San Diego’s 30-Year-Old Synergy Restaurant Gift Cards Company Is Shutting Down, And Cardholders Are Being Given Barely Any Time to React

A San Diego–based gift card program that has operated for nearly three decades is coming to an abrupt end, leaving thousands of consumers scrambling to spend remaining balances with little warning.

Synergy Restaurant Gift Cards, a multi-restaurant gift card program founded in 1995 and long sold through retailers such as Costco, has announced it is winding down operations and preparing to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy. According to a notice recently circulated to cardholders, all Synergy Restaurant Gift Cards, both physical and digital, will cease to be redeemable after January 31, 2026, effectively giving customers days, not months, to use money they already paid for.

The national program is operated by Synergy World, Inc., a San Diego company headquartered in Miramar. The company is led by Larry Kantor, President of Synergy World, Inc., and Joel Kantor, who serves as CEO.

In a letter addressed to “Synergy Restaurant Gift Card Network Cardholders,” posted on the website's homepage, the company stated that its current business model “no longer provides viable margins” and cited ongoing financial losses. The notice confirms Synergy World is in the process of winding down and expects to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, a liquidation process that typically leaves unsecured creditors, including gift card holders, at the back of the line.

What’s striking is not that a gift card company failed, that happens, but how little notice consumers were given. Many customers only learned of the shutdown through social media posts, Reddit threads, or word of mouth. Some cardholders report having purchased Synergy cards as recently as December, unaware that the company was weeks away from collapse. Others say participating restaurants have already stopped accepting the cards, uncertain whether they’ll ever be reimbursed.

In short: consumers are being told to rush out and spend their balances immediately, while restaurants are being asked to honor gift cards tied to a company entering liquidation.

For years, Synergy’s pitch was convenience. The gift cards could be purchased in one market and redeemed at participating restaurants across multiple states, including California, Arizona, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, and Texas. At its peak, the program claimed participation from more than 400 restaurants, many of them small, locally owned businesses.

That flexibility made the cards popular holiday gifts, and also makes this shutdown especially disruptive. A card bought for future dinners, celebrations, or travel is now effectively expiring overnight. Online, frustration has been swift and blunt.

On Reddit’s Costco forum, users reported restaurants refusing cards, others racing to burn through balances, and widespread confusion about whether balances would be honored at all. One commenter summed it up succinctly: “I guess the synergies just weren’t there.”

Participating restaurants are also left exposed. With Synergy World moving toward Chapter 7 liquidation, there is no guarantee establishments will be reimbursed for honoring outstanding cards. Several restaurant owners have reportedly stopped accepting them entirely, a rational decision that nonetheless leaves consumers holding the bag.

This dynamic - consumers pressured to spend quickly, restaurants pressured to decide whether to accept risky payment - is the inevitable result of late disclosure.

Gift cards are effectively short-term loans from consumers to companies. The entire system relies on trust: trust that the value will be there when you’re ready to use it.

By providing only days of notice before rendering cards worthless, Synergy World has severely undercut that trust, not just in its own program, but in multi-restaurant gift cards more broadly. It’s a cautionary tale for consumers who assume gift cards are “safe” simply because they’re sold at big-box retailers or tied to familiar restaurants.

Compounding the problem is timing. The shutdown is unfolding during San Diego Restaurant Week, when many participating restaurants explicitly prohibit the use of gift cards, promotions, or third-party discounts because menus are already offered at reduced prix-fixe pricing. That means a significant number of Synergy-affiliated restaurants may be unavailable to cardholders precisely when they are being told to urgently spend their balances. In effect, customers are being rushed to use gift cards at the exact moment when many of the listed restaurants won’t honor them, a logistical nightmare that further limits already shrinking options.

Synergy World has directed customers to monitor its official Instagram page for updates, an unusual and insufficient channel given the stakes involved. Historically, balances could be checked at synergygiftcards.com, though access and functionality have reportedly been inconsistent in recent days.

At this point, cardholders should assume January 31, 2026 is a hard deadline, verify balances immediately, and confirm acceptance directly with restaurants before dining. Those who purchased cards recently may wish to contact their credit card issuers to inquire about possible chargebacks.

As for Synergy World, its 30-year run ends not with celebration or transparency, but with confusion, urgency, and a lot of unhappy customers wondering why they were given so little time to react.

Originally published on January 29, 2026.