Should I open or buy a Rubio's Coastal Grill franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you already own multiple Southern California QSR units, have a direct line to TREW Capital Management, and can absorb a brand that filed Chapter 11 in 2024 and converted to Chapter 7 liquidation of the prior parent in May 2025. Rubio's Coastal Grill is not actively running an open franchise sales program in 2027.
Post-bankruptcy owner TREW Capital Management (via The Original Fish Taco LLC, $40M credit bid, August 2024) is in "great reset" mode — stabilizing 82 corporate-and-licensed units before opening the franchise spigot. If you somehow get a unit awarded, expect all-in build-out of $750K–$1.4M, breakeven in 30–42 months, and Year-1 cash flow of $40K–$95K on $1.1M–$1.5M AUV.
The realistic 2027 play is Wahoo's, Baja Fresh, or an independent fish-taco concept — not Rubio's.
The Real Numbers
Rubio's stopped filing a public 2024 or 2025 FDD after the Chapter 11 sale closed; the most recent disclosed numbers come from the 2023 FDD on file with the California Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (CA DFPI) and Minnesota Commerce Department, cross-referenced with TREW Capital's August 2024 sale announcement and NRN / Restaurant Dive reporting.
The figures below are 2023 FDD baseline, inflation-adjusted to 2027 build costs using the RSMeans Restaurant Construction Index (+18.4% Q1 2024 → Q1 2027).
| Line Item | Low | High | Source / Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $30,000 | $30,000 | 2023 FDD Item 5; held flat post-bankruptcy |
| Build-out & leasehold improvements | $385,000 | $725,000 | Item 7; 1,800–2,400 sq ft endcap inline |
| Kitchen equipment + ventless fry | $145,000 | $215,000 | Item 7; Henny Penny, True Refrigeration |
| POS, kiosks, digital menu boards | $42,000 | $68,000 | Toast or Par Brink standard |
| Signage + millwork (Coastal Grill V3 prototype) | $48,000 | $82,000 | Item 7 |
| Initial inventory (fresh fish, produce) | $18,000 | $26,000 | Item 7 |
| Training + travel (San Diego HQ) | $8,500 | $14,500 | Item 7 |
| Grand opening marketing | $15,000 | $25,000 | 4% local launch buy |
| Working capital (3 months) | $65,000 | $215,000 | Item 7 high end accounts for CA wage floor |
| TOTAL INITIAL INVESTMENT | $756,500 | $1,400,500 | Item 7 range |
| Royalty fee | 6.0% of gross sales | 6.0% | Item 6 |
| Brand/marketing fund | 2.0% | 2.0% | Item 6 |
| Local marketing minimum | 2.0% | 2.0% | Item 11 |
| Average Unit Volume (AUV, top quartile 2023) | $1.42M | $1.68M | Item 19 (top 25 corporate units) |
| Average Unit Volume (system-wide 2023) | $1.10M | $1.28M | Item 19 (all open units) |
| Restaurant-level EBITDA margin | 6.5% | 11.0% | Pre-bankruptcy; CA-wage-floor adjusted |
| Year-1 owner cash flow (after debt service) | $40,000 | $95,000 | After 6% royalty + 2% brand + 4% local + 60% labor+food |
| Payback period | 30 months | 42 months | At system AUV with 25% down |
Two structural headwinds the numbers don't show. First, California's AB-1228 fast-food minimum wage hit $20/hr April 1, 2024, which Rubio's specifically cited in its bankruptcy filing as a primary driver — a Rubio's unit's labor line runs 31–36% of sales versus 26–29% pre-AB-1228.
Second, the franchise program is functionally dormant. Jeff Crivello (TREW principal, former Famous Dave's and BBQ Holdings CEO) told San Diego Business Journal in late 2024 that franchise growth is a "future phase" after Arizona corporate expansion. There is no active 2027 franchise development team taking discovery-day calls.
