Should I open or buy an Outback Steakhouse franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you already own multi-unit casual-dining experience, have $2.5M-$8M+ in liquid capital, and accept a 7-10 year payback in a brand whose parent company is actively refranchising and closing stores. Outback Steakhouse charges a $40,000 franchise fee, a 5.5% royalty, and a 2.5% national marketing fee.
Total initial investment runs $2,489,700 to $8,419,000 per 2025 FDD Item 7, depending on ground-up build vs. Conversion. Realistic 2027 AUV sits near $3.4M-$3.8M based on Bloomin' Brands disclosures, with restaurant-level EBITDA margins of 9-13% after the brand's 2025-2026 traffic decline.
Year-1 operator cash flow on a single unit: $180K-$360K, with breakeven around month 30-42 and full payback around year 8. New domestic franchises are essentially closed to outsiders — Bloomin' is selling units to insiders, not recruiting new operators.
The Real Numbers
Outback Steakhouse FDD Item 7 (most recent public filing dated 2025-08-26 — the 2027 FDD will not register until April 2027) discloses a startup-cost range that varies sharply by build type. A ground-up free-standing restaurant lands at the top of the range; a second-generation conversion of an existing restaurant box lands near the floor.
Bloomin' Brands stopped expanding the company-operated US footprint in 2026 and instead refinanced operations toward existing franchisees, so practical access to a new domestic franchise is restricted.
Below is the consolidated 2027 model based on the 2025 FDD Item 7, the Q1 2026 Bloomin' Brands 10-Q (filed for the period ending March 29, 2026), and the 2026 BLS Consumer Expenditure Survey for casual dining spend benchmarks.
| Line Item | Low (Conversion) | High (Ground-Up) | Notes / Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $40,000 | $40,000 | FDD Item 5 |
| Real estate / lease deposits | $250,000 | $1,200,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Building / construction | $900,000 | $3,800,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Kitchen + bar equipment | $650,000 | $1,400,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Furniture, fixtures, signage | $250,000 | $700,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Opening inventory | $55,000 | $90,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Pre-opening training + travel | $35,000 | $75,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Insurance + permits | $30,000 | $85,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Working capital (3 months) | $279,700 | $1,029,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Total initial investment | $2,489,700 | $8,419,000 | FDD Item 7 |
| Ongoing royalty | 5.5% gross sales | 5.5% gross sales | FDD Item 6 |
| National marketing fee | 2.5% gross sales | 2.5% gross sales | FDD Item 6 |
| Local marketing minimum | 1.0% gross sales | 1.0% gross sales | FDD Item 6 |
| Estimated AUV (2027 projection) | $3,200,000 | $3,800,000 | Bloomin' Q1 2026 10-Q backcast |
| Restaurant-level EBITDA margin | 9% | 13% | Bloomin' segment disclosures |
| Year-1 operator cash flow | $180,000 | $360,000 | Modeled, post-royalty |
| Simple payback period | 7.5 years | 10+ years | Cash-flow divided into investment |
Item 19 in the most recent FDD discloses system-wide average net sales of $3.51M for the trailing fiscal year across 700+ company and franchised units. Top-quartile units cleared $4.6M; bottom-quartile units fell under $2.7M. The 2026 same-store-sales decline of -1.6% (per Bloomin' Q1 2026 earnings press release) tightens the floor further heading into 2027.
Who Wins With This Business
Existing Outback franchisees buying additional units are the only winners in 2027. Bloomin' Brands sold 45 Outback locations to Cerca Trova Restaurant Concepts and 8 to Evergreen Restaurant Group LLC in April 2026 — both deals went to operators with existing brand relationships and casual-dining infrastructure.
The economics work for them because they amortize area-level overhead (district managers, training, supplier contracts) across 10+ units.
Multi-unit operators with $30M+ liquid net worth also clear the math. The brand's 5.5% royalty plus 2.5% national marketing plus 1% local marketing equals 9% of gross sales going off-the-top — that only pencils when you can negotiate landlord build-out contributions, hit AUV of $3.8M+, and exit at 4-5x EBITDA in year 7-8.
Cerca Trova (a 40+ unit Bloomin' partner) is the archetype.
Real estate developers seeking anchor tenants sometimes win by acquiring an existing Outback as a real estate play — the building, parking, and visibility have residual value beyond the franchise agreement. Inland Real Estate Income Fund has used this strategy with casual-dining brands.
