Columbus’s lone York Steak House, the cafeteria-style throwback on West Broad that generations of locals still hit up for steaks and nostalgia, had a scare this week after state tax officials flagged the restaurant for unpaid sales taxes. While the paperwork drama played out behind the scenes, staff kept the line moving and owner Tim Burkhammer worked to calm nervous regulars. The flap has refocused attention on how old-school, independently run spots survive ownership changes and red tape.
Tax notice and owner response
According to The Columbus Dispatch, the Ohio Department of Taxation posted a notice saying the restaurant had unpaid sales taxes and a vendor-license action that could force it to shut down operations until the debt is resolved. Burkhammer told The Columbus Dispatch he “will do everything he can to keep the restaurant open.”
A last-of-its-kind diner
The Broad Street location at 4220 W. Broad St. is widely viewed as the country’s final York Steak House, and the restaurant’s own site lists that address and its trademark cafeteria setup. The property was sold to Burkhammer in July 2024, according to Columbus Business First, and he has leaned into nostalgia with menu nods such as Nancy’s chicken and noodles. Local food writers and fan sites have continued to treat the place as a living museum of Columbus dining history.
What unpaid taxes mean for buyers
In Ohio, buyers of existing businesses can end up responsible for prior tax liabilities if they do not secure the right clearances, and the state can pull vendor privileges until outstanding sales-tax debts are paid. Legal and business guidance for purchasing Ohio companies recommends getting a tax-clearance certificate or holding back part of the purchase price to guard against surprise bills. Those commercial-transaction rules spell out how a buyer and the Ohio Tax Commissioner can settle unpaid sales-tax obligations so a vendor license may be reinstated. In this case, that process will dictate how quickly York can move past the notice…