Should I open or buy a PDQ franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Proceed carefully: PDQ is a premium chicken-tender fast-casual brand that has largely retrenched to company operations and pulled back on franchising — confirm current franchise availability before pursuing it, and weigh higher capital. PDQ ("People Dedicated to Quality"), founded in 2011 by an Outback Steakhouse co-founder and MVP Holdings, operates premium chicken-tender fast-casual restaurants with made-to-order tenders, sandwiches, salads, and hand-spun shakes.
Notably, PDQ has been primarily company-operated and scaled back franchising after earlier expansion, so a new franchise may not be readily available. Where franchising applies, a comparable build runs a franchise fee around $35,000-$50,000 with total investment of roughly $1,000,000 to $2,500,000 (full-service kitchens are costly), a royalty near 5%, and an ad fee.
AUVs are strong ($1.5M-$2.5M+), but the model is operationally intensive and capital-heavy. Confirm availability; if closed to franchising, pursue an emerging tender brand (Huey Magoo's, Slim Chickens) instead.
The Real Numbers
A PDQ unit is a premium fast-casual restaurant (often with double drive-thru) of 3,000-4,500 sq ft with a scratch-cooking kitchen (fresh tenders, hand-spun shakes), making it more capital- and labor-intensive than a typical tender QSR. Revenue is dine-in, drive-thru, and digital.
| Line Item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Franchise fee (if available) | $35,000 | $50,000 | Confirm availability |
| Buