An analysis based on Realytics Intelligence Platform data and demographic research. Sample sizes are still limited: the data provides a directional trend, not a definitive statistic.
1. The context: a small network in a large market
La Piadineria operates in France with 15 active locations, compared to 544 in Italy. Its presence is concentrated in Île-de-France, with additional openings in Lyon, Nice, Marseille, Reims and Rouen. Almost all locations are inside shopping malls: Westfield La Part-Dieu, Rosny 2, Les 4 Temps, Docks 76.
The French expansion began in 2017 (first openings in Nice and Marseille). Today the French network represents approximately 3% of the Italian one.
| Indicator |
Data |
| Locations in France |
15 |
| Locations in Italy |
544 |
| France share of Italian network |
~3% |
| Primary channel |
Shopping malls |
| First opening in France |
2017 (Nice, Marseille) |
| Source: Realytics Atlas, June 2026 |
2. The product works: customer satisfaction in France exceeds Italy
The first relevant data point goes in the opposite direction from what one might expect for a brand entering a foreign market: on every comparable dimension, French customers are more satisfied than Italian customers of the same brand.
| Dimension |
France |
Italy |
Difference |
| Overall satisfaction |
77% |
62% |
+15pp |
| Food quality |
95% |
90% |
+5pp |
| Service speed |
85% |
75% |
+10pp |
| Staff friendliness |
67% |
58% |
+9pp |
| Value for money |
60% |
47% |
+13pp |
| Waiting time |
26% |
19% |
+7pp |
| Order accuracy |
7% |
2% |
+5pp |
| Source: Realytics Atlas. Data window: customer dimensions from January 2024. |
The order accuracy figure (7% in France, 2% in Italy) is low in absolute terms in both markets. In a food court where customers can choose between multiple brands within a few metres, a wrong order or an out-of-target wait time is an immediate and difficult-to-recover drop-off factor.
The issue is not the product and not the market. French customers appreciate the piadina. The scaling risk lies elsewhere.
3. The worrying signal: mature locations are losing traffic
When separating locations with sufficient historical data (opened before 2024) from recent ones, a pattern emerges that aggregate data conceals: 7 out of 9 tracked locations show a traffic decline when comparing the current 12 months against the prior 12 months.
The two locations showing growth — Lyon Part-Dieu and Roissy Aeroville — are recent openings in ramp-up phase. Overall network growth in France is therefore entirely driven by new openings, not by the strength of the existing estate.
| Location |
Traffic change |
Note |
| La Défense (Paris) |
−59% |
Mature location |
| Paris Soufflot |
−52% |
Mature location |
| Marseille Port |
−38% |
Mature location |
| Paris Roosevelt |
−31% |
Mature location |
| Nice |
−28% |
Mature location |
| Lyon Part-Dieu |
+18% |
Recent opening — ramp-up |
| Roissy Aeroville |
+22% |
Recent opening — ramp-up |
| Source: Realytics Atlas. Traffic index based on review volume — directional reading, not definitive statistics. |
Methodological note: the Realytics traffic index is built on reviews and mentions, not POS data or physical counters. Samples per location are limited (between 19 and 89 mentions/dimension). The data provides a directional trend, not a definitive statistical measure. The analysis expressed in this article does not express absolute values but is based on a cross-referencing of CSAT and demographic data.
4. The confirmation: the decline is real in review volume too
To verify the signal was not a methodological artefact, Realytics analysed quarterly review volume for each mature location. The result confirms the decline: all mature locations show a drop in review volume compared to their 2024 peak.
The brand's aggregate data for France appears stable or growing because it includes new openings: Rouen Docks76 records 249 mentions in 2025 Q1. Mature locations, analysed in isolation, all show a contraction from the 2024 peak.
| Location |
Peak quarter |
2025 Q4 |
2026 Q1 |
| Paris Roosevelt |
138 (2024 Q2) |
44 |
97 ↑ |
| Paris Soufflot |
133 (2024 Q3) |
20 |
48 |
| Nice |
133 (2024 Q2) |
21 |
66 |
| Marseille Port |
108 (2025 Q1) |
55 |
39 |
| La Défense |
81 (2024 Q4) |
16 |
29 |
| Source: Realytics Atlas. 20–90 mentions per location per quarter: directional reading. |
5. Satisfaction drops in the same locations where traffic drops
The most significant dynamic emerges from cross-referencing traffic and satisfaction at location level. These are not two separate phenomena: in locations that lose traffic, satisfaction also falls. In locations that recover, both rise.
| Location |
CSAT 2023 |
CSAT 2024 |
CSAT 2025 |
CSAT 2026 |
| Paris Soufflot |
96% |
86% |
62% |
67% |
| Paris Roosevelt |
n.a. |
~85% |
~67% |
n.a. |
| Marseille Port |
40% |
40% |
75–80% |
n.a. |
| Source: Realytics Atlas. Sample sizes vary by location and year. |
Paris Soufflot is the clearest case: from 96% in 2023 to 62% in 2025, with partial recovery to 67% in 2026. Traffic and satisfaction fall in parallel at the same location in the same time window; this pattern almost always indicates an operational execution problem, not a contraction in market demand.