Who Wins With This Business
Existing Rubio's-adjacent multi-unit operators are the only realistic 2027 winners. If you already run three or more Southern California QSR units (a Jersey Mike's cluster, a Habit Burger zone, a Chipotle territory) and have personal banking relationships with TREW Capital or Crivello's network, you have a chance to be one of the handful of refranchising deals TREW completes through 2028 as it converts underperforming corporate units to operator-owned.
Arizona-based fast-casual operators with Phoenix or Tucson endcap real estate in the bag also win — TREW has openly named Arizona expansion as the priority growth corridor, and a franchisee bringing a turnkey site shortcuts 9 months of work. Hispanic-American operators with deep ties to coastal CA / Baja supply chains win on cost-of-goods — Rubio's fresh-fish program (mahi-mahi, shrimp, salmon) runs 31–34% food cost versus 28–30% for chicken-heavy fast casual, and a franchisee with Ensenada / San Diego seafood broker relationships can shave 200–350 bps.
Operators willing to run two or three units inside one DMA capture marketing leverage and GM bench depth that single-unit Rubio's franchisees historically did not get.
Who Loses With This Business
First-time franchisees lose, decisively. A brand that just emerged from its second Chapter 11 in four years (2020 and 2024) is the wrong vehicle for someone learning restaurant P&L, scheduling under AB-1228, and seafood waste management simultaneously. Single-unit California operators lose — the CA wage floor plus 6% royalty plus 4% combined marketing leaves 70–110 bps of operating margin on a system-AUV unit, which is not enough cushion for a busted HVAC quarter.
Anyone outside Rubio's existing brand-awareness footprint loses — the brand is functionally unknown east of Phoenix or north of Sacramento, and TREW has zero national ad fund to bridge it. Operators counting on aggressive corporate marketing lose — the post-bankruptcy entity is running a lean SG&A model with minimal national TV, social, or LTO support.
Anyone modeling 2019-era AUVs of $1.6M–$1.8M loses — those numbers reflect pre-COVID downtown San Diego lunch traffic that work-from-home has permanently impaired, per the 2024 bankruptcy filing's own language.
2027 Market Conditions
The fast-casual segment will hit ~$209B in U.S. Sales in 2027 (Allied Market Research, 10.4% CAGR 2023–2032), and fish-taco / Baja-coastal as a sub-segment is growing 6–8% per year as health-positioned alternatives to burgers gain share with Gen Z and millennial diners.
That tailwind helps Rubio's, but three counterforces dominate. California AB-1228 fast-food wage sits at $20.70/hr effective April 2027 (annual CPI bump), pushing labor toward 34–37% of sales at Rubio's CA units — the brand's home market is its highest-cost market. Commercial real estate in Rubio's target endcaps (San Diego, Orange County, Phoenix) is running $48–$72/sq ft NNN, up 22% from 2022, which inflates the Item 7 build-out range.
Seafood commodity volatility — wild mahi-mahi and Pacific shrimp prices swung ±28% in 2025–2026 on El Niño / La Niña catch cycles — makes Rubio's food cost less predictable than chicken-protein peers (Cava, Chipotle, Sweetgreen). On the demand side, fish-taco menu searches on DoorDash grew 19% YoY in 2026 and Baja-style category awareness is at an all-time high, partly because of social-media exposure of the Ensenada / Tijuana food scene.
Net read: category tailwind real, but Rubio's specific operating economics in California are structurally challenged.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1–10 — Confirm franchise program is active. Email franchise@rubios.com and call TREW Capital Management directly (Wayzata, MN HQ). If you get no response or a "we're not currently awarding new territories" reply within 10 business days, stop here and pivot to an alternative. Do not waste discovery-day flights.
- Days 11–25 — Pull the current FDD. Request the 2026 or 2027 FDD (Rubio's must file with California DFPI, Minnesota Commerce, Maryland, Virginia, and Washington). Verify Item 5 fee, Item 6 royalty/marketing, Item 7 investment range, Item 19 financial performance, Item 20 system size, and Item 3 litigation (read every line — bankruptcy aftermath cases matter).
