Should I open or buy a Salata Salad Kitchen franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you already operate two or more restaurants in a Sunbelt market, have $700K-$1M of liquid capital beyond your home equity, and treat Salata as a multi-unit development play rather than a single-store retirement income. Salata Salad Kitchen charges a $40,000 franchise fee, a 5% royalty, and a 2% marketing fee against a real-world build-out of $522,000 to $968,500 (FDD Item 7, 2026).
System-average unit volume hovers near $1.05M, with top-quartile stores doing $1.2M-$1.4M. Realistic Year-1 owner cash flow at average AUV after debt service: $70K-$110K. Breakeven on equipment typically arrives at month 14-22; full payback runs 5-7 years.
The math works if you can hit AUV; it does not work as a passive single-unit.
The Real Numbers
Salata's 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document (filed with state regulators April 2026) discloses the following ranges. These are real FDD numbers, not marketing site estimates.
| Line Item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee (Item 5) | $40,000 | $40,000 | Single unit; multi-unit dev fee $10K/add'l unit |
| Real estate / rent deposit | $9,000 | $35,000 | 2,400-2,800 sq ft endcap or in-line |
| Leasehold improvements | $280,000 | $510,000 | Build-out: salad bar, line, HVAC, plumbing |
| Furniture, fixtures, equipment | $115,000 | $175,000 | Salad bar wells, refrigeration, POS, ovens |
| Signage | $12,000 | $30,000 | Exterior + interior brand package |
| Smallwares, opening inventory | $14,000 | $22,000 | Bowls, utensils, produce starter |
| Training travel + grand opening | $14,000 | $32,000 | 6-week training program at Houston HQ |
| Insurance, permits, professional | $8,500 | $24,500 | LLC, FDD review, liquor (where applicable) |
| Working capital (3 months) | $30,000 | $100,000 | Payroll, rent, COGS before breakeven |
| TOTAL INITIAL INVESTMENT | $522,000 | $968,500 | Item 7, 2026 FDD |
Ongoing fees:
- Royalty: 5.0% of gross sales (Item 6)
- Brand marketing fund: 2.0% of gross sales
- Local marketing minimum: 1.0% of gross sales
- Technology fee: ~$450/month per unit
Item 19 financial performance (2026 FDD, fiscal year 2025 data for 78 reporting franchised units open the full year):
| Metric | System Average | Top Quartile | Bottom Quartile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average Unit Volume (AUV) | $1,052,400 | $1,287,600 | $812,300 |
| Food cost % of sales | 31.4% | 29.8% | 33.6% |
| Labor % of sales | 28.7% | 26.1% | 31.9% |
| Occupancy % of sales | 8.2% | 7.1% | 10.4% |
| Store-level EBITDA margin | 14.5% | 18.2% | 9.8% |
| Store-level EBITDA $ | $152,600 | $234,300 | $79,600 |
Payback math at system-average AUV and a $745K all-in investment, financed 70% at 9.5% SBA 7(a) over 10 years: annual debt service ~$81K, free cash to owner ~$71K Year 1, ramping to ~$95K-$115K by Year 3 once the loan amortization curve flattens. Cash-on-cash on $223K equity: ~32% by Year 3 if you hit AUV.
Full payback of equity: year 5.5.
Compare to public peers (for sanity-check): CAVA AUV ~$2.6M, Sweetgreen ~$2.9M, Just Salad ~$2.2M per their 2025 annual reports. Salata's AUV is roughly 40% of CAVA's — which is exactly why the investment is also ~40% lower than a CAVA franchise (CAVA does not franchise; the comparison is conceptual).
The unit economics are honest; they just aren't lottery tickets.
Who Wins With This Business
Multi-unit Sunbelt operators with 2-5 existing restaurant locations in adjacent categories (QSR, fast-casual, coffee). These owners already have a commissary, a regional manager bench, and a payroll department. Adding a Salata is incremental overhead, not a new business.
Texas-based developers specifically — Salata's home market is Houston, supply chain density is highest there, and brand awareness halves your launch marketing burn.
Healthcare and corporate-campus real estate owners — Salata's daypart skews 60% lunch, 25% dinner, 15% catering. Hospital cafeterias, university food halls, and Class A office towers are the strongest sites in the system. If you own or control such real estate, the same store inside your building can do $1.4M+ AUV, putting you firmly in the top decile.
Operators with a real catering arm. Salata's B2B catering platform (Salata Catering) accounts for 18-24% of revenue at top-quartile stores vs. <8% at the bottom. If you can hire a dedicated catering sales rep and tap corporate accounts, the margin uplift is enormous because catering food cost runs 26% vs. 32% retail.
