CHICAGO, May 4, 2026, 07:02 CDT
McDonald’s will put six specialty drinks on U.S. menus on Wednesday, making a permanent national bet that fruit refreshers, cold foam sodas and boba can bring customers in when they are not buying burgers and fries. Alyssa Buetikofer, chief marketing and customer experience officer for McDonald’s USA, said the chain wants beverages to become “the reason” customers visit. McDonald’s Corporation
The push matters now because McDonald’s is trying to turn drinks into a stand-alone traffic driver after tests across more than 500 U.S. restaurants. Jill McDonald, the company’s global chief restaurant experience officer, said the tests “drove incremental occasions” and higher average checks, while BTIG analyst Peter Saleh said equipment investments by franchisees could help lift comparable sales in the mid-single digits if the rollout scales well. Restaurant Dive
Drinks have become a sharper fight across quick-service restaurants as consumers look for smaller, lower-ticket treats and operators look for products with better margin potential. Retail analyst Bruce Winder told Axios that higher-margin drinks can be discounted to drive visits and pull through food purchases, a plain but important point for chains facing pressure on beef, labor and store costs.
The McDonald’s lineup includes three Refreshers — Strawberry Watermelon, Mango Pineapple and Blackberry Passion Fruit — and three crafted sodas: Sprite Berry Blast, Orange Dream and Dirty Dr Pepper. The company is also pairing the drinks with six Susan Alexandra beaded drink carriers priced between $42 and $58, each with a $10 McDonald’s Arch Card, TheStreet reported.
The “dirty soda” format — soda mixed with syrups, cream or other toppings — has moved from niche shops into larger restaurant chains. Technomic called dirty soda the fastest-growing search term on its menu-tracking platform over the past year, up more than 636%, while Yelp data cited by Fortune showed searches for “dirty soda” jumped 1,289%. Fortune
McDonald’s is also refreshing the McCafé brand around the launch. Paloma Azulay, vice president of global brand marketing, said the redesign was meant to make customers feel the “joy” tied to the new drinks; Nation’s Restaurant News reported that Canada, Germany, Australia and other markets are expected to roll out new beverages later this spring and summer. Nation’s Restaurant News
The competitive set is no longer just burger chains. McDonald’s is moving into territory where Starbucks and Dutch Bros have trained customers to make drinks a separate trip, while Yum Brands’ Taco Bell has been expanding its Live Mas Café beverage concept inside U.S. stores.
There is a hitch: store execution. Cold foam, boba and freeze-dried fruit add more steps than a standard fountain drink, and an early Sporked review of the Refreshers praised the Strawberry Watermelon flavor but flagged uneven fruit-piece sizing and lid issues. That is small, but small things matter when pushed through thousands of restaurants.
The larger risk is that McDonald’s has been here, in a different form. Reuters reported last year that the company would close its standalone CosMc’s beverage stores while testing some CosMc’s-inspired drinks in regular McDonald’s locations; restaurant consultant John Gordon said McDonald’s had historically been “very quiet” in beverages compared with chains using more complex, higher-margin drinks. Reuters
McDonald’s enters the launch with stronger recent sales. The company said fourth-quarter global comparable sales rose 5.7%, with U.S. comparable sales up 6.8%, and full-year systemwide sales above $139 billion. Before regular U.S. trading opened Monday, market data put McDonald’s shares at $286.64, down $6.96 from the prior close.
The test now is less about whether a Dirty Dr Pepper gets attention. It is whether McDonald’s can make a drink run routine — fast enough for franchisees, cheap enough for customers and distinct enough to pull visits away from coffee chains and smaller beverage specialists.