Beyond Meat, the company behind popular plant-based meat substitutes like Beyond Burger and Beyond Beef, is on the brink of Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Reports on August 10 confirmed the move, with bankruptcy experts citing steep revenue declines, mounting debt, and waning consumer interest as key factors.
Why Beyond Meat Is Filing for Bankruptcy
According to the law office of John T. Orcutt, Beyond Meat’s revenue has been falling steadily amid a slowdown in the plant-based meat market. The company’s second-quarter revenue dropped by 20%, totaling around $75 million compared to the expected $82 million.
Sales in the refrigerated plant-based meat category fell 17.2%, while frozen alternatives declined 8.1%. Compounding the problem, Beyond Meat carries $1.2 billion in debt but had just $117 million in cash as of mid-2025. Most of the debt comes from convertible bonds issued in 2021, which are now nearly impossible to convert because the stock price has crashed to less than 3% of its peak value.
The company has been negotiating with bondholders for debt restructuring, but so far, no deal has materialized.
Beyond Meat is bankrupt.
Sales collapsed. Debt exploded.
But here’s the truth no one in the plant-based PR machine wants to admit:
It’s not real food.
🚫 Ultra-processed soy & pea protein isolates — stripped of natural nutrients.
🚫 Seed oils — inflammatory omega-6 overload.
🚫… pic.twitter.com/jNa5tR42YK— EZ_100 Life (@SciFit_) August 14, 2025
Why Beyond Meat Lost Its Edge
Industry analysts say Beyond Meat’s challenges go beyond financial missteps. Competition in the plant-based market has intensified, while consumer preferences have shifted away from processed meat alternatives toward whole-food options like beans, lentils, and tofu.
Additionally, skepticism from nutritionists and increased scrutiny of highly processed foods hurt Beyond Meat’s brand appeal. Even with reformulated products and attempts at new financing, the company couldn’t recover from declining demand and rising debt.
If Beyond Meat fails to secure restructuring, it could mark one of the biggest collapses in the plant-based food sector to date.