Should I open or buy a CAVA franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
You almost certainly cannot — CAVA does not sell traditional franchises in 2027, so the real question is whether to chase the rare licensed-operator path, buy into an adjacent Mediterranean fast-casual franchise, or build an independent concept. CAVA Group operates and owns nearly all of its ~400 locations corporately and has no active FDD offering single-unit franchises to the public.
The handful of "franchise-like" units are legacy Zoes Kitchen conversions and tightly controlled licensed deals. If you want comparable economics with an actual ownership path, the like-for-like franchised plays are The Simple Greek, Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh, Naf Naf Middle Eastern Grill, and Just Salad — with total investments of $300,000 to $1.2M, royalties of 5%-6%, and AUVs of $900K-$1.6M.
CAVA's own corporate AUV crossed $2.9M in 2025 with 25%+ restaurant-level margins, which is exactly why it keeps the upside in-house.
The Real Numbers
CAVA is the structural outlier of the Mediterranean fast-casual segment: it is a public company (NYSE: CAVA) that funds growth from its own balance sheet and IPO proceeds, not from franchise fees. There is no public 2026 FDD offering single-unit CAVA franchises, so the "cost to open a CAVA" question has two honest answers — the corporate build cost (which you cannot buy into) and the cost of the comparable franchised concepts you actually can.
What a corporate CAVA costs the company to build: roughly $1.1M to $1.6M per unit in buildout, equipment, and pre-opening, against a 2025 AUV of ~$2.9M and restaurant-level margins of 25%-26%. That is best-in-class unit economics, and it is the entire reason CAVA refuses to franchise — every franchised unit would hand 75% of that margin to an operator.
What the comparable franchised plays cost you (per their 2026 FDDs):
| Concept | Total Investment | Franchise Fee | Royalty | Ad Fee | Typical AUV |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CAVA (corporate, not for sale) | $1.1M-$1.6M build | N/A | N/A | N/A | ~$2.9M |
| The Simple Greek | $331,000-$687,000 | $37,500 | 6% | 2% | $900K-$1.2M |
| Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh | $408,000-$758,000 | $35,000 | 6% | 2% | $950K-$1.1M |
| Naf Naf Middle Eastern Grill | $709,000-$1,200,000 | $40,000 | 5% | 2% | $1.3M-$1.6M |
| Just Salad | $500,000-$1,100,000 | $35,000 | 6% | 2% | $1.2M-$1.5M |
Revenue reality: if you build a comparable Mediterranean unit at a $1.1M AUV with 6% royalty and 2% ad fee, your owner cash flow lands at 10%-15% of revenue, or $110,000-$165,000 per unit before debt service — assuming you run it as an owner-operator. CAVA's own $2.9M AUV is roughly 2.6x what the franchised alternatives produce, which is the gap you are paying for when you choose a sellable franchise over the unbuyable corporate model.
Who Wins With This Business
The winning operator profile in Mediterranean fast-casual is a hands-on, single-to-multi-unit owner-operator who can run a labor-heavy made-to-order line and hit 8%-12% food cost discipline.
- Capital required: $150,000-$300,000 liquid for a comparable franchised unit, plus $200,000-$500,000 in SBA-backed debt. CAVA-corporate is not accessible at any capital level.
- Time commitment: 50-60 hours per week for the first 18 months. Made-to-order bowls are labor-intensive at the line, and throughput discipline during the lunch rush is the single biggest driver of unit profit.
- Skills: operations over branding. The Mediterranean category sells itself on health positioning; what you control is speed of line, food cost, and labor scheduling.
- Geographic fit: dense daytime population, median HHI above $70,000, and strong lunch traffic — office corridors, university-adjacent strips, and affluent suburban lifestyle centers.
- Multi-unit ambition: the franchised alternatives reward operators who scale to 3-5 units, where commissary efficiency and management leverage push margins toward CAVA-like territory.
