Independent restaurants across the U.S. continue to face high costs, uneven consumer spending and financing pressure in 2026. In Florida this month, that pressure is showing up in three locally significant closures in Orlando, Coral Springs and St. Petersburg.
Three confirmed closures across Orlando, Coral Springs and St. Petersburg
Three Florida restaurants are confirmed to be closing or already closed this month: Better Than Sex in Orlando, La Fontana Pizzeria and Italian Restaurant in Coral Springs, and Red Mesa Cantina in downtown St. Petersburg. The Orlando dessert restaurant served its last customers on June 14 after 10 years, according to the business’s public announcement reported by FOX 35 Orlando.
La Fontana’s owners announced that the family-run restaurant at The Walk on University Drive will close on June 21, 2026, which is Father’s Day, ending an 18-year run in Coral Springs, according to Coral Springs News and Coral Springs Talk. The reports said owners Spartaco and Antonio Tare thanked customers and described the restaurant as more than a business to their family.
Red Mesa Cantina closed more abruptly. The downtown St. Petersburg restaurant at 128 3rd Street S. announced its immediate closure on June 2, one day after parent company Veytia Ventures LLC filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the Middle District of Florida, according to Creative Loafing Tampa and bankruptcy case records.
Together, the three closures represent three different timelines: one immediate shutdown, one restaurant with a final service date already completed, and one restaurant giving diners a last weekend to return. What is verified is the count, the cities and the closing dates. No broader statewide master list of June restaurant closures has been released by any state agency.
What the closings mean in each Florida community
In Orlando, the closing affects Ivanhoe Village, where Better Than Sex operated at 1905 N. Orange Avenue. FOX 35 Orlando reported the adults-only dessert restaurant opened in January 2016 and said its Orlando location would close while other locations, including Key West, Savannah, Plano and Greenville, continue operating.
In Coral Springs, the confirmed impact is limited to La Fontana’s single location at The Walk. Local coverage identified it as a neighborhood staple for wood-fired pizza and Italian meals, but no additional South Florida locations were tied to the closure because the restaurant was independently owned.
In St. Petersburg, the impact is broader because the closure also affected Red Mesa Event Spaces above the cantina. Creative Loafing Tampa reported the shutdown was effective immediately, and later reporting cited couples with future bookings seeking refunds or transfers while the bankruptcy case moved forward.
What is not fully known is whether any additional related Florida hospitality operations will be affected beyond the cantina event business. Reporting indicates the original Red Mesa Restaurant on 4th Street North and Red Mesa Mercado locations remain open, but no public filing reviewed here says those other restaurants are closing.
Why these restaurants are closing and what customers should expect
The reasons differ by restaurant. Better Than Sex publicly described its Orlando closure as a difficult decision but, in the reporting available, did not release a detailed financial explanation for shutting that location while keeping others open. That means the closure is confirmed, but the company has not publicly provided a fuller cause beyond its farewell statement.
La Fontana’s closure appears tied primarily to the owners’ personal decision to leave after a long run. Coral Springs coverage said the Tare brothers, originally from Ferrara, Italy, plan to return to Europe after navigating years that included the pandemic, a recession and a family loss.
For Red Mesa Cantina, the explanation is more directly documented. In a statement cited by local television and other outlets, the owners attributed the shutdown to economic and market conditions that made restaurants and events harder for customers to prioritize, and the bankruptcy filing listed liabilities between $1,000,001 and $10 million. Separately, the U.S. Department of Labor said in March 2023 that Red Mesa Restaurant and Red Mesa Cantina violated the Fair Labor Standards Act, resulting in $190,730 in back wages and damages for 89 workers.
For customers, the practical picture is now clear. Orlando and St. Petersburg diners can no longer return to those specific restaurants, while Coral Springs customers had until June 21 for one final visit. In St. Petersburg, event clients are still tied to court-supervised refund or transfer procedures, according to bankruptcy filings, leaving the clearest next step in that case inside the legal process rather than the dining room.
