DB
Dine Brands Global, Inc. (DIN)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 revenue was $216.2M, Adjusted EPS $0.73, and Adjusted EBITDA $49.0M; Applebee’s comps were +3.1% while IHOP comps were -1.5% .
- Results came in below consensus: revenue $216.2M vs $220.6M*, Adjusted EPS $0.73 vs $0.99*, and EBITDA $49.0M vs $55.2M*; higher G&A and lower segment profit drove the miss . Values retrieved from S&P Global.
- Capital return pivot: dividend cut from $0.51 to $0.19 per quarter and commitment to repurchase at least $50M of shares over the next two quarters; management cited undervaluation and buybacks as the more accretive lever .
- Strategic momentum: dual-brand conversions are accelerating (≈30 opened/under construction in 2025; ≥50 openings in 2026), with strong early economics and franchisee enthusiasm .
- Near-term setup: guidance maintained with EBITDA likely at the low end due to temporary remodel/conversion closures; Applebee’s sales sustained into Q4 and IHOP has accelerated .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Applebee’s achieved a second straight quarter of positive comps (+3.1%) with positive traffic; menu innovation (Chicken Parmesan Fettuccine) and the Ultimate Trio appetizer drove transactions and check growth, and off-premise sales rose +9% YoY .
- Dual-brand strategy showed compelling economics (1.5x–2.5x sales lifts, near doubling of four-wall margins, sub-three-year paybacks), with ~30 domestic units opened/under construction by year-end and ≥50 planned in 2026 .
- Asset-light cash generation remains strong: YTD operating cash flow $83.3M and adjusted free cash flow $68.2M, supporting buybacks and reinvestment, while unrestricted cash ended Q3 at $168.0M .
What Went Wrong
- Consolidated profitability compressed: Adjusted EBITDA fell to $49.0M from $61.9M YoY, and Adjusted EPS declined to $0.73 from $1.44, driven by higher G&A and lower segment profit; temporary closures for remodels and dual-brand conversions also pressured results .
- IHOP comps were -1.5% amid elevated commodities (eggs, pork, coffee); value mix grew, requiring barbell initiatives to lift check (weekday value incidence reduced from ~25% to ~15%) .
- Company-owned restaurants remained a drag (expected ~$9–$10M segment profit hit in 2025), reflecting liquor license gaps, construction downtime, and catch-up repair/training costs; management expects these to abate as conversions/licensing complete .
Financial Results
Consolidated P&L Trend (Reported Quarterly)
Q3 2025 vs Prior Year and vs Consensus
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Margins (Calculated from reported figures)
Note: Margins are calculated from reported revenue and Adjusted EBITDA.
Segment/Brand KPIs
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “In the third quarter, Dine Brands sustained positive sales and traffic trends, driven by our everyday value platforms, innovative new menu offerings, and high-impact marketing that continues to resonate with guests.” — John Peyton, CEO .
- “We believe our shares are undervalued… we plan to repurchase at least $50 million of shares over the next two quarters.” — Vance Chang, CFO .
- On dual-brand economics: “Sales performance approximately 1.5x to 2.5x higher post-conversion… four-wall margins nearly doubling… payback period of less than three years.” — John Peyton .
- On Q4 outlook: “Sales volume for Applebee’s really sustained from Q3 into Q4, and then it’s accelerated for IHOP from Q3 into Q4.” — Vance Chang .
Q&A Highlights
- Company-owned restaurants: management expects ~$9–$10M segment profit hit in 2025 from licenses, construction closures, and catch-up expenses; headwinds should abate next year as transitions complete .
- IHOP check strategy: barbell approach and upsell have reduced weekday value incidence from ~25% to ~15%, improving check while retaining traffic .
- Dual-brand trajectory: ~30 domestic units open/under construction by YE 2025; ≥50 in 2026; franchisee demand strong with conversions leading near-term .
- Capital returns: dividend reduced to $0.19/share and buybacks increased due to perceived undervaluation; target share count reduction ~11–13% over two quarters at current prices (management commentary) .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 consensus vs actual: EPS $0.99* vs $0.73 Adjusted, revenue $220.6M* vs $216.2M, EBITDA $55.2M* vs $49.0M Adjusted — all below expectations. Primary EPS and EBITDA definitions may differ vs company’s non-GAAP metrics; comparison shown to Adjusted figures given investor focus .
- Next quarter (Q4 2025) consensus: EPS $1.09*, revenue $226.5M*; management noted sustained Applebee’s sales and IHOP acceleration into Q4 .
- Targets and coverage: Target price consensus ~$27*, with 6–7 estimates on EPS and 5–6 on revenue for Q3–Q4*. Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Near-term print was a modest miss vs consensus driven by higher G&A and lower segment profit; expect Q4 EBITDA at the low end of the annual range due to elevated temporary closures for remodels and dual-brand conversions .
- Capital allocation pivot (dividend reduction; ≥$50M buybacks) is a tangible catalyst; buyback pace suggests meaningful share count reduction if valuation remains depressed .
- Applebee’s momentum is intact (positive traffic and comps; off-premise strength), while IHOP is showing positive traffic and improving check via barbell strategy; monitor Q4 comps to confirm trajectory .
- Dual-brand strategy is gaining scale with attractive unit economics and franchisee demand; watch 2026 build cadence and early U.S. conversion returns to gauge medium-term growth and margin accretion .
- Commodity backdrop mixed (IHOP mid-single-digit inflation; eggs/pork/coffee elevated) but co-op savings progressing; continued tariff fluidity is a risk to input costs .
- Company-owned portfolio headwinds are transitory (licenses, closures); as conversions/remodels complete, segment drag should lessen and refranchising pathway may unlock value .
- Trading lens: the buyback/dividend mix shift and improving brand traffic are supportive; execution on Q4 comps and visibility on 2026 dual-brand openings are key narrative drivers.
Note: All company figures and narrative sourced from Q3 2025 press release and 8-K, Q3 earnings call, and prior quarter releases/calls. Consensus figures marked with * are from S&P Global.
References:
- Q3 2025 press release and financials:
- Q3 2025 8-K (Item 2.02 and Exhibit 99.1):
- Q3 2025 earnings call transcript:
- Q2 2025 press release:
- Q2 2025 call transcript:
- Q1 2025 press release:
- Q1 2025 call transcript:
- Dividend press release (Q3 declared):
- Consensus estimates: Values retrieved from S&P Global.