Betty Rae’s opening OP ice cream shop in May, deepening Johnson County scoop-print
March 6, 2025 | Joyce Smith
Local favorite Betty Rae’s Ice Cream is expanding in Johnson County — taking a coveted corner spot in the Shoppes at Deer Creek Woods in sprawling Overland Park.
A May opening is scheduled at 6936 W. 135th. St. It will be the sixth Betty Rae’s for the metro. (Hen House Market is an anchor tenant in the center, just east of Metcalf Avenue.)
“When I bought the company two years ago, my intent was really to bring Betty Rae’s to more people in Kansas City,” owner Matt Shatto told Startland News. “We’ve looked at areas where we’re missing out — and where customers are missing out. Southern Johnson County is one of those places. We’re extremely excited to come to a new population, and hopefully they’ll embrace us, like we’re going to embrace them.”
Betty Rae’s Ice Cream serves 26 handmade premium ice cream flavors — from such classics as vanilla bean and chocolate to monthly specials like matcha, Bee’s Knees, and Nutty Professor. It also is known for its collaborations with other high-profile local businesses, incorporating popular ingredients like McLain’s Cinnamon Rolls (McLain’s Bakery) and Joe’s KC BBQ & Burnt Ends (Joe’s Kansas City Bar-B-Que).
The company was founded in 2016. Shatto purchased it in May 2023 and rapidly added three locations.
Now Betty Rae’s has shops in Merriam, Olathe, Prairie Village, the River Market and Waldo, as well as an ice cream truck.
Its ice cream also is carried in 28 Cosentino family-owned Price Chopper, SunFresh, and Cosentino’s Market grocery stores, as well as many Hy-Vees.

Matt Shatto at the Betty Rae’s Ice Cream location in River Market; photo by Taylor Wilmore, Startland News
Shatto also is franchising Betty Rae’s.
One location opened in Omaha in September and the franchisee is opening another soon.
In late February, Shatto announced seven cities in the region for his franchise footprint: St. Louis, Missouri; Wichita, Kansas; Bentonville, Arkansas; Nashville, Tennessee; Denver, Colorado; and Oklahoma City and Tulsa in Oklahoma.
ICYMI: Why keep Betty Rae’s from the world? KC ice cream shop franchising brand across region
“We wanted to get it to more people in Kansas City. But we didn’t want to limit [the brand] to people in Kansas City,” Shatto said of taking Betty Rae’s regional, then national.
The company is eying franchise partners who will open two to five shops in each market.
Startland News contributor Joyce Smith covered local restaurants and retail for nearly 40 years with The Kansas City Star. Click here to follow her on Bluesky, here for X (formerly Twitter), here for Facebook, here for Instagram, and by following #joyceinkc on Threads.

2025 Startups to Watch
stats here
Related Posts on Startland News
One Kansas City startup survives national Kauffman contest
After about a month of public deliberation, the 1 in a Million pitch competition has narrowed participating startups down to a top five — and one hails from Kansas City. Although five area companies advanced to the top 40, The Grooming Project is last startup standing from Kansas City. A panel of Kauffman fellows will…
Not in Kansas anymore: Mycroft opens Kansas City, Silicon Valley offices
Editor’s note: This content is sponsored by LaunchKC but independently produced by Startland News. After a recent seed round that was topped off with a $50,000 LaunchKC grant, artificial intelligence startup Mycroft is moving from Lawrence to the City of Fountains. Mycroft — which developed an open-source, artificial intelligence device similar to Amazon Echo — not…
AOL founder Steve Case says innovators must become policy savvy
Get familiar with public policy or your company will get left behind. That was the forward-looking message that AOL founder Steve Case had for a group of about 200 investors and entrepreneurs at the 2016 Kauffman Fellows summit in Kansas City. Now the CEO of Revolution, Case argued that investors, entrepreneurs and policymakers will have…
Venture capitalist Keith Harrington opens up on KC investment culture
For most of the 200 Kauffman Fellows attending the Reunion VC Summit, it is their first time visiting Kansas City. To help them get a taste of the metro’s entrepreneurial ecosystem, Keith Harrington, Kauffman fellow and partner at Kansas City-based Fulcrum Global Capital, presented some cultural highlights at the summit Tuesday. Like many Midwestern cities,…

