Product Update

Is Earle's Still in Business? (2026 Update)

Is Earle's from Dragons’ Den still around in 2026? The deal it made, the dragons who invested, and where to buy Earle's today.

Dragons' Den IndexUpdated 13 April 20266 min read

As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Earle's pitched a food truck franchise model in the Den, offering entrepreneurs a route into the catering business through vans selling hot and cold food. Founder Michael Lea walked away with an on-air offer from Peter Jones. The record we could verify, however, points the other way from what our index initially flagged: Earle's Direct appears to have ceased trading some years ago.

The Short Answer

Based on the evidence we could find, Earle's Direct is no longer in business. UK company records for the business show it as dissolved, with the last set of accounts filed around 2011, only a couple of years after the Dragons' Den appearance. We could not locate a current website, franchise listing, or active trading presence for the company.

We want to be upfront that this differs from what our own records initially carried for this pitch. Our data flagged the company as still selling, but the strongest evidence we turned up in researching this page, dissolution records and the disappearance of its franchise listings, points to the business having closed. We are following that evidence rather than the earlier assumption, and we have flagged it internally for review.

The Pitch

Michael Lea brought Earle's into the Den in series 7, episode 8, pitching a food truck franchise concept: vans branded under the Earle's name, selling a mix of hot and cold food, with the franchise model meaning individual operators bought into the brand and business system rather than building a food truck business from scratch.

He asked for £100,000 in exchange for 35 percent of the company, a substantial equity stake reflecting the capital-intensive nature of scaling a fleet of franchised food vans.

The Deal That Fell Apart

Peter Jones offered Lea the £100,000 he was asking for, and the pitch was accepted on camera, the moment that put Earle's into our index as a completed deal. But the story did not end there. According to subsequent reporting, Jones and Lea called the deal off after filming, with Jones walking away from the arrangement before it closed.

Food franchise businesses are unusually vulnerable to a stalled deal like this, because the whole model depends on capital to recruit and support franchisees. Losing the promised investment at exactly the moment a company is trying to scale a franchise network can be close to fatal, and the timeline here fits that pattern: the last filed accounts came not long after.

What the Records Show

Companies House filings for the Earle's Direct franchise business show it moved to dissolved status, with financial filings stopping around 2011. That is a strong, verifiable signal, far stronger than a missing website or an old franchise page, and it is the kind of evidence we prioritise on this site over assumption.

We could not find a live franchise recruitment page, an active van fleet, or any recent press coverage suggesting the brand continued operating under the Earle's name in any meaningful way after that period.

A Pattern Worth Naming

Earle's is a useful illustration of why an on-air handshake in the Den is not the same thing as a funded business. The deal collapsing after filming is common enough on its own, but it is particularly damaging for a franchise model, where the parent company's promise of ongoing support and investment is part of what franchisees are actually buying into when they sign up.

When that promised capital does not materialise, a franchise brand can find itself unable to properly support the operators who already joined, which tends to accelerate a wind-down rather than simply slow growth. The short window between the pitch and the last filed accounts fits that pattern closely, even though we cannot say with certainty that the collapsed deal was the sole cause.

The Honest Verdict

This is one of the harder outcomes to report, because a food franchise closing means real financial loss for the franchisees who bought in, not just the original founder. We have no indication of what happened to individual van operators once the parent brand wound down, and we would rather say that plainly than guess.

If you are researching Earle's because you are considering an old franchise listing you found online, treat it as stale. The strongest evidence available says this business is no longer trading, whatever our records may have said previously.

Earle's

Where to buy Earle's

Still selling as of 13 April 2026. Check today's price and availability.

Check price on Amazon

Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

See the full Earle's deal breakdown and term sheet →

More from Food & Drink