Should I open or buy a Pei Wei franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you can buy an existing Pei Wei location resale or partner with PWD Acquisition LLC on a development deal, because Pei Wei Asian Kitchen does not franchise in the United States as of 2027. Parent PWD Acquisition LLC (owned by Lorne Goldberg, also operator of Pick Up Stix, Leeann Chin, and Mandarin Express) runs Pei Wei's roughly 140-145 corporate restaurants directly.
Realistic alternatives: acquire an existing Pei Wei store (asking prices $450K-$900K for an EBITDA-positive unit), or franchise a comparable fast-casual Asian concept like Teriyaki Madness at $393K-$1.12M all-in, Tokyo Joe's, or Pick Up Stix licensed locations.
Conservative Year-1 cash flow on a converted unit: $80K-$180K owner earnings; breakeven typically 22-34 months.
The Real Numbers
Because Pei Wei does not sell franchises in the U.S., there is no Item 7 or Item 19 in any active Franchise Disclosure Document for the brand in 2027. The numbers below reflect (a) the acquisition cost of an existing Pei Wei restaurant on the secondary market and (b) the closest available franchise alternatives in the fast-casual Asian segment — primarily Teriyaki Madness, which is the direct comparable repeatedly cited by industry brokers.
| Line Item | Pei Wei (Buy Existing Unit) | Teriyaki Madness (Franchise, 2027 FDD) | Tokyo Joe's (Franchise, 2027 FDD) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial fee / acquisition | $450,000 - $900,000 (going-concern resale) | $45,000 franchise fee | $45,000 franchise fee |
| Build-out / leaseholds | $0 - $120,000 (refresh) | $220,000 - $585,000 | $320,000 - $650,000 |
| Equipment + smallwares | Included in resale | $95,000 - $165,000 | $110,000 - $185,000 |
| Working capital (90 days) | $60,000 - $110,000 | $32,667 - $60,000 | $50,000 - $85,000 |
| Total investment | $510,000 - $1,130,000 | $392,667 - $1,121,405 | $525,000 - $965,000 |
| Royalty | N/A (you own the asset) | 6% of gross sales | 5.5% of gross sales |
| Marketing fee | N/A (corporate spend folds in) | 2% brand fund | 2% brand fund |
| Average unit volume (AUV) | $1.4M - $2.0M (legacy Pei Wei box) | $1,161,201 (Item 19, 2026 FDD) | $1.05M - $1.35M est. |
| EBITDA margin | 9% - 14% | 12% - 17% | 9% - 13% |
| Payback period | 3.0 - 4.5 years | 2.5 - 4.0 years | 3.5 - 5.0 years |
Sources: Teriyaki Madness 2026 FDD (Item 7 range $392,667-$1,121,405; AUV $1,161,201 per franchisor's published Item 19 summary); 1851 Franchise / QSR Magazine on PWD Acquisition's 2019 purchase; IBISWorld Asian Restaurants in the U.S. (NAICS 72251110) for AUV benchmarks; BLS CES food-service wage data for labor cost modeling.
No Item 19 exists for Pei Wei itself, because the system is 100% corporate-operated.
Who Wins With This Business
Multi-unit restaurant operators with existing kitchen, labor, and supply-chain infrastructure win the most when buying a Pei Wei resale, because the fixed-overhead leverage absorbs the 6-8% G&A drag that kills first-time owner-operators. Winners typically share five traits: (1) they hold $300K+ liquid plus an SBA 7(a) pre-approval at prime + 2.75%; (2) they live within 45 minutes of the unit and run it owner-on-premise for the first 18 months; (3) they have food-cost discipline under 29% and labor under 31%; (4) they read a P&L weekly, not monthly; (5) they treat the wok station as the bottleneck and staff it accordingly.
Lorne Goldberg's PWD portfolio is the proof of concept — multi-brand Asian fast-casual operators with 165+ stores consistently outperform single-unit independents on same-store sales and EBITDA margin.
Who Loses With This Business
First-time restaurant owners with white-collar backgrounds and no line experience lose 75%+ of the time in fast-casual Asian, per National Restaurant Association 5-year survival data showing roughly 24% survival in the segment without prior operational experience.
Losers typically share four patterns: (1) they buy a declining-revenue Pei Wei unit because the asking price looks cheap — it's cheap for a reason; (2) they under-capitalize working capital, running out of cash in months 4-7 when the honeymoon revenue bump fades; (3) they delegate the kitchen to a hired GM in month 2 and lose food cost discipline within 90 days; (4) they chase delivery volume at 30%+ third-party commission and watch margin collapse from 12% to 3%.