Marseille Port shows the opposite trajectory: it started from very low satisfaction (40%) in 2023–2024 and recovered to 75–80% in 2025. This demonstrates that the problem is not structural to the format. Something changed in Marseille between 2024 and 2025 at the operational or management level, and reversed the curve. Identifying what worked in Marseille and what failed at Soufflot is the most productive question arising from this analysis.
6. The competitive context: the scale gap with the market leaders
Realytics traffic data per location in Paris reveals a significant gap between La Piadineria and the dominant brands in urban fast food. These are traffic indices, not transaction counts — the comparison is therefore indicative, not precise.
| Brand / Location |
Traffic index |
Channel |
| O'Tacos Châtelet |
5,392 |
Street |
| McDonald's Haussmann |
4,964 |
Street |
| Burger King BNF |
3,480 |
Street |
| Tasty Crousty |
2,195 |
Street |
| Nach! |
1,999 |
Street |
| La Piadineria (best location) |
~177 |
Shopping mall |
| Source: Realytics Atlas. Individual sample locations. Traffic indices — not comparable to POS data. |
The gap is relevant. La Piadineria operates in a channel (mall) that guarantees baseline footfall but structurally limits volume potential compared to street locations. O'Tacos International — the most direct benchmark for the fast casual segment — operates predominantly on street.
| Brand |
Paris locations |
Avg visits/location |
CSAT |
Halal |
| Burger King |
36 |
966 |
74% |
No |
| O'Tacos |
28 |
651 |
86% |
Yes — 100% |
| Popeyes |
4 |
1,165 |
74% |
No |
| La Piadineria |
~9 |
~114 |
~77% |
No — lard in dough |
| Source: Realytics Atlas. Paris network estimates — not official company data. |
O'Tacos with 28 locations in Paris achieves 651 average visits per location and a CSAT of 86%. La Piadineria with approximately 9 locations achieves ~114 visits per location. This difference cannot be explained by network scale alone.
7. An unaddressed structural variable: the demographic composition of key markets
There is a variable that operational analysis alone does not capture: the demographic composition of the urban areas where La Piadineria operates in France.
Traditional Romagnol piadina is made with a dough based on lard — a fat derived from pork. The core menu fillings (Parma ham, cooked ham, mortadella, salami) are also pork-derived. Lard and all pork derivatives fall into the haram — forbidden — category under Islamic dietary rules.
An observant Muslim consumer cannot eat a piadina even in the vegetarian filling version, because the dough base itself is haram.
This is not a matter of taste or preference: it is a structural product exclusion for a segment of the population.
The French census does not record religious composition for constitutional secularism reasons. The most-cited indirect indicator in demographic literature is the percentage of Arabic-origin names among newborns, recorded by INSEE and analysed by demographer Jérôme Fourquet (IFOP).
| Area |
% Arabic-Muslim names among newborns — 2016 |
Source |
| France — national average |
18.8% |
INSEE / Fourquet-IFOP |
| High-density urban areas (range)* |
25–40% |
Fourquet-IFOP |
| Greater Paris (estimate in range) |
~32% |
Fourquet-IFOP |
| Mediterranean area — Marseille (estimate) |
~33% |
Fourquet-IFOP |
| Lyon east area (estimate) |
~30% |
Fourquet-IFOP |
| * The 25–40% range is verified for the aggregate "highly urbanised areas". Area-level figures are editorial estimates within the verified range — not INSEE data per municipality. Source: Jérôme Fourquet / IFOP based on INSEE 2016 data. |
La Piadineria's locations in France are predominantly in the same urban areas where this presence is highest: Île-de-France, Marseille, Lyon.
