, Singapore
Jayss Rajoo, head of marketing and food innovation at Pizza Hut Singapore Pte Ltd.

Pizza Hut Singapore chases solo diners

The meal may be solo, but the experience is still social.

The rise of solo dining is prompting quick-service restaurants (QSRs) to rethink menu formats and how they position traditionally shareable food.

For pizza chains, the shift presents a structural challenge: a product built around group dining must now compete for increasingly fragmented, individual eating occasions.

Lifestyle changes are pushing more consumers to eat alone—not as a niche behaviour, but as an everyday default, said Jayss Rajoo, head of marketing and food innovation at Pizza Hut Singapore Pte Ltd.

“What we’re seeing is a reflection of broader lifestyle changes,” she told QSR Media Asia via Zoom. “Meals are increasingly happening between work, commutes, workouts, and errands. They’re no longer fixed moments—they’re flexible, in-between occasions.”

She cited the expansion of delivery, pickup, and mobile ordering, alongside changing living patterns and greater independence amongst younger consumers.

“Over half of consumers are now looking for individual portions that fit their own needs,” Rajoo said, citing internal and third-party research.

This is forcing QSRs to rethink both product development and marketing.

Pizza brands have long centred their messaging on shared experiences such as family gatherings, celebrations, and group meals. But Rajoo said operators must also compete for smaller, everyday eating moments.

“Historically, pizza has always been about sharing,” she said. “Now we also need to show up for quick lunches, desk meals, and late-night snacks.”

The shift has influenced product development at Pizza Hut Singapore in recent years, including the relaunch of My Box in 2021 and the introduction of Melts in 2023.

This year, the chain is extending that strategy with Hut’s Sliders, a smaller-format pizza designed for portability and solo consumption.

The rise of solo dining also has implications for pricing and portion sizes. Rajoo said Hut’s Sliders were designed to fit quick, on-the-go meals whilst remaining affordable.

The product works as a standalone meal or as an add-on, with one-handed portability for consumers eating on the move.

Amongst Millennials and Gen Z, solo dining is less about isolation than autonomy, Rajoo said.

Despite eating alone more often, consumers still engage with food socially through digital channels.

“People may eat alone, but they’ll still post about it, review it, and recommend it,” she said. “The meal may be solo, but the experience is still social.”

Despite the push toward solo formats, shared dining remains culturally significant across Asia, with group meals continuing to anchor celebrations and family occasions.

“Solo consumption will increasingly form the everyday baseline,” Rajoo said. “Shared meals will remain culturally important—they'll just happen less frequently and be more intentional.”

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