McDonald's is Dead Last in Fast-Food Customer Satisfaction Survey

This version of Mcdonalds Dead Last Fast Food Customer Satisfaction Survey N132991 - Business and Economy | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.

With the economy improving, Americans are eating out more and choosing quality over cheaper fast-food chains like McDonald's and Taco Bell.
McDonald's placed bottom on a survey of customer satisfaction at restaurant chains.
McDonald's placed bottom on a survey of customer satisfaction at restaurant chains.Andrew Burton / Getty Images

McDonald's just doesn't do it for some people, now the recession is over.

With Americans eating out more, quality is becoming more important than price, according to the American Customer Satisfaction Index released on Tuesday. ACSI analysts believe this trend is the result of improving economic conditions.

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"In a weaker economy, consumers respond to price, but as the economy improves, quality becomes more important to restaurant customers," ACSI chairman and founder Claes Fornell said. "This is good news for smaller chains and individual restaurants, which customers associate with higher quality food and better service."

And customer satisfaction is lowest at the big-name fast-food chains, like McDonald's and Taco Bell.

McDonald's placed bottom on a survey of customer satisfaction at restaurant chains.
McDonald's placed bottom on a survey of customer satisfaction at restaurant chains.Keith Srakocic / AP

Subway, which had held the top spot in the fast-food category for a number of years, dropped 6 percent in the satisfaction survey to get an ACSI rating of 78, which ties Wendy's.

Burger King and Starbucks tied at 76, but the coffee giant dropped 5 percent from last year. Dunkin' Donuts dropped 6 percent to 75, while KFC had the biggest decline in customer satisfaction, down 9 percent to 74. At the bottom of the list? Taco Bell at 72 and McDonald's 71, both were down 3 percent.

The survey showed the average American went to a fast-food chain or restaurant four times per week last year, a 60 percent increase since the end of the Great Recession.

Full-service restaurants are doing a better job of making us happy—up 1.2 percent to an ACSI score of 82 - which puts them slightly ahead of fast food chains (80). They do a great job of getting the orders right and providing high quality food and drinks. They've even improved the speed of getting food on the table significantly from last year.

The survey shows that we are even more satisfied when we go to restaurants that are part of a smaller chain, such as Panera and Chipotle. The score for these restaurants jumped 2 percent to 84.

At the same time, satisfaction with the five largest full-service brands dropped. Top-rated Outback Steakhouse (down 1 percent) and Olive Garden (down 4 percent) had an ACSI score of 80. Red Lobster (down 6 percent) and Applebee's (down 5 percent) both rated a 78, while Chili's (down 5 percent) scored a 74.

Four large pizza companies topped the list of the major fast-food chains in this survey: Papa John's (unchanged) and Pizza Hut (up 3 percent) tied at 82, Little Caesar (down 2 percent) and Dominos (down 1 percent) both scored 80. They outranked every other large fast-food chain in the country.

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