The typical operator who succeeds is 35-55, has prior multi-unit restaurant or hospitality experience, $250,000+ liquid, and treats the build as a 5-unit development plan rather than a single store.
Who Loses With This Business
Anyone who thinks they can "get a CAVA franchise" loses on day one — the offering does not exist. Beyond that, the common failure modes in the comparable category:
- The CAVA-mirage applicant. Prospects spend months chasing a CAVA development deal that corporate has no intention of selling, burning time and legal fees. CAVA's stated strategy is 100% company-owned growth.
- The single-unit underwriter. Operators who model one store at a $900K AUV with 6% royalty and full debt service often net under $80,000 — a thin return for the hours. The model rewards density, not single units.
- The food-cost-blind operator. Mediterranean bowls use proteins, dips, and premium toppings that push food cost to 30%-33% if portioning isn't controlled. A 3-point miss erases the entire owner margin.
- High-rent-market operators. In Manhattan, San Francisco, and Boston, occupancy can hit 12%-15% of sales, and combined with city minimum wages of $16-$20/hour, owner cash flow compresses to near zero.
- Operators expecting CAVA's brand pull. The franchised alternatives do not carry CAVA's marketing budget or public-company brand equity, so traffic must be earned locally.
2027 Market Conditions
Mediterranean is the fastest-growing fast-casual cuisine entering 2027, and CAVA is the category's public-market bellwether — which both validates the segment and explains why imitators struggle to match its economics.
- Demand: Mediterranean fast-casual category sales +18% YoY, the strongest of any cuisine segment per Technomic, driven by health positioning and the protein-bowl format.
- CAVA's own trajectory: ~400 units in 2025, with a public target of 1,000+ units by 2032, all company-owned. Same-store sales rose ~13% in 2025 with traffic-led (not price-led) growth.
- Regulatory: state and city minimum-wage increases in California, New York, and Washington push line-labor costs 3-5 points above Southeast operators for the franchised alternatives.
- Real estate: second-generation restaurant space is more available in 2027 as casual-dining closures free up inline and endcap locations, lowering buildout for new Mediterranean operators by 10%-15%.
- Supply chain: olive oil and tahini input costs rose 8%-12% in 2025 on Mediterranean-basin drought; chickpea and feta costs stabilized.
- Competitive: CAVA, Sweetgreen, and Chipotle dominate the bowl format, while Naf Naf, Garbanzo, The Simple Greek, and a wave of regional Med concepts compete for the franchised operator who wants in on the trend with actual ownership.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Day 1-15: Confirm the CAVA reality. Contact CAVA Group investor relations and franchise-development email; document in writing that no single-unit franchise FDD is offered. This kills the mirage and refocuses your capital.
- Day 16-30: Shortlist the real franchised plays. Request FDDs from The Simple Greek, Naf Naf, Garbanzo, and Just Salad. Read Items 5, 6, 7, and 19 on each.
- Day 31-45: Validate AUV with operators. Call 5+ current franchisees from each Item 20 list. Ask: "What is your real AUV, food cost, and owner take-home in Year 1, 2, and 3?"
- Day 46-60: Site-select for daytime density. Target median HHI above $70K and daytime population above 25,000 within a 1-mile radius. Mediterranean bowls live and die on lunch.
- Day 61-75: Secure financing. Mediterranean fast-casual underwrites at 25% equity, 1.3x DSCR, SBA 7(a). Lock quotes from 3 lenders.
- Day 76-85: FDD legal review. Budget $5,000-$8,000. Flag development-schedule penalties, territory rights, and renewal terms.
- Day 86-90: Decide single vs. Multi-unit. If your model only works at 3+ units, negotiate a development agreement, not a single-store deal.
Alternative Plays
If CAVA is off the table — which it is — these adjacent plays match the operator profile and offer real ownership:
- The Simple Greek — $331K-$687K, 6% royalty, $900K-$1.2M AUV. Closest single-unit Mediterranean entry point.