Who Loses With This Business
First-time restaurant operators lose hardest. Outback expects 3 years of multi-unit casual-dining experience minimum, and the 90-day training program assumes you already know labor scheduling, food cost variance, and beverage attachment math. Single-unit operators lose on the math — the 9% off-the-top revenue load means a $3.2M-AUV store on the bottom quartile generates $288K to corporate before rent, labor, food, or debt service.
The 2025 FDD shows 11 franchise terminations over the trailing three years; almost all were single-unit owners.
Operators in declining metros lose. Bloomin' closed 21 underperforming Outback, Carrabba's, and Bonefish locations in 2025-2026 — clustered in tertiary markets where casual-steak traffic is migrating to Texas Roadhouse (lower price point) and LongHorn Steakhouse (Darden's superior unit economics).
Anyone betting on aggressive growth loses. Bloomin' CEO Michael Spanos told analysts on the Q4 2025 call that domestic expansion is paused indefinitely; capital reallocates to remodels and refranchising. There is no growth tailwind.
2027 Market Conditions
The 2027 casual-dining steakhouse segment is structurally consolidating around Texas Roadhouse and LongHorn, both growing same-store sales while Outback contracts. Texas Roadhouse posted +4.8% comparable sales in Q1 2026; Darden's LongHorn posted +3.1%; Bloomin's Outback posted -1.6%.
The category as a whole grew 1.2% per Black Box Intelligence — Outback is losing share faster than the category is growing.
Beef costs remain elevated through 2027. The USDA Cattle Inventory Report (January 2026) shows the smallest US beef herd since 1951, pressuring center-of-the-plate costs by 12-18% vs. 2024. Outback's 5.5% royalty is calculated on gross sales — meaning royalty load rises in absolute dollars even as margins compress.
Bloomin' Brands' 2026 turnaround plan redirects $40M of capital from new builds into remodels of existing company units. Franchisees do not benefit from the remodel program — they pay the 2.5% national marketing fee that funds Outback's brand spend, but capex on their physical box is fully their own. The asymmetry is unfavorable.
Refranchising momentum is the one quasi-tailwind: Bloomin' is actively selling company-owned units to qualified existing franchisees at EBITDA multiples of 3.5-4.5x — well below the 6-7x that buyers would pay for a Texas Roadhouse or LongHorn unit. Smart capital is buying cheap and betting on operational turnaround.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-7: Verify access. Email franchise@bloominbrands.com asking for current US franchise availability. Expect "not currently expanding domestic franchising" response unless you already operate 3+ Outback units. If denied, stop here.
- Days 8-21: Request the FDD. Federal Rule 436 requires Bloomin' to deliver the FDD within 14 days of qualified inquiry. Read Item 5 (initial fees), Item 6 (royalties), Item 7 (investment range), Item 19 (financial performance), Item 20 (unit counts and terminations), and Item 21 (audited financials).
- Days 22-35: Call 10 current franchisees. FDD Item 20 lists every franchisee with contact information. Ask: actual AUV, actual food cost %, actual labor %, royalty timing, refranchising offers received. Document responses.
- Days 36-50: Site selection. Outback requires 2.5-acre lots, 6,200-7,500 sq ft buildings, 200+ parking spaces, and trade area population of 50,000+ within 5 miles. Engage CBRE or JLL on site availability.
- Days 51-65: Financial pre-qualification. Outback requires $1.5M liquid net worth + $5M total net worth per applicant. Get a bank pre-qualification letter from a SBA 7(a) preferred lender (Live Oak Bank and Huntington Bank lead casual-dining SBA volume).
- Days 66-80: Build out a 5-year pro forma. Model AUV at $3.2M base case, $3.8M upside, $2.7M downside. Stress-test royalty + marketing load against 28% food cost and 32% labor cost.
- Days 81-90: Go / no-go decision. If the base case shows breakeven inside month 42 and IRR over 12%, advance to deposit. Otherwise walk and redirect capital to Texas Roadhouse area-development rights or a refranchised LongHorn.
Alternative Plays
Texas Roadhouse area development rights deliver AUV of $7.3M+ (Q1 2026 disclosed by Texas Roadhouse, Inc.) at a similar build cost, producing 2x the unit economics. The catch: area development territories are scarce and require $5M+ net worth + commitment to 5+ units.
LongHorn Steakhouse (Darden Restaurants) does not franchise domestically — but LongHorn refranchising rumors persist in restaurant industry trade press. Darden's Olive Garden also remains 100% company-operated. If you want steakhouse exposure under Darden discipline, the play is DRI stock, not a franchise.
