Daily Press

For Chick-fil-A customers, slow drive-thrus are worth the wait

- By Matt Kempner

ATLANTA — Time, it turns out, is relative at Chick-fil-A.

For clock watchers, drive-thrus at the Atlantabas­ed chain remain the slowest among major fastfood brands, most of which have seen wait times grow during the pandemic, according to a new annual study.

But Chick-fil-A customers aren’t buying it. They give the chain’s drive-thru speed of service the best ratings of any of the brands tested, a separate new survey shows.

And packed drive-thrus at the chicken sandwich stop continue to gather top rankings in other measuremen­ts — perhaps making waits more tolerable.

Many restaurant­s around the nation saw business plummet amid coronaviru­s concerns and government­set restrictio­ns early in the pandemic. Plenty of dining rooms have yet to reopen. But restaurant­s with drivethrus had what turned out to be a strategic advantage in an era of social distancing.

Chick-fil-A, one of the largest U.S. restaurant chains by revenue, had some of the highest perrestaur­ant sales in its segment last year. It hasn’t publicly disclosed how its business has fared in recent months, but long drive-thru lines that were common before the pandemic are still evident at some of its restaurant­s.

Among 10 large fast-food chains, total drive-thru times this summer averaged 5 minutes and 57 seconds, half a minute longer than a year ago, according to SeeLevel HX, an Atlantabas­ed market research firm conducting its 20th annual review. The time spanned from when a tester pulled into line until they received their food.

Chick-fil-A’s average total time increased just two seconds, but it still had the longest waits — 8 minutes and 9 seconds. Arby’s, which is also based in metro Atlanta, had the secondlong­est average time: 6 minutes and 34 seconds, almost 90 seconds longer than its mark a year ago.

The shortest average waits were at KFC, at 4 minutes and 43 seconds, though it ranked last for customer service and accuracy. McDonald’s, Taco Bell and KFC each had shorter average waits from a year ago .

fil-A spokeswoma­n praised the chicken chain’s operators and workers “for their dedication to customer service and resiliency during what has been a challengin­g year for all. They have worked tirelessly to share a smile through a mask and deliver a seamless, contactles­s experience, primarily in our drivethrus.”

One likely reason for Chick-fil-A’s longer waits: Its restaurant­s tend to serve far more customers, with testers counting nearly three times as many other vehicles in the chain’s lines than the industry average, SeeLevel HX found. Both Chick-fil-A and the other chains had more vehicles in line than were counted a year ago.

SeeLevel HX’s mystery shoppers gave Chick-fil-A No. 1 ratings for order accuracy, customer service and taste.

Chick-fil-A is less focused on timing than other attributes consumers value, said Lisa van Kesteren, SeeLevel HX’s chief executive.

 ?? DREAMSTIME ?? Customers are willing to wait in long lines at drive-thrus to get food from Chick-fil-A.
DREAMSTIME Customers are willing to wait in long lines at drive-thrus to get food from Chick-fil-A.

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