Five Danish entrepreneurs, including Jesper Buch, founded Just Eat in Denmark and launched the service in August 2001. The company started with 15 employees. In 2005 the technology entrepreneur Bo Bendtsen (co-founder) bought out all the founders and initial investors apart from Jesper Buch and moved the company to the UK. Buch moved to the UK as part of the buyout in 2006, and hired Welsh executive David Buttress to join as CEO and co-founder of Just Eat UK in March. The international expansion from the UK headquarters, starting with the Netherlands, launched in July 2007 and was followed by Ireland in April 2008. In January 2011, Just Eat established a joint venture in India. In February, the Group raised £30m (US$48m) from their Series B investment. The money was used to finance: • Four partnerships in new countries with local operators: Eat.ch in Switzerland in April, ClickEat in Italy in May, RestauranteWeb in Brazil in June and Alloresto in France in December; • Three acquisitions to solidify its presence in the UK (Urbanbite to get into the corporate market) and Canada (YummyWeb purchased in April to cover the region of Vancouver and GrubCanada in October for the Ontario and British Columbia markets). In April 2012, Just Eat acquired fillmybelly.com. A week later, Just Eat announced its £40 (US$64) million Series C funding round. The funds were partly used to launch the Don't Cook rebranding campaign in the UK and to acquire in October its main competitor in Spain, SinDelantal. Also in Spain, the company had previously acquired another delivery business,
La Nevera Roja, from the German company
Rocket Internet, taking over a large part of the market until the arrival of
Uber Eats. After nearly five years at the helm of Just Eat, the group CEO Klaus Nyengaard stepped down in February 2013 and was replaced in May by former UK MD David Buttress. On 3 April 2014, Just Eat floated on the London Stock Exchange. In July, Just Eat increased its stake in Alloresto to 80%. In September, Just Eat merged its Brazilian business, RestauranteWeb, with one of its competitors, iFood, to form the joint venture IF-JE in which Just Eat had a 25% stake. In February 2015, Just Eat sold to FoodPanda its investments in their Indian JV, and continued its expansion in the Americas by launching in Mexico, via a 100% acquisition of SinDelantal, and increased its stake in IF-JE, the Brazilian JV with iFood. In May 2015, Just Eat announced that it would buy
Menulog, an Australian food ordering company for
A$855 million, and would fund the deal by issuing new shares. In July 2015, Just Eat acquired Orderit.ca, a Canadian online food ordering company, further solidifying its presence in Canada. In August 2016, Just Eat sold its operations in the Netherlands and Belgium to its Dutch competitor
Takeaway.com for €22.5 million. Whereas Takeaway.com sold its UK operations to Just Eat also in 2016. In December 2016, Just Eat announced that it was acquiring
Hungryhouse from
Delivery Hero for £200m (with the possibility of a further £40m if the company hit performance targets), and Canada's
SkipTheDishes for
C$110m (£66m). On 12 October 2017, the
Competition and Markets Authority gave its preliminary approval for the deal. In February 2017, Buttress announced he would be leaving as CEO after four years, due to urgent family matters, continuing to be a non executive director. He later took up a role with
Newport, Wales-based
rugby union side
Dragons as their CEO. His departure was noted by industry commentators as a "significant loss" for the business, with Buttress having been "one of the UK's stand out entrepreneurs of the last decade". On 10 January 2020, 80.4% of Just Eat shareholders approved Takeaway.com's deal to acquire Just Eat plc. Although Just Eat plc became a subsidiary of Takeaway.com on 3 February 2020, the
Competition and Markets Authority ordered on 4 February 2020 that no integration should take place and that the brands should be kept separate until their investigation is completed. Just Eat plc was renamed to Just Eat Limited while the investigation took place. At the time of the merger Just Eat had 3,600 employees and 26.3 million customers in 2018. Takeaway.com won over a bid for Just Eat from
Prosus. Just Eat partnered with
McDonald's in January 2020 to deliver food in the United Kingdom, ending the monopoly which
Uber Eats had previously exercised in the country. On 22 April 2020, The UK's
Competition and Markets Authority announced it was unconditionally approving Just Eat's merger with
Takeaway.com, following an investigation.
Under Just Eat Takeaway.com On 2 March 2022, in a response to its announcement of losses, Just Eat Takeaway revealed plans to exit Portugal, Romania and Norway from 1 April 2022. On 5 May 2022, Just Eat Takeaway announced that Just Eat in the United Kingdom would be partnering with
Domino's Pizza. The two launched a trial in May where ten Domino's-owned stores in London would be placed on the platform. 106 Domino's franchise partner stores in the UK were expected to be on the platform by the end of May. Just Eat would be the only food delivery app in the United Kingdom to offer Domino's. In July 2022, the company announced 390 redundancies in France, after its market capital fell following the COVID-19 pandemic. In March 2023, Just Eat Takeaway announced 1,700 delivery driver redundancies in the UK, with drivers to work as
gig workers (freelancers) instead of being employed. In July 2024, Just Eat announced its intention to leave France. In August 2024, the Advertising Standards Authority upheld a complaint that Just Eat failed to use appropriate targeting to ensure an advertisement featuring products that were high in fat, sugar and salt was not directed at under 16s. In March 2026, The UK's
Competition and Markets Authority announced they were looking into whether the business had inflated the star ratings of some restaurants and grocers.
Ireland Just Eat Ireland launched in April 2008. In November 2014, Just Eat acquired 250 restaurants from Eatcity.ie. Just Eat Ireland recently commissioned economic consultants DKM to carry out research on the Irish restaurant industry and found that nearly €1.5bn was spent on takeaway/delivered food by Irish consumers in 2015. DKM said in 2016 that takeaway services accounted for 57% of restaurant sales, and that the sector was likely to grow by 17% in the next four years. In 2023, Just Eat reported that Irish consumers were spending approximately €2.2 billion annually on takeaway/delivered food, indicating a significant increase from the €1.5 billion spent in 2015.
North America Just Eat entered into the North American market in July 2009, bolstering its Canadian operations with the acquisition of YummyWeb (Vancouver) in April 2011, GrubCanada (Ontario) in October 2011 and OrderIt.ca in July 2015. In December 2016, Just Eat acquired
SkipTheDishes for an initial, C$110 million. A further cash amount of up to C$90 million may also be payable, subject to certain financial targets being met in 2018 and 2019. Just Eat's existing Canadian operations were subsequently folded into the SkipTheDishes brand. SkipTheDishes operates a food delivery service that allows customers to order from a variety of local and national chain restaurants using the SkipTheDishes website or mobile phone app. The service is widely available across most larger centres in every province in Canada. Skip was present in a limited number of American cities including
St. Louis, Omaha,
Buffalo,
Cleveland, Columbus, and
Cincinnati, but exited the US market in 2019. SkipTheDishes is headquartered in
Winnipeg,
Manitoba, Canada.
India Just Eat India was founded on 26 July 2006, as HungryBangalore, by Ritesh Dwivedy. In August 2008, HungryBangalore was renamed as HungryZone. HungryZone received a first round of funding raised from the Indian Angel Network. On 17 January 2011, HungryZone announced a partnership with Just Eat. Just Eat bought a 60% stake in HungryZone. Just Eat disposed of its shares in its India business in January 2015. ==Investment==