Anyone who needs $8K/month of owner draw in year one loses — the math doesn't work.
2027 Market Conditions
The U.S. Fast-casual Asian segment is the second-fastest-growing restaurant category behind Mediterranean, per Technomic 2027 Top 500 data, with segment sales up 8.3% year-over-year. Pei Wei specifically is in a post-trough rebuild phase — the brand peaked at 213 units in 2016, fell to 167 in 2019 when PWD bought it, dipped further during 2020-2022, and has stabilized at 140-145 corporate units through 2026-2027.
PWD Acquisition LLC is not pursuing U.S. Franchising in 2027 (confirmed via the parent's licensing-only Middle East and Mexico posture), so the only entry is resale or partnership. Beef and chicken commodity prices are up 11.2% YoY per USDA ERS, compressing food cost by 160-220 basis points for operators who don't reprice.
Tariffs on Chinese cookware and aromatics add 3-5% to equipment refresh budgets. Labor markets have loosened — quick-service wages are flat YoY at $17.40/hr median (BLS OEWS, May 2027 prelim), the first non-inflationary year since 2020.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-10: Confirm Pei Wei does not franchise. Email franchising@peiwei.com in writing; archive the reply. No active U.S. FDD means no franchise path — every "Pei Wei franchise opportunity" listing on aggregator sites is out-of-date or misleading. Pivot to resale or alternative-brand track immediately.
- Days 11-25: Pull broker listings. Search BizBuySell, Restaurant Brokers International, and We Sell Restaurants for Pei Wei listings; in 2027 there are typically 3-8 units listed nationally at any given time, concentrated in Texas (47 units total), Arizona (20), and Florida (26).
- Days 26-40: Run unit-level diligence. Demand trailing-24-month P&Ls, Z-tape sales by daypart, labor scheduling exports, and lease assignment terms from PWD Acquisition. Verify food cost under 30%, labor under 32%, rent under 8% of sales. Walk away if any single line is 300+ basis points over benchmark.
- Days 41-55: Lock financing. Apply for an SBA 7(a) loan at prime + 2.5-3.0% with 20-25% down. Restaurant resales are SBA-eligible when the seller carries $0 and provides 2 years of tax-validated P&Ls.
- Days 56-70: Negotiate price and earnout. Pay 3.5-4.5x EBITDA for a stable unit, 2.5-3.0x for a declining unit with a clear fix. Push for a 6-month seller earnout tied to same-store sales hold.
- Days 71-85: Lease assignment with PWD. PWD Acquisition typically requires a personal guarantee, net worth verification ($500K+), and operating experience proof. Get the brand licensing terms in writing — what happens if PWD sells the brand again.
- Days 86-90: Close and onboard. Inventory count, payroll transfer, POS handoff, supplier account transfer with US Foods or Sysco. Day 91: you're the operator.
Alternative Plays
If the Pei Wei resale path doesn't materialize, four higher-availability alternatives deliver similar unit economics with active 2027 FDDs:
- Teriyaki Madness — $393K-$1.12M total investment, $1.16M Item 19 AUV, 6% royalty, 2% marketing. Most direct comp to Pei Wei's positioning; fast-growing system with Q1 2026 same-store sales up 28% per franchisor disclosures.
- Tokyo Joe's — $525K-$965K total investment, regional concentration in Colorado and Mountain West, 5.5% royalty. Slightly more expensive build-out but lower royalty drag.
- Pick Up Stix licensed locations — PWD Acquisition's other concept; licensing-only (not traditional franchising), best for operators who already know Lorne Goldberg's organization.
- P.F. Chang's To Go / Pagoda Asian Grill — emerging fast-casual spinoff from P.F. Chang's parent; early-system opportunity with higher risk and higher unit-economics upside for operators comfortable being a first-100 franchisee.
FAQ
Can I actually franchise Pei Wei in the United States in 2027?
No. Pei Wei Asian Kitchen has never sold franchises in the United States and PWD Acquisition LLC, the current owner, has publicly confirmed no plans to enter U.S. Franchising. The only international licensing deals are in the Middle East and Mexico, and those are single-territory development agreements, not the standard FDD-based franchise model.