Owners willing to be on-site 50+ hours/week for 18-24 months. This is not absentee-friendly. The franchisor does not approve passive investors; Item 15 requires an operating principal on premises.
Who Loses With This Business
Single-unit first-time franchisees with all their capital tied into one store. The math collapses if you land at bottom-quartile AUV ($812K). At that level, store EBITDA is $79K, debt service eats $81K, and you are working 60-hour weeks for negative cash flow.
Operators in low-density, non-Sunbelt markets. Salata has opened and closed in Chicago, Atlanta exurbs, and parts of California where the fast-casual salad price point ($13-$16 a bowl) didn't clear against local income or against entrenched competition from Sweetgreen, CAVA, and regional chains.
Anyone counting on Year-1 distributions to live on. Ramp is 9-14 months to mature-store AUV. Plan for $0 owner draw for the first 12 months and a modest salary line ($60K-$80K) baked into the labor budget.
Buyers who can't underwrite the lease. Endcap rent on a 2,600 sq ft Sunbelt suburban site runs $32-$48 NNN per sq ft. That's $85K-$125K/year in rent alone before CAM. Bad real estate kills the deal before food cost does.
Investors expecting franchisor-funded marketing rescue. The 2% brand fund covers digital, app, loyalty — not local launch. Your grand-opening burn is on you ($30K-$60K typical).
2027 Market Conditions
Fast-casual salad is consolidating, not exploding. Sweetgreen (260+ units, $2.9M AUV) is rolling out Infinite Kitchen automation which is taking 7% margin and 10% check uplift, raising the bar for non-automated competitors. CAVA (480+ units by late 2026) is the Mediterranean-bowl benchmark — different category, same customer.
Just Salad (~75 units) operates a hybrid model. Salad and Go (drive-thru) has paused expansion after closing ~30 units in 2025.
Salata's 2027 positioning: It is the only franchised salad-bar concept with 80+ units and a real Item 19 that a single operator can actually buy into (Sweetgreen and CAVA are corporate-only). The company took 19 years to reach 100 units and is now signaling intent to triple to 300 by 2030.
That implies 40+ openings/year — aggressive but achievable in the Sunbelt where they have density.
Risk factors for 2027:
- GLP-1 weight-loss drugs (Wegovy, Mounjaro, Zepbound) have measurably reduced QSR ticket sizes; salad chains have so far benefited (Sweetgreen up 9% same-store 2025) but the category could fragment.
- Labor inflation in Texas/Florida is running 4-6% annually; the 28.7% labor ratio is under pressure.
- Produce volatility — drought and tariff effects on Mexican-sourced romaine, tomatoes, avocados directly hit food cost.
- Sunbelt rent has stabilized at 8-10% above 2024 levels, no longer climbing rapidly.
Bottom line for the market: The category is healthy but mature. Salata is not the next CAVA, but it is not Subway-in-decline either. It is a plausible $1M-unit franchise that requires real operating chops.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-7: Pull the 2026 FDD directly from Salata (
franchise.salata.com). Read Items 7, 19, 20, 21 cover to cover. Flag every footnote on Item 19 — pay attention to how many units reported, how long open, geography.
- Days 8-14: Build the validation list. Item 20 lists every current and former franchisee with contact info. Call at minimum 10 current operators and all closed-unit former operators. Ask the four questions: AUV, hours worked, royalty experience, would-you-do-it-again.
- Days 15-30: Site survey. Engage a commercial real estate broker who has done at least 3 fast-casual deals in your target metro. Identify 5 candidate sites with traffic counts >20K vehicles/day, daytime population >50K within 3 miles, and median HHI >$75K.
- Days 31-45: Financial modeling. Build a 5-year P&L with three scenarios (bottom quartile, average, top quartile). Stress-test at food cost 34%, labor 30%, sales -15% from plan. If any scenario produces negative cash flow >18 months, the deal is too thin.
- Days 46-60: SBA pre-qualification. Approach 3 SBA 7(a) lenders (Live Oak, Huntington, Byline) with the model. Get term sheets showing rate, amortization, personal guaranty, collateral requirements. Don't sign yet.
- Days 61-75: Discovery Day in Houston. Salata flies you to HQ. Tour the training kitchen, meet the executive team. Use this to validate the supply chain story, marketing tech, and franchisee support staffing ratio (target: 1 field consultant per 12 franchisees max).
- Days 76-90: Decision and franchise agreement. Have a franchise attorney (Mario Herman, Lawley, or Marks Gray are standard) redline the FA. Negotiate personal guarantee cap, territory protection radius, transfer terms. Sign or walk.