France is the leading European market for the halal food segment with 18.95% of the total European market (Mordor Intelligence, 2024). This figure measures the structural demand present in the same cities where La Piadineria operates.
| Indicator |
Data |
Source |
| France share of European halal food market |
18.95% — 1st in Europe |
Mordor Intelligence, 2024 |
| Muslims in France buying halal meat (estimate) |
~65% |
Research Nester (secondary source) |
| Muslim community in France (estimate) |
5–10% of national population |
Academic sources |
| Source: Mordor Intelligence Europe Halal Food and Beverages Market, 2024. |
8. The comparison with those who have already adapted their offer
Several direct competitors have structured their offer in response to this demand.
O'Tacos has an entirely halal offer and has built its positioning around a multicultural urban target. It is the brand with the highest CSAT in the Paris panel (86%) and the highest traffic volume among non-global fast casual brands.
Quick converted its entire network to 100% halal following its acquisition by H.I.G. Capital in 2021. Certification is managed by ARGML (Association Rituelle de la Grande Mosquée de Lyon). According to industry estimates cited by Bernard Boutboul (Gira Conseil), revenue reportedly grew from approximately €250 million to approximately €515 million in the three years following conversion. These are not certified official accounts — they are industry analyst estimates.
McDonald's France and KFC do not have a halal offer at national scale in France. The operational complexity of managing two parallel supply chains is cited by operators as the primary obstacle.
| Brand |
Halal offering in France |
Notes |
| O'Tacos |
Yes — 100% |
Explicitly muslim-friendly positioning |
| Quick |
Yes — 100% |
Full conversion 2021, ARGML certified |
| KFC |
No — not at national scale |
|
| Burger King |
No |
|
| McDonald's |
No — not at national scale |
|
| La Piadineria |
No — lard in dough |
Core fillings all pork-derived |
| Source: public brand certifications. The European Conservative, Nov. 2025 (Quick). Lateliergourmand.fr (ARGML). |
9. Overall reading: what the data shows and what it does not yet show
The available data is not sufficient to establish with causal certainty why mature La Piadineria locations in France are losing traffic. Sample sizes are small, the time window is limited, and internal sales data that would allow separation of an operational problem from a structural demand problem is absent.
What the data shows with sufficient clarity to be considered a trend:
- The traffic decline at mature locations is real, confirmed by both the Realytics index and quarterly review volumes. It is not a methodological artefact.
- The decline is localised and asymmetric: some locations worsen, Marseille improves. The cause is at least partly operational, not solely a product or market issue.
- The product works: satisfaction in France is higher than in Italy on every dimension measured.
- There is a structural demographic variable — the size of the Muslim-faith population in the urban areas where La Piadineria operates — that the current product cannot serve due to the composition of both the dough and the fillings. This variable does not appear in standard operational analysis.
- The competitors with the greatest traction in the same locations (O'Tacos, Quick) have structured their offer to be accessible to this segment of the population.
What the data does not yet show with statistical sufficiency:
- Whether the decline is primarily attributable to operational issues (staffing, order fulfilment times, order accuracy) or to a structural limit in the pool of repeatable customers.
- Whether the demographic variable is causally linked to the decline or is a geographical correlation. Answering this would require a cross-analysis between the demographic composition of each location's trade area and traffic trends — data not publicly available.
- Whether the Marseille turnaround is replicable and which specific lever produced it.
10. The operational questions the data raises
On the operational side: what changed in Marseille between 2024 and 2025 that reversed both traffic and satisfaction? The answer to this question is worth more than any aggregate comparison, because Marseille is already a successful turnaround case within the same network.
On the product side: is the lard-based dough a negotiable constraint? Several artisan piadinerie in Italy produce a variant with extra virgin olive oil replacing lard, with no perceptible impact on texture — and La Piadineria itself already has variants without this ingredient in the dough. The question is not whether it is technically feasible — it is — but whether the centralised production model of the Brescia facility is compatible with a dual production line for the French market, and whether a piadina adapted to French market requirements would preserve or dilute the overall product characteristics that have made the chain the only Italian QSR capable of scaling internationally.
Notes on sources
All traffic, satisfaction and review volume data comes from the Realytics platform (public chat session, June 2026). Demographic data is based on Jérôme Fourquet/IFOP on INSEE 2016 data — indirect indicators, not official religious composition statistics.
Halal market data from Mordor Intelligence (2024). Quick/halal data from The European Conservative (November 2025) and lateliergourmand.fr.
The charts, originating from Realytics, were reworked by Claude AI, which sourced the demographic data required for a more accurate and methodological analysis.
Numerical projections not directly verifiable from these sources have been excluded.
Michele Ardoni — micheleardoni.com | experviser.com | June 2026