º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Retail & Consumer

Asda-owned Leon slashes hundreds of jobs as work from home trend bites

The firm, which was co-founded by Henry Dimbleby, son of veteran BBC broadcaster David Dimbleby, said it had reduced its headcount by 17% in 2024 - but did not disclose the number of roles cut

Leon at Grand Central Station, Birmingham(Image: Graham Young / BirminghamLive)

Leon has slashed hundreds of positions after describing a "challenging" year marked by soaring cost inflation and weakened consumer expenditure.

The Asda-owned fast-food operator reduced its workforce by 17 per cent, cutting 224 roles to leave 1,120 employees throughout 2024, according to its latest filings, as it attempted to tackle substantial losses, as reported by .

The company, which was co-established by Henry Dimbleby, son of seasoned BBC presenter David Dimbleby, recorded a 3.9 per cent decline in turnover to £62.5m, coupled with losses of £8.4m, representing a considerable improvement from the £12.5m deficit reported in the prior year.

"The º£½ÇÊÓÆµ economy was challenging throughout 2024, with its impacts felt across consumer spending," Leon said.

"This again led to inflationary pressures, particularly seen with electricity costs and costs of sales."

"Within the year, we have continued to actively control our cost base and have seen a significant reduction year on year."

Leon also noted that operations had been "further affected" by rail and underground strikes, which caused reduced footfall owing to the proximity of its outlets to railway stations.

"Furthermore, the working-from-home trend has impacted many Leon restaurants, particularly ones based in office-centric locations, and these have seen a slower recovery."