Alternative Plays
- Saladworks franchise — older brand, 100+ units, lower AUV (~$780K), lower investment ($385K-$615K). Better for smaller-market operators; less Sunbelt density than Salata.
- Tropical Smoothie Cafe — adjacent healthy fast-casual, 1,400+ units, AUV ~$1.05M, investment $327K-$711K. Much larger system, more proven, lower territorial risk.
- Crisp & Green — Midwest-anchored salad chain, ~40 units, growing fast, AUV ~$1.1M. Better fit if you're north of the Sunbelt.
- Independent salad concept in a corporate-campus food hall — skip the royalty entirely. Sub-$300K build, 10-12% margin instead of 14.5%, but you keep the brand equity.
- Wait and watch Salata for 24 months. If they hit 150 units with stable AUV, the system is real and worth the buy-in. If AUV slides below $950K or the unit count stalls, the thesis is broken.
FAQ
How much money do I actually need in the bank to qualify for a Salata franchise?
Salata's Item 21 financial requirements specify $300,000 minimum liquid net worth and $1,000,000 total net worth, but practical SBA underwriting requires you to bring 25-30% equity to a $745K all-in project — that's $185K-$225K of post-closing liquidity plus another $75K-$100K in reserves.
Realistic floor: $300K cash you can lose without changing your life, on top of a paid-off home.
Can I open just one unit, or do I have to sign a multi-unit deal?
Single units are technically available but Salata's awarded-territory bias and their multi-unit incentive structure (discounted franchise fees on units 2-3) push almost all new development toward 2-pack or 3-pack agreements. Single-unit franchisees post lower AUV on average and historically have higher closure rates.
The franchisor prefers committed multi-unit operators and prices accordingly.
How long until I can take an owner salary or distribution?
Most franchisees pay themselves a modest manager salary ($60K-$85K) baked into the labor line from day one, then take their first real distribution between month 18 and month 30 once the SBA loan has 12+ months of clean payment history and store EBITDA is stable above $130K.
Plan zero distributions in Year 1. Plan $25K-$45K in distributions in Year 2 at average AUV.
What's the realistic failure rate for new Salata units?
Per Item 20 of the 2026 FDD, the system shows 4 franchised-unit closures and 2 transfers in fiscal 2025 across roughly 85 franchised units — a closure rate around 4.7%. That is better than the QSR median (~7%) but worse than top-tier brands like Chick-fil-A (<1%). New-unit failures cluster in single-operator first-timers in secondary markets.
Multi-unit Sunbelt operators have near-zero closure rate.
Is Salata a better investment than just buying Sweetgreen or CAVA stock?
Depends on your time horizon and tolerance for operating risk. CAVA stock has compounded at 30%+ annually since IPO; Sweetgreen has been volatile but is up 200%+ from 2024 lows. A successful single Salata unit at average AUV returns ~32% cash-on-cash on equity by Year 3 — comparable but with no liquidity and 2,500+ hours/year of your own labor.
If you don't want to operate a restaurant, buy the stock. If you want the operational and tax advantages of a real business you control, the franchise can pencil.
Bottom Line
Salata Salad Kitchen is a competent, real franchise — not a fantasy. The $1.05M AUV is honestly reported in Item 19, the 14.5% store EBITDA margin holds across the system, and the $522K-$968K investment range is defensible against comparable healthy fast-casual concepts.
But it is not a passive investment, not a single-unit retirement play, and not a category-leader on AUV (Sweetgreen and CAVA out-earn it 2.5x). Buy it if you are a Sunbelt multi-unit operator with $700K+ liquid, a catering-friendly site, and the operational discipline to be on the floor for 18-24 months.
Don't buy it if any of those is missing. The system will likely have 150-180 units by 2030; the window to lock favorable territory is 2027-2028 before that density arrives.
Sources
- Salata Franchising LLC, 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document (Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20, 21), filed April 2026
- Salata Salad Kitchen Franchise Insights — VettedBiz
- Cost to Start a Salata Salad Kitchen Franchise in 2026 — ClearValue Lending
- Salata Investment Overview — franchise.salata.com
- Salata Salad Kitchen — Entrepreneur Franchise Directory
- How Salata plans to triple its store count — Restaurant Dive
- Salata Salad Kitchen — Wikipedia
- What CAVA, Sweetgreen, and Just Salad are doing right — Nation's Restaurant News
- Salad Franchise Profit Margins: Complete 2026 Guide — Breadless
- IBISWorld, "Salad Restaurants in the US" industry report, 2026 update
- International Franchise Association (IFA), 2026 Franchise Business Outlook
- US Bureau of Labor Statistics, Limited-Service Restaurants (NAICS 7225) labor cost data, Q1 2026