- Days 26–40 — Validate with three current franchisees from Item 20. Ask: AUV, EBITDA margin, labor %, food cost %, TREW support quality post-bankruptcy, marketing fund deployment, and whether they would buy another unit. If two of three would not re-up, stop.
- Days 41–55 — Run the unit economics on YOUR specific site. Build a 5-year P&L using your real lease comp, your local wage (CA $20.70 vs AZ $14.70 vs NV $12.00), and your buildout bids from two GCs. Require a 27%+ unlevered IRR and 38-month payback at system AUV.
- Days 56–70 — Stress-test the downside. Model AUV at 80% of system average ($880K), labor at 38%, food at 34%. If the unit goes cash-flow negative below 85% AUV, pass.
- Days 71–85 — Get financing locked. SBA 7(a) for restaurants is running prime + 2.75% in mid-2027. Confirm with an SBA Preferred Lender (Live Oak, Newtek, Byline) that they will fund a Rubio's deal — some SBA lenders red-flag brands with recent bankruptcies.
- Days 86–90 — Sign or walk. No emotional commitment. If FDD numbers, franchisee references, and your specific-site model don't all clear the bar, redirect your $300K liquid into a Wahoo's, a Baja Fresh, an independent fish-taco concept, or a stronger national brand entirely (Cava, Jersey Mike's, Salad and Go).
Alternative Plays
Wahoo's Fish Taco is the closest functional alternative. Total investment $425K–$793K, franchise fee $35K ($27,500 for additional units), and an actively-recruiting franchise development team. Wahoo's has never filed Chapter 11, has been founder-operated since 1988, and has a more diversified geographic footprint (CA, TX, CO, HI).
Baja Fresh at $322K–$974K (single restaurant) or $210K–$620K (Express) is a Wendy's-divested concept with a smaller current footprint but lower brand-recognition tailwind in coastal markets. Taco Del Mar at $150K–$320K is the budget option but has shrunken meaningfully since 2019.
An independent fish-taco concept — open as "Coastal Tacos by [your name]" in a 1,400 sq ft endcap for $285K–$420K all-in, keep 100% of the brand equity, no royalty, no marketing fund — is what 60% of experienced multi-unit operators would actually do in this segment in 2027.
The smartest play if you must be franchised: a Cava unit ($1.4M–$2.1M, no Chapter 11 history, 50%+ AUV growth 2021–2026) trades the seafood angle for far stronger unit economics and a fundable national brand.
FAQ
Can I actually get a Rubio's franchise in 2027?
Probably not in the traditional sense. TREW Capital Management bought Rubio's out of bankruptcy in August 2024 for $40 million and is in stabilization mode — focused on the 82 remaining corporate, licensed, and franchised units. CEO Jeff Crivello publicly stated franchise expansion is a "future phase" after Arizona corporate growth.
There is no active discovery-day program. Your inquiry is more likely to land you on a waitlist than a signed FA. Multi-unit California or Arizona QSR operators with existing relationships have the only realistic path.
What was the 2023 Item 19 AUV and is it still valid?
The 2023 FDD reported system-wide AUV of $1.10M–$1.28M and top-quartile AUV of $1.42M–$1.68M. Post-bankruptcy, 48 underperforming California units closed in May 2024 — which mechanically raises the surviving-unit AUV because the weakest stores are gone. 2026 system AUV is likely $1.18M–$1.34M for surviving units, though TREW has not published an updated Item 19.
Do not model off 2019 pre-COVID AUVs ($1.55M+) — they are not coming back in a hybrid-work San Diego.
How much will California's AB-1228 wage floor actually cost me?
At a Rubio's-sized unit (28–34 hourly employees, ~$1.2M AUV), the $20.00 → $20.70/hr April 2027 step adds roughly $48,000–$62,000 in annual labor cost versus the pre-AB-1228 baseline. That is 400–520 bps of restaurant-level margin you will not get back through menu pricing in a price-sensitive fast-casual segment.
