The Phenomenal Rise of Crispy King: How a Local Brand Took Over the Fried Chicken Throne

In an era where big names dominate the food scene and global fast-food chains enjoy decades of head start, one unlikely challenger is rewriting the playbook . Crispy King. What started as a small venture from a self-made entrepreneur with no college degree is now a national phenomenon. From just 100 branches in 2021 to more than 1,000 branches in 2025, Crispy King has done more than just grow, it has conquered.

And astonishingly, it’s still warming up.

The Man Behind the Crown

Behind Crispy King is Eric Joseph Quitalig Tolo, a name quickly rising in the Philippine business scene, though still under the radar of mainstream media. No fancy MBAs or high-profile backers — just grit, diskarte, and an uncanny ability to read the market.

Eric began with a humble bakeshop in Cebu and after growing it to four branches, he returned to his roots in Ormoc, where he would plant the seeds of an empire. Alongside Dayka Bakeshop, he also built Estong Lechon Manok , but it is Crispy King that would become his crown jewel.

A Fried Chicken Frenzy

What makes Crispy King’s growth so shocking is not just the speed — but the demand. Even in towns with five or six branches, long queues snake around its humble counters during peak hours. In cities like Dumaguete, fans joke that “for every four steps you take, there’s a Crispy King,” while one follower on Facebook from Surigao quipped, “It’s not China that’s taking over our territory — it’s Crispy King.”

No PR agency engineered this. No flashy ad campaign launched it. The growth was, and still is, organic, driven by the most powerful force in marketing: word of mouth.

How Did They Expand So Fast?

The numbers are mind-bending:

  • 2021: 100 branches
  • 2023: 220 branches
  • 2025: Over 1,000 outlets and counting

In a country where permits, supply chains, and logistics can be a headache, how did this explosion even happen?

Here’s what insiders and observers believe are key:

1. Franchise Model That Works for the Masses

Crispy King’s franchise model is lean, affordable, and designed for aspiring entrepreneurs in provincial towns. The setup cost is lower than most mainstream food chains, allowing sari-sari store owners, OFW returnees, and local investors to grab a piece of the action.

2. Simplicity Is Their Secret

No fancy menus, no massive store layouts. Just a focus on what Filipinos love — crispy, flavorful fried chicken with rice at an affordable price. This allows faster setup, easier replication, and a consistent product experience.

3. Mass Appeal, Filipino Style

Crispy King’s flavor hits home. It’s reminiscent of lutong-bahay fried chicken, but with the crunch and seasoning that rivals any fast-food giant. The affordability is key: a meal at Crispy King won’t hurt your wallet but will satisfy your craving.

4. Real-Time Improvement

Unlike many startups that wait for perfection, Crispy King keeps evolving on the ground. Slowly but surely, better packaging, upgraded store designs, and new product lines are being introduced. Instead of launching everything at once, they’re refining as they go, a sign they’re in it for the long haul.

Flying Under the Radar

Perhaps the most surprising thing about Crispy King is how little is written about them. Apart from a rare video interview with Korina Sanchez, there is no well-oiled PR team. No press releases, no glossy media coverage. Yet, the brand is winning ground branch by branch, town by town.

And that’s what makes the rise even more impressive — it’s unmanufactured. The buzz comes from long lines, full rice meals, and satisfied customers.

The Impact: Is the Joyful Bee Still Sleeping Well?

Make no mistake . Crispy King is not just some flash-in-the-pan trend. The consistency in quality, speed of expansion, and unrelenting demand suggest something deeper: a real disruption in the local fast-food industry.

Even the country’s most beloved brands — including the once untouchable “joyful bee” — must be taking notice. When a challenger can open multiple branches in one town and still have customers lining up, it’s no longer an anomaly. It’s a market shift.

What’s the Real Secret?

According to Eric himself, Sipag at tiyaga are not enough. You need to have diskarte as well.

That word — diskarte — is hard to translate but deeply understood by every Filipino hustler. It’s resourcefulness. Street smarts. The instinct to navigate challenges and spot opportunities others miss.

It’s also what has brought a man with no college degree from a bakery in Cebu to a fried chicken empire in Ormoc, with 1,000+ branches across the nation — and growing daily.

A Kingdom Still Rising

Crispy King isn’t just building a brand — it’s building a movement. It speaks to every Filipino dreamer who’s ever wanted to start something of their own. It proves that you don’t need an Ivy League diploma or billions in capital to win in business. Sometimes, all you need is a killer recipe, a clear vision, relentless execution — and a whole lot of diskarte.

One thing’s certain: The chicken wars are far from over.

And Crispy King?
They’re just getting started.

Leave a comment