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Fans mourn closure of cupcake vending
machine company Sprinkles Cupcakes
[January 03, 2026]
NEW YORK (AP) — Sprinkles Cupcakes, a company famous for selling
sweet treats in vending machines known as “cupcake ATMs,” has shut down
after 20 years of operation around the United States, according to its
former owner. |

A newly-installed 24-Hour Cupcake "ATM," that will be continuously
restocked to dispense fresh cupcakes, is seen right as patrons enter
Sprinkles Cupcakes in Beverly Hills, Calif., March 5, 2012. (AP
Photo/Damian Dovarganes, File) |
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“Even though I sold the company over a decade ago, I still have
such a personal connection to it, and this isn’t how I thought
the story would go,” said Candace Nelson, who started the
company after she lost her job in 2005. The closure was
announced Dec. 30.
Nelson started Sprinkles Cupcakes in her own kitchen, and the
first location was in a small Beverly Hills storefront that had
previously been a sandwich shop. The brand would go on to ascend
to national fame, and fans took to social media following the
company's announcement to lament the closure.
The company's cupcake-dispensing machines in malls and airports
briefly went viral on TikTok for the not-so-subtle “I love
Sprinkles” jingle that played repeatedly while a mechanical arm
delivered the dessert.
The company no longer has any products for sale on its website,
which also has removed all operational locations across the
country.
Nelson sold her business to private equity firm KarpReilly LLC
in 2012 after the company had expanded to 10 locations across
the country. The firm owns dozens of other companies for
products including a health food home delivery service, kombucha
and protein wellness shakes.
KarpReilly did not respond to an emailed request for comment
Friday evening. Neither the firm nor Nelson provided a reason
for the cupcake company's closure.
Private equity has dramatically expanded its influence in
restaurants over the last decade, investing $94.5 billion
between 2014 and 2024, according to data from capital market
company PitchBook.
Some outraged Sprinkles Cupcakes fans said on social media that
the closures were part of a larger trend where private equity
firms purchase restaurants and retail brands — like Red Lobster
or TGI Fridays — that later file for bankruptcy or close
altogether.
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