BHC Chicken Tests Canadian Market With Toronto Flagship

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BHC Chicken has quietly used its first Canadian restaurant as a proving ground for broader North American ambitions. After opening at The Well in downtown Toronto in October 2024, the Korean fried chicken brand has spent its first year observing customer behaviour, refining operations, and assessing what it takes to scale responsibly in a demanding urban market.

Located at 486 Front Street West within The Well’s Wellington Market, the roughly 2,560 square foot restaurant with seating for about 90 guests serves as BHC’s North American flagship. The store anchors the brand’s entry into Canada and reflects a deliberate strategy to test performance in a diverse, high-expectation city before accelerating expansion.

“BHC Chicken is the No.1 brand in the Korean fried chicken market, built around proprietary recipes and a strong focus on operational consistency,” said Hwayeon Nam, Senior Executive Director of Dining Brands Group’s Global Business Division. “In Korea, fried chicken is part of everyday dining culture, and BHC has grown by steadily refining both the food and how it’s made and served over many years.”

Toronto, she explained, was selected not simply as a launchpad, but as a learning environment. “Toronto felt like the right place to begin in Canada. It’s a city where people are open to different cuisines but also very clear about their expectations. From the start, we saw Toronto not just as an entry point, but as a place to understand how a single BHC store performs in a diverse, high-expectation market.”

BHC Chicken celebration party at The Well in Toronto. Photo: BHC Chicken

Measuring Early Demand in a Competitive Market

During its first year of operation, the Toronto location recorded more than 110,000 visitors, a figure that BHC views as validation of underlying demand rather than a singular success metric. According to Nam, what mattered most was repeat visitation.

“Reaching more than 110,000 visitors in the first year suggested there is steady demand for Korean fried chicken in Canada,” she said. “More important than the number itself was seeing customers return over time, which showed that the experience met their expectations.”

Toronto’s dining landscape includes an increasingly crowded field of Korean fried chicken operators, ranging from independent concepts to international chains. While BHC anticipated strong engagement from Korean and broader Asian communities, the breadth of its customer base proved notable.

“While we expected interest from Korean and Asian communities, what stood out was how naturally non-Korean customers engaged with the menu,” Nam said. “Many were open to bold, seasoning-forward flavors and comfortable making BHC part of their regular dining choices.”

For BHC, the takeaway was clear. “The first year reinforced a simple point for us: cultural curiosity may bring customers in, but consistency and execution are what keep them coming back.”

Photo: BHC Chicken
BHC Chicken at The Well in Toronto. Photo: BHC Chicken

Menu Performance and Operational Adjustments

BHC entered Toronto with its core menu intact, led by signature offerings such as Bburinkle, Matcho King, and Gold King, flavours that have driven tens of millions of servings globally. These items performed strongly, reinforcing the brand’s confidence in its proprietary seasoning and sauce systems.

“Our core chicken items, especially those built around BHC’s signature seasonings and sauces, were received very well,” Nam said. “These flavors are central to the brand and difficult to replicate.”

Operating a busy downtown restaurant also surfaced areas that required refinement. The Toronto store experienced peak-time traffic patterns and service demands that differed from some Asian markets, prompting adjustments to menu balance and service flow.

“At the same time, operating a busy Toronto location highlighted areas that needed adjustment,” Nam said. “We fine-tuned menu balance and service flow to better match local dining habits and peak-time traffic.”

Those changes, she added, were informed by experience rather than experimentation. “One advantage BHC brings to this market is experience. The systems behind the food, recipes, training, and daily operations have been tested over time, which allowed us to make thoughtful adjustments rather than constant changes.”

Using Toronto as an Operational Benchmark

BHC’s Toronto location now serves as an internal reference point for evaluating future stores across Canada and the United States. According to Nam, the first year provided a realistic picture of what it takes to operate in a North American urban environment.

“The first year in Toronto gave us a realistic view of what it takes to operate in a North American urban environment,” she said. “We saw how supply, staffing, costs, and customer flow come together in practice.”

