Soho House & Co. signed a definitive merger agreement to go private in a $2.7 billion transaction led by founder Ron Burkle's investment vehicle and a consortium that includes actor and tech investor Ashton Kutcher, who will join the board. The deal values shares at $9.00 each, representing a 31% premium to the thirty-day volume-weighted average price prior to announcement. The company expects transaction close in Q2 2025, subject to shareholder and regulatory approval.
The London-founded members club operator went public via SPAC in July 2021 at an implied enterprise value of $2.8 billion, listing on the New York Stock Exchange. The stock traded below its $10 debut price for most of the past seventeen months, reflecting broader SPAC malaise and investor skepticism around profitability timelines for asset-heavy hospitality platforms. Soho House operates 43 properties across 17 countries, with 223,000 members paying annual fees between $2,500 and $4,500 depending on location and access tier. The company reported $1.1 billion in revenue for the trailing twelve months ending September 2024, but has not yet reached adjusted EBITDA breakeven as it completes a $500 million capex cycle begun in 2022.
The privatization allows Soho House to exit quarterly earnings scrutiny while completing its ongoing expansion into secondary luxury markets—Miami Beach, Nashville, São Paulo—where real estate acquisition and buildout timelines conflict with public-market patience. Burkle's consortium includes hospitality-adjacent family offices that have quietly accumulated distressed luxury hotel assets since 2023, positioning the group to consolidate club-concept platforms ahead of expected private-credit refinancing windows in late 2025. Kutcher's board appointment signals an operational tilt toward integrated wellness programming and digital membership tools; his venture fund has backed hospitality-tech infrastructure providers including AllVoices and Looped, both focused on retention analytics for subscription-based lifestyle brands. The deal structure suggests the consortium expects to harvest value through a re-IPO or trade sale in 2028-2029, once the current property portfolio reaches stabilized occupancy and the company can demonstrate unit-level cash flow without headquarter drag.
The transaction also removes public disclosure requirements around membership churn, a metric private-equity operators in the wellness-hospitality vertical treat as proprietary alpha. Soho House has not published granular retention data since its S-1 filing, but industry participants estimate annualized churn between 12% and 18%, materially higher than the 6-8% range achieved by invitation-only competitors like The Battery and Zero Bond. The consortium's ability to restructure membership tiers, experiment with dynamic pricing, and selectively close underperforming locations without investor backlash represents the primary operational flexibility gained through delisting. Burkle's track record includes similar take-privates of Morgans Hotel Group and Fred Segal, both of which he repositioned through brand contraction before sale to larger hospitality groups.
Operators should monitor three developments through mid-2025: whether the consortium refinances Soho House's existing $650 million credit facility ahead of its November 2025 maturity, which debt markets will interpret as confidence in near-term cash generation; any announced closures or conversions of the company's eight lowest-revenue properties, likely candidates being Austin, Mumbai, and Berlin; and Kutcher's first board-level initiatives, expected to surface in member communications by Q3 2025 and likely involving app-based booking tools or tiered wellness add-ons priced between $200 and $800 monthly.
The deal closes the public chapter for a brand that spent two decades as the reference case for members-only hospitality scaling, now becoming the reference case for how quickly that thesis can revert to private hands when unit economics lag narrative.