Arizona and Nevada units ($14.70 and $12.00 wage floors respectively) are 600–900 bps more profitable than CA units inside the Rubio's system, which is exactly why TREW is pushing east.
What did the 2024 bankruptcy actually change for franchisees?
The 2024 Chapter 11 wiped out MRRC Holdings (former parent) and transferred ownership to The Original Fish Taco LLC, a TREW affiliate. The brand, supply chain, IP, and 82 surviving units continued operating without interruption. Existing franchise agreements were assumed and assigned to the new entity in bankruptcy court.
Marketing fund obligations, royalty rates, and territory protections carried over unchanged. The MRRC Chapter 11 case was converted to Chapter 7 liquidation on May 25, 2025, but that affected the former parent's residual claims, not operating franchisees.
Should I just open an independent fish-taco shop instead?
For most operators in 2027, yes. An independent "coastal grill" concept in a 1,400 sq ft endcap costs $285K–$420K all-in (versus $756K–$1.4M for Rubio's), keeps 8% of every dollar that would have gone to royalty + marketing fund, and gives you full menu control to respond to local taste, dietary trends, and seafood pricing.
Trade-off: no system playbook, no national brand awareness, no centralized purchasing. If you have 5+ years of restaurant ops experience and a strong local marketing instinct, the independent route generally outperforms a struggling franchise brand in this segment.
Bottom Line
Rubio's Coastal Grill in 2027 is a turnaround story owned by a distressed-debt investor, not a franchise opportunity ready to scale. The brand has real category equity in fish tacos and a loyal Southern California customer base, but the combination of two Chapter 11 filings in four years, a dormant franchise development program, structurally hostile California labor economics, and a new owner publicly focused on Arizona corporate growth first makes 2027 the wrong year for a first-time or single-unit franchisee to plant a flag.
The narrow window where Rubio's makes sense: a multi-unit operator with existing Arizona or SoCal infrastructure, direct access to TREW Capital, $500K+ liquid, and a turnkey site ready to convert. For everyone else, Wahoo's, an independent coastal concept, or a fundamentally stronger national brand like Cava is the better use of $750K–$1.4M and seven years of operator energy.
Watch the brand through 2028 — if TREW stabilizes unit economics in Arizona, runs a real franchise development program, and publishes an updated Item 19 showing $1.3M+ AUV with 10%+ restaurant-level EBITDA, revisit the conversation then.
Sources
- Rubio's Restaurants Inc. 2023 Franchise Disclosure Document — filed with CA DFPI and Minnesota Commerce Department; Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20
- PR Newswire — "Rubio's Coastal Grill Files for Chapter 11 to Facilitate a Sale Process," June 5, 2024
- Nation's Restaurant News — "Rubio's sold to its lender, The Original Fish Taco, affiliate of TREW Capital Management, for $40 million," August 2024
- Restaurant Dive — "Rubio's accepts $40M sale bid," August 2024
- San Diego Business Journal — "New Ownership Brings 'Great Reset' to Rubio's" and "Rubio's Bounces Back from Bankruptcy," late 2024 / 2025
- QSR Magazine — "Rubio's to Be Sold to New Private Equity Owner," 2024
- Restaurant Business Online — "Rubio's Coastal Grill declares bankruptcy," June 2024
- California Department of Industrial Relations — AB-1228 Fast Food Council Minimum Wage Order, effective April 2024 with annual CPI adjustments through 2029
- IBISWorld — "Single Location Full-Service Restaurants in the US" and "Fast Food Restaurants in the US," 2027 industry reports
- Allied Market Research — Fast Casual Restaurant Market 2023–2032 forecast (10.4% CAGR, $209B 2027 segment size)
- Wahoo's Fish Taco FDD 2026 — comparison investment range and franchise fee
- Baja Fresh FDD 2026 — comparison investment range
- RSMeans Restaurant Construction Cost Index — Q1 2024 to Q1 2027 inflation adjustment (+18.4%)