Rather than pursuing rapid multi-unit openings, the company is taking a measured approach built around single-unit franchised restaurants. Initial expansion will remain concentrated in Toronto and the broader Ontario market.

“With that experience, we’re now looking to expand through additional single-unit franchise locations, starting in Toronto and the broader Ontario area,” Nam said. “We’re also beginning to apply what we’ve learned as we explore future opportunities, keeping the focus on moving forward efficiently while staying grounded in day-to-day operations.”

Photo: BHC Chicken
BHC Chicken at The Well in Toronto. Photo: BHC Chicken

Canada’s Role in a Broader North American Strategy

While the Toronto store functions as a flagship, BHC does not view it as a standalone showcase. Instead, it serves as a data point that informs how the brand evaluates site performance, staffing models, and operational balance.

“Canada plays an important role in how we think about North America,” Nam said. “Toronto isn’t just a showcase store. It’s a reference point. Its performance helps us understand what a healthy store looks like in terms of traffic, staffing, and overall balance.”

Ontario’s density and retail structure have made it a natural focus for near-term growth. “Ontario, in particular, has the density and market structure that allows individual stores to stand on their own,” she said. “Our approach is to build solid locations one by one, using what we’ve already learned rather than rushing ahead.”

This strategy aligns with Dining Brands Group’s broader international expansion philosophy, which emphasizes disciplined growth over rapid footprint expansion.

Maintaining Consistency Across Borders

As BHC scales further into North America, maintaining consistency remains a central concern. The company relies on centralized recipe management, structured training, and close control of key ingredients to ensure uniformity across markets.

“Consistency has always been central to BHC,” Nam said. “We rely on centralized recipe management, structured training, and close control of key ingredients to ensure the food tastes the same wherever it’s served.”

At the store level, that consistency is reinforced through standardized operating guidelines and ongoing oversight. “As we grow, the focus isn’t on changing how the food is made, but on making sure new locations are set up to execute properly from day one,” she said.

BHC Chicken one year celebration at The Well in Toronto. Photo: BHC Chicken

Word of Mouth Drives Early Momentum

Marketing efforts in Toronto have been intentionally restrained, with an emphasis on organic discovery rather than heavy promotional campaigns. According to Nam, word of mouth and social sharing proved more effective than traditional advertising.

“In Toronto, much of the traction came from word of mouth and organic social activity, supported by simple local marketing,” she said. “Customers responded more to consistency and familiarity than to heavy promotion.”

The customer base has spanned multiple demographics, unified less by age or background and more by expectations around reliability and quality. “Our customer base has been broad, young professionals, families, and people who enjoy trying different foods, but what connects them is an expectation of reliability,” Nam said. “Seeing customers return regularly has been one of the most encouraging signs for us.”

What Comes Next for BHC in Canada

Looking ahead, BHC plans to build on the foundation established in Toronto through carefully selected franchised locations across Ontario, with Canada continuing to play a strategic role in its North American footprint.

“Customers can expect to see more BHC locations, starting with additional single-unit franchised restaurants across Toronto and Ontario,” Nam said. “The first location helped us understand what works here, and we’re building from that experience as we grow.”

The company also plans to continue integrating Korean culture into the brand experience as it expands. “Our focus is on expanding in a way that stays true to the food, and the experience people expect from BHC, while gradually introducing the brand to more communities across Canada and North America,” she said. “In addition, we plan to expand and introduce more locations where customers can experience BHC’s distinctive menu along with Korean culture.”

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Craig Patterson
Craig Patterson
Located in Toronto, Craig is the Publisher & CEO of Retail Insider Media Ltd. He is also a retail analyst and consultant, Advisor at the University of Alberta School Centre for Cities and Communities in Edmonton, former lawyer and a public speaker. He has studied the Canadian retail landscape for over 25 years and he holds Bachelor of Commerce and Bachelor of Laws Degrees.

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