Thomas Foods International USA buys Tyson Foods plant in Northwest Jacksonville

It matches Project Pan, the company that received city incentives to restart the facility.


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  • | 5:14 p.m. September 22, 2025
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Thomas Foods International USA bought the closed Tyson Foods Inc. plant at 5441 W. Fifth St. in Northwest Jacksonville on Sept. 17 for $3.55 million.
Thomas Foods International USA bought the closed Tyson Foods Inc. plant at 5441 W. Fifth St. in Northwest Jacksonville on Sept. 17 for $3.55 million.
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Thomas Foods International USA bought the former Tyson Foods Inc. plant in Northwest Jacksonville on Sept. 17 for $3.55 million and matches the city description of a code-named company seeking to restart it.

Thomas Foods International is an Australian meat processing and exporting company. It specializes in beef, lamb and goat products. It also sells seafood.

Thomas Foods says it processes and distributes more than 100 million pounds of meat products a year in the U.S. from its Lakeside Processing Facility in Swedesboro, New Jersey. 

It makes prepackaged, retail-ready meat products for retail stores that “arrive prepared for immediate display in your meat case.”

Its U.S. headquarters is in Cherry Hill, New Jersey. Founded in 1988 by Chris Thomas, the company is now led by his son, Darren.

The company says it has teams in Australia, the U.S., China, Japan and Europe.

The closed Tyson Foods Inc. plant in Northwest Jacksonville at 5441 W. Fifth St.
Colliers

Project Pan

Thomas Foods matches the company code-named Project Pan that was approved for $800,000 in city incentives Aug. 26 by the Jacksonville City Council to establish a meat-processing operation.

Resolution 2025-0607 and supporting city documents identify Project Pan as an international meat processor interested in investing $28 million into a vacant facility. Based on an independent comparison, the facility as described in city documents matches the vacant former Tyson Foods Inc. plant at 5441 W. Fifth St.

Bruss Co. of Springdale, Arkansas, sold the plant to Thomas, which bought it through TFI USA Properties LLC. 

Bruss Co. bought the plant in 2012 for $1.5 million.

The warehouse was built in 1974 on 4.29 acres. In return for the public funding, the company would build-out the 50,000-square-foot facility, where it would create up to 100 new jobs within the first three years of operations.

Those jobs would pay an annual wage of $59,211 plus a benefits package equal to about $16,000 per employee, a staff report on the legislation states. According to an amendment added to the legislation, the REV grant would be terminated if the company does not create 10 jobs by 2029.

According to the OED report, the facility would produce 1 million pounds of finished product weekly. 

Ed Randolph, the city’s executive director of economic development, said Project Pan would bring in meat products from overseas and would be a heavy port user. He said Jacksonville was competing for the plant with Savannah, Georgia, which also provides port access. 

Tyson closed in 2024

Tyson Foods Inc. notified the state and Mayor Donna Deegan in November 2023 that it was closing its Jacksonville plant effective Jan. 8, 2024, cutting 219 jobs.

 

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