- Naf Naf Middle Eastern Grill — $709K-$1.2M, 5% royalty, $1.3M-$1.6M AUV. Highest AUV of the franchised Med set.
- Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh — $408K-$758K, 6% royalty. Mature franchisor with development support.
- Just Salad — $500K-$1.1M, 6% royalty, bowl/salad format with a strong urban-lunch positioning.
- Independent Mediterranean concept — $400K-$800K buildout, 15%-22% EBITDA, full equity, and a 4-6x EBITDA exit multiple in the 2027 fast-casual transaction market per Franchise Times.
FAQ
Can I actually buy a CAVA franchise in 2027?
No, not in the conventional sense. CAVA Group operates almost all of its ~400 locations as company-owned restaurants and does not publish a Franchise Disclosure Document offering single-unit franchises to the public. Its growth model is 100% corporate, funded by IPO proceeds and operating cash flow.
A small number of legacy licensed or Zoes-conversion arrangements exist, but they are not an open franchise program.
Why won't CAVA franchise when other restaurant brands do?
Because the unit economics are too good to give away. CAVA's 2025 AUV of ~$2.9M with 25%-26% restaurant-level margins generates roughly $725,000-$750,000 of unit-level profit. Franchising would hand most of that to operators in exchange for a 5%-6% royalty. As a public company, CAVA maximizes shareholder value by keeping that margin in-house and self-funding expansion.
What is the closest franchise to CAVA I can actually buy?
Naf Naf Middle Eastern Grill is the closest on AUV ($1.3M-$1.6M), and The Simple Greek is the closest on entry cost ($331K-$687K). Both offer made-to-order Mediterranean bowls, real franchise agreements, and operator ownership. Neither matches CAVA's brand equity or AUV, but both give you an actual path to own the asset and sell it later.
How much can I make owning a Mediterranean fast-casual franchise?
$110,000-$165,000 per unit in owner cash flow at a $1.1M AUV as an owner-operator, before debt service. Multi-unit operators running 3-5 stores with management leverage and commissary efficiency can push blended margins toward 18%-20%, which is where the real wealth in the category is built — not in a single store.
Is the Mediterranean fast-casual trend durable or a fad?
Durable. The category posted +18% sales growth in 2025 — the strongest of any cuisine segment — and the protein-bowl, health-forward format aligns with multi-year consumer shifts, not a seasonal trend. CAVA's public target of 1,000+ units by 2032 signals institutional confidence.
The risk is execution and density, not category demand.
Bottom Line
Stop trying to buy a CAVA franchise — it does not exist as a public offering, and corporate has every financial incentive to keep it that way. If you want CAVA-like economics with an actual ownership and exit path, Naf Naf (highest AUV), The Simple Greek (lowest entry), or an independent Mediterranean concept are the structurally correct plays.
Model the business as a 3-5 unit development plan, not a single store, because that is where the Mediterranean category's margin advantage compounds. If you can only make a single unit work on paper, the category's labor intensity will likely grind your return below a corporate salary — walk away.
Sources
- CAVA Group, Inc. (NYSE: CAVA) — 2025 Annual Report and Q4 2025 earnings (unit count, AUV, restaurant-level margin)
- The Simple Greek Franchise Disclosure Document (2026 filing) — Items 5, 6, 7, 19
- Naf Naf Middle Eastern Grill FDD summary (franchisedirect.com)
- Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh FDD summary (Items 7 and 19)
- Technomic — "Mediterranean Fast-Casual Category Growth 2025-2026"
- Restaurant Business Online — "CAVA's unit volumes and expansion strategy" (2025 reporting)
- QSR Magazine — "Why CAVA Doesn't Franchise" (2025)
- Franchise Times — fast-casual transaction multiples 2026-2027
- International Franchise Association (IFA) — 2027 Franchise Economic Outlook
- IBISWorld — Fast Casual Restaurants in the US, 2026 industry report
