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Texas Roadhouse earns the 2024 Brand Icon award, blending heritage with modern guest experiences and off-premises growth.
Photo by Stu Moffat
Texas Roadhouse’s Brand Icon win in 2024 isn’t just a trophy. It marks a deliberate cadence: honor the roots while pushing for modern guest experiences. NRN named the Brand Icon, powered by The Coca-Cola Company, underscoring a model that blends legacy with ongoing innovation. The award validates a growth story that put the chain ahead of Applebee’s to become the second-largest casual-dining chain in the U.S. by 2023, now chasing Olive Garden at the top. With a 13.8% sales rise in 2023 and $4.78 billion in sales, the math is simple: solid fundamentals plus selective disruption. This is the frame for what comes next.
Behind the headlines sits a disciplined philosophy. Kent Taylor launched the chain in 1993, and the brand’s evolution is described through legendary hospitality and consistent execution. Leaders speak of balancing tradition with scalable change, a pattern that keeps service steady in communities while embracing modern guest-facing capabilities. The Brand Icon badge isn’t a one-off: it’s a statement that heritage can coexist with digital tools, drive‑through options, and improved ordering workflows, all without diluting the guest’s welcome.
The through-line is clear: heritage fuels consistency, and consistency enables calibrated innovation. That balance explains why Texas Roadhouse shows up in markets coast-to-coast with the same warm hospitality and the same readiness to adapt—be it digital ordering, flexible pickup windows, or enhanced off-premises options. This isn’t a one-year story; it’s the pattern that underwrites a brand expecting to stay relevant while honoring its origins.
Growth here rests on disciplined operating fundamentals paired with new capabilities. As Sam Oches notes, ongoing operational advancements—especially in off-premises dining and expanded ordering tools—have produced a consistent, reliable guest experience in markets nationwide. In practice, that means a steady blend of dependable dine-in service with flexible delivery and pickup options that preserve signature hospitality even as convenience rises. The result is a brand that can scale without surrendering its core guest promise.
Operational discipline is the blunt edge that keeps the model honest. The Texas Roadhouse playbook blends the dine‑in anchor with digital access, ensuring guests meet the same level of hospitality whether they order at a table or via app. The priority is consistency and speed, not novelty for novelty’s sake. As markets evolve, the ability to serve reliably through channels matters as much as the act of serving well in the dining room.
Forecast for 2024 onward is clear: off‑premises will keep growing, but the dine‑in foundation remains the anchor. The balance between quick, convenient access and the traditional, attentive service defines the road ahead for Texas Roadhouse as it expands beyond its current footprint.
Industry voices framed the Brand Icon recognition as a standard-bearer for hospitality and execution. The award functions as a benchmark for how a brand can honor tradition while sustaining momentum through innovation. The Coca‑Cola partnership sits at the center of that narrative, reinforcing a shared commitment to guest delight and sustained performance across channels. As the coverage notes, the award spotlight also serves as a platform for a dialog about the balance of heritage and agility in casual dining.
Heather Trotter, Senior Vice President, East Region, for The Coca-Cola Company North America, offered hearty congratulations, calling the award a testament to dedication to legendary service, quality, and unforgettable guest experiences. NRN’s coverage also notes the award’s role in spotlighting the Coca‑Cola and Texas Roadhouse partnership that underscores shared commitments to guest delight and sustained performance. In this view, the Brand Icon honor is more than a trophy; it’s a signal for the industry’s standard‑bearers.
"Texas Roadhouse is the most exciting story in casual-dining restaurants today," said Sam Oches, echoing the momentum that surrounds the Brand Icon recognition. The ceremony coverage, as NRN frames it, is part of a broader conversation about how heritage and modern guest expectations intersect in leadership and performance. The takeaway is simple: the award is a lens on standards that don’t expire with a headline.
Texas Roadhouse’s 2024 Brand Icon ceremony was tied to CREATE: The Event for Emerging Restaurateurs, with the awards spotlight scheduled for October in Nashville. CEO Jerry Morgan would engage in a main‑stage conversation with Sam Oches to discuss the brand’s evolution and the vision laid down by founder Kent Taylor. NRN signaled a comprehensive multimedia report in the November issue to explain how heritage and innovation intersect in the brand’s trajectory. In parallel, the Domino’s 2025 Brand Icon profile confirms the award will be presented at CREATE in October, with the date set for October 15 in Nashville.
Brand Icon lineage reinforces a cadence: White Castle in 2022, Taco Bell in 2023, Texas Roadhouse in 2024, and Domino’s in 2025. The sequencing isn’t accidental; it’s a marker that leadership in this space values a blend of heritage and digital-era leadership. The event calendar isn’t just ceremonial—it's a forum for operator benchmarking, a stage for dialogue, and a snapshot of where guest expectations are headed from one October to the next.
Looking ahead, NRN and Coca‑Cola maintain a collaborative forum for shaping the next wave of brand-icon practices. The coverage isn’t about a single win; it’s about ongoing guidance for operators on how to blend heritage with agility in a market shaped by digital ordering, off-premises demand, and guest expectations for consistent, high‑quality experiences. The awards program, in this light, becomes a barometer for how far a brand will go without losing its core identity.
2024 data show a historic shift at the top of the casual‑dining segment. Texas Roadhouse rose to be the largest U.S. casual-dining chain by systemwide sales, surpassing Olive Garden, with year‑over‑year growth of about 14.7% and total systemwide sales around $5.5 billion, according to Technomic data cited by NRN and other outlets. Olive Garden, by comparison, posted about $5.2 billion in systemwide sales for 2024. These figures underline a market where leadership is earned through scale, guest loyalty, and the ability to marry heritage with digital-era expectations.
Domino’s 2025 Brand Icon profile shows a second act in play: Domino’s sits as the 10th largest restaurant chain in the U.S. by sales, with 2024 sales of $9.5 billion and about 7,000 domestic units, representing 5.3% growth versus 2023. Sam Oches lauded Domino’s as a pioneer in delivery and digital ordering, while The Coca-Cola Company’s Heather Trotter praised the brand’s legacy of innovation, leadership, and excellence. The award will be presented at CREATE in Nashville, and NRN plans a full multimedia report in its November issue to explain why Domino’s earned Brand Icon status.
Implications for 2026 aren’t a crystal ball so much as a direction: Coca‑Cola and NRN will keep shaping the forum that helps operators benchmark how to blend heritage with agility. The ongoing coverage and multimedia reports will continue to map how leading brands balance a storied identity with the demands of a digital, off‑premises era. The takeaway is clear: leadership in casual dining is about enduring standards plus a willingness to reinvent the playbook without losing the flavor of the brand.