A change is coming to Subway restaurants today

Subway is now freshly slicing meat at its stores.

Subway is now freshly slicing meat at its stores. (Subway)


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NEW YORK — To undercut its fast-growing rivals, Subway is making a big change to its meats.

The chain's roughly 20,000 US locations will freshly slice their deli meat beginning Wednesday, marking Subway's biggest change since two years ago, when it began refreshing its menu offerings, ingredients and restaurant appearances to boost once-sagging sales and make itself an attractive acquisition target.

Around 80% of stores will display the $6,000 slicers prominently (space permitting) near the deli counter with most of the meat sliced several times a day, including turkey, pepperoni, roast beef, ham and salami. That's a major shift from Subway's previous method of slicing meat at its factories and delivering it to stores.

In addition to boosting freshness, slicing cold cuts at its stores brings the chain in-line with methods at its smaller competitors like Jimmy John's, Jersey Mike's Subs and Firehouse Subs, all of which have been growing their store counts in recent years. That's in sharp contrast to Subway, which has closed roughly 7,000 locations since 2016.

Subway locations currently fresh slice vegetables and freshly bake bread and cookies daily. Adding freshly sliced meat "felt like the natural step that we needed to get back to and address," Trevor Haynes, president for Subway's North America operations, told CNN.

Cheese, steak and rotisserie chicken will still be delivered pre-sliced.

To promote the changes, Subway is rolling out four new sandwiches that highlight the new slicer, including turkey, garlic roast beef, ham and "The Beast," which features pepperoni, salami, turkey, ham and roast beef on Italian bread.

A year ago, Subway unveiled its most extensive makeover in the company's nearly 60-year history. The makeover placed less of an emphasis on customization in favor of a "Subway Series" sandwich menu, which now accounts for 20% of sales. Digital growth is also a bright spot for the company, with sales made through its app or third-party services doubling compared to 2021.

Average yearly sales at Subway U.S. restaurants, however, are much lower compared to its sandwich business rivals. Data from QSR Magazine reveals that its three rivals pull in about $1 million per unit, with an average Subway location raking in less than $500,000.

Still, privately held Subway said it had a record-setting year in 2022 with sales at its North America stores that have been open at least a year rising 7.8% last year compared to 2021. Sales also exceeded projections by more than $700 million, but the company didn't reveal specific numbers.

Subway is also up for sale, with Haynes saying that it's "on track" for an imminent announcement, likely in mid-July.

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