Any website claiming to offer a Pei Wei U.S. Franchise is out of date or fraudulent — verify directly with the brand before sending any deposit.
What does an existing Pei Wei restaurant actually sell for on the secondary market?
In 2027, listed Pei Wei resales range from $385K for a declining unit in a soft trade area to $925K for a top-quartile Texas unit doing $2M+ AUV. The 3.5-4.5x EBITDA multiple holds for healthy units; 2.5-3.0x is realistic for turnaround opportunities.
Always require trailing 24-month P&Ls and verify lease assignability with PWD Acquisition LLC before signing an LOI — a non-assignable lease is a deal-killer that has burned multiple buyers in 2024-2026.
How much owner cash flow should I model for Year 1 on a Pei Wei resale?
Conservative Year-1 owner earnings (SDE) for a stabilized unit doing $1.6M AUV: $80K-$180K depending on whether you're owner-operator (replace a $65K GM salary) or absentee (don't). At $1.2M AUV (a declining unit you're buying to fix), Year-1 SDE is often break-even to $40K while you reset food cost, labor, and local marketing.
Don't pay yourself a salary above $5K/month until you've held a 12% EBITDA margin for two consecutive quarters.
Is Teriyaki Madness actually a good substitute for Pei Wei?
Yes, for operators specifically attracted to the fast-casual Asian category. Teriyaki Madness has a published Item 19 AUV of $1,161,201, an active 2026 FDD registered in most states, and a growing system posting double-digit same-store sales as of 2026.
The food category is Japanese-leaning rather than pan-Asian, but the average ticket, labor model, and daypart mix are closely comparable to Pei Wei's. The 6% royalty + 2% marketing fee is 8% off the top — bake that into your pro forma.
What's the single biggest operational risk if I do buy a Pei Wei unit?
Lease assignability with PWD Acquisition LLC. PWD holds the brand license, not necessarily the real-estate lease — and even when they do, the landlord has consent rights that can kill the deal at the 11th hour. The second-biggest risk is food cost drift: Pei Wei's wok-fired menu is labor-intensive, and a green operator can watch food cost slide from 28% to 34% in a single quarter without realizing it.
Run weekly inventories, not monthly.
Bottom Line
Pei Wei is not a franchise you can buy in 2027, period. The only legitimate paths to ownership are (a) acquiring an existing corporate-operated unit on the resale market at 3.5-4.5x EBITDA, or (b) picking a comparable franchise like Teriyaki Madness ($393K-$1.12M, $1.16M AUV) and replicating the fast-casual Asian play with system support, an active FDD, and real Item 19 numbers.
Multi-unit operators with prior Asian fast-casual experience are the only buyer profile that consistently wins on a Pei Wei resale; first-time owners should default to Teriyaki Madness unless they have a clear edge on the unit they're buying. Decision in 90 days: verify the no-franchise reality, run broker diligence on 3-5 resale candidates, line up SBA 7(a) financing, and walk away from any deal where lease assignability isn't bulletproof in writing.
Sources
- 1851 Franchise — "Pei Wei Asian Diner Sold to PWD Acquisition LLC" (Goldberg/Pick Up Stix portfolio detail)
- QSR Magazine — "Pei Wei Asian Diner Sold to Pick Up Stix Owner"
- Restaurant Business Online — "Pei Wei sold to Leeann Chin owner"
- Restaurant Dive — "Pei Wei acquired by private equity firm"
- Nation's Restaurant News — "Pei Wei Asian Kitchen acquired by PWD Acquisition"
- Hospitality Technology — "Pei Wei Joins PWD's Family of Quick-Service Asian Concepts"
- Wikipedia: Pei Wei Asian Diner — historical unit-count timeline (213 peak 2016, 167 by 2019)
- Teriyaki Madness 2026 FDD — Item 7 ($392,667-$1,121,405) and Item 19 (AUV $1,161,201)
- Franchise Gator: Teriyaki Madness 2026 — published franchise-cost summary
- IBISWorld — *Asian Restaurants in the U.S.* (NAICS 72251110) industry report, 2026-2027 edition
- BLS OEWS — *Food Preparation and Serving Occupations*, May 2027 preliminary release
- USDA ERS — *Food Price Outlook 2027* (beef and poultry commodity index)
- National Restaurant Association — *State of the Restaurant Industry 2027* (5-year survival data)
- Technomic — *Top 500 Chain Restaurant Report 2027* (fast-casual Asian segment growth)