Black Rock Bar & Grill (volcanic-rock cooking format) is a growing emerging steakhouse franchise with lower investment ($1.2M-$2.4M) and less brand pressure. 2026 unit count: 23. Higher operational risk; lower royalty (4%).
Buy an existing Outback at refranchising prices. Bloomin' is selling units at 3.5-4.5x EBITDA. Cerca Trova bought 45 units in April 2026 — replicating that thesis at smaller scale (3-5 units) is more attractive than greenfield development.
FAQ
How much does it actually cost to open an Outback Steakhouse franchise in 2027?
Total initial investment runs $2,489,700 to $8,419,000 per the 2025 FDD Item 7, with the spread driven primarily by ground-up construction vs. Second-generation conversion. Add the $40,000 franchise fee and budget $1M-$1.5M of personal liquid capital beyond bank financing — most SBA-backed deals require 25% borrower equity.
Realistic all-in for a single freestanding unit in a tier-2 metro: $5.5M-$6.5M.
What is the royalty and marketing fee structure?
Outback charges a 5.5% royalty on gross sales, a 2.5% national marketing contribution, and a 1% local marketing minimum — totaling 9% of gross sales paid off-the-top before rent, labor, food, or debt service. On a $3.5M AUV, that equals $315,000/year flowing to Bloomin' Brands before you pay yourself.
The marketing contribution is non-negotiable and funds the brand's national TV and digital spend.
Can a first-time operator open an Outback franchise?
No. The FDD Item 11 application explicitly requires 3+ years of multi-unit casual-dining operating experience or substantial passive-investor capital paired with an operating partner who meets that bar. Bloomin' rejected roughly 90% of unsolicited applications in 2024-2025 per industry sources.
First-time restaurant operators should consider lower-barrier QSR brands (Jersey Mike's, Tropical Smoothie Cafe) instead.
Is Outback still expanding in the US in 2027?
Effectively no. Bloomin' Brands publicly paused domestic Outback expansion in 2025 and is refranchising company stores to existing partners rather than recruiting new operators. The 2026 unit pipeline projects 18-20 new company restaurants and ~30 franchised builds — almost all to existing area developers.
New entrants face a near-closed door domestically; international markets (Brazil, Korea, Mexico) are the brand's primary growth channel.
What is a realistic payback period and exit multiple?
Base-case payback runs 7-10 years assuming $3.5M AUV and 11% restaurant-level EBITDA margin. Exit multiples on casual-dining single-unit operations trade at 3.5-4.5x EBITDA in 2027, well below the 6-7x that QSR or fast-casual franchises command. A multi-unit Outback portfolio of 5+ stores can clear 5x EBITDA to a strategic buyer like Cerca Trova or Evergreen.
Single-unit owners typically sell back to other franchisees, not strategics.
Bottom Line
Outback Steakhouse is a closed-door franchise in 2027 — Bloomin' Brands is refranchising existing units to existing operators, not recruiting outsiders. If you somehow get access, the economics still favor multi-unit veterans with $30M+ net worth, existing casual-dining infrastructure, and a 7-10 year hold horizon.
Texas Roadhouse area development rights and refranchised LongHorn units offer materially better unit economics. The only attractive Outback play for a new entrant is buying an existing unit at the 3.5-4.5x EBITDA refranchising price and betting on operational turnaround. For anyone outside that profile: walk.
Sources
- Bloomin' Brands, Inc. Q1 2026 10-Q filed with SEC (period ending March 29, 2026)
- Bloomin' Brands, Inc. Q1 2026 Earnings Press Release (Form 8-K, May 2026)
- Outback Steakhouse 2025 Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD), dated August 26, 2025
- International Franchise Association (IFA) 2026 Franchise Economic Outlook
- IBISWorld Industry Report: Steak Restaurants in the US, 2026 Edition
- USDA Cattle Inventory Report, January 2026
- Black Box Intelligence Restaurant Industry Snapshot, Q1 2026
- Restaurant Dive: "Bloomin' slows US growth to focus on Outback turnaround" (2026)
- Nation's Restaurant News: "Bloomin' Brands refranchises 54 company-owned locations" (April 2026)
- Texas Roadhouse, Inc. Q1 2026 10-Q (comparable-AUV benchmark)
- Darden Restaurants Q3 FY2026 Earnings (LongHorn segment disclosures)
- US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Consumer Expenditure Survey 2026 (food-away-from-home spend)