our network driven by a shared need to better understand what’s happening in the market and how to respond on the ground.
This update brings together what we’re seeing and hearing. It’s designed to provide context, spark thinking, and help make sense of a market that continues to adjust.
This is not a story of collapsing demand. It’s a story of redistributed spend. Understanding where value is being created and who is still willing to spend has become increasingly important.
The Two-Speed Consumer
Household spending is now largely shaped by two factors: housing position and exposure to interest rates.
On one side are asset-rich, low-pressure consumers mortgage-free retirees, downsizers, and high-income professionals. This group remains resilient and continues to spend on experiences that feel genuinely worth it.
On the other are value-focused, high-pressure households renters and recent mortgage holders, managing permanently higher essential costs. While inflation has eased, spending decisions are now more deliberate and trade-off driven.
The result isn’t less spending overall, but more intentional spending.
Foodservice: Polarisation Creates Opportunity
The foodservice market is becoming increasingly fragmented, with the strongest performance at the extremes.
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- Premium dining remains resilient. Consumers are dining out less often, but spending more when they do gravitating toward destination venues, long lunches, fixed-price menus, and experience-led offerings. Operators are tightening trading hours, leaning into bookings, and designing menus with margin in mind.
- QSR and takeaway continue to gain share. For many households, a reliable, affordable takeaway night has replaced the casual dine-in occasion. Pizza, bundles, and value-led formats have become weekly solutions rather than compromises.
The pressure point remains mid-market casual dining, particularly businesses without a clear value or premium position.
Cafés and the Reset of Daily Habits
One of the more structural shifts we’re seeing is the erosion of the daily “small luxury.”
Coffee has become the consumer’s inflation reference point. As prices move toward $6- $7, habitual café visits are giving way to home brewing and workplace solutions. CBD lunch trade continues to soften as packed lunches return, and hybrid work patterns persist.
Once broken, these habits are hard to restore, creating a permanent volume reset for many cafés, but also opening opportunities around smarter bundles, loyalty-led offers, and simplified menus.
Leisure: Fewer Impulse Moments, More Planned Spend
Leisure spending hasn’t disappeared; it’s just become more selective.
Consumers are still prioritising big moments, concerts, festivals, and major sporting events, but are trimming impulse and secondary spend. The “walk in and spend $50” customer is fading.
In response, many operators are finding success with memberships, bundles, and pre-commitment models that offer value and certainty for both sides.
Pizza & Pasta: Clear Lanes Win
Pizza and pasta are a clear reflection of the two-speed economy.
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In pizza, ultra-value QSR and premium artisan formats are both winning, while those stuck in the middle continue to feel pressure. At one end, families want certainty and affordability; at the other, pizza has become an event or indulgence.
Pasta is following a similar path. Fast-casual, value-led formats are growing strongly, while premium Italian venues double down on craftsmanship and “luxury comfort.” Mid-tier offerings need a clear point of difference to compete.
P&C: From “Servo Food” to Food Destination
The perception of “servo food” continues to shift. Convenience stores are now emerging as one of the fastest-growing competitors to traditional QSR, particularly as fuel prices rise and consumers look to consolidate trips.
While higher fuel costs are causing some consumers to reduce discretionary purchases, value-led food offers continue to win. Where the proposition is clear quick, reliable, good-quality food at a fair price customers are still buying.
We’re seeing:
- Improving quality perceptions, with P&C food increasingly viewed as fresh, consistent, and dependable
- A strong proximity advantage, especially in suburban areas where work-from-home patterns have shifted demand away from CBD cafés
- A heavily male-dominated customer base, favouring functional, satisfying, and no-fuss food solutions
The hot food offer is being reinvented. Low-margin staples are giving way to higher-quality, customisable handheld options that deliver speed without compromise. Rising fuel prices are reinforcing “one-stop” behaviour, with customers treating the forecourt as both a refuel and meal solution.
The opportunity in P&C isn’t more food it’s better food, faster, delivered in formats that feel like a smart choice rather than a compromise.
Looking Ahead: The Operator Era
The remainder of 2026 will reward clarity, discipline, and execution.
Operators performing best are:
- Designing menus that clearly address value while retaining premium credibility • Using digital loyalty and bundled offers to protect frequency
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- Simplifying menus and prioritising takeaway-first formats
- Leveraging partnerships and scale as consolidation continues
- Adopting labour-saving solutions to protect yield and consistency
Final Thought
The Australian consumer is not broken, but they are divided.
The opportunity in 2026 lies in understanding which speed your customer is travelling at and aligning price, product, and experience accordingly.
At Brand Partnerz, our focus remains on helping our partners turn this complexity into competitive advantage.
Until next time, food for thought.
Matt Rivers
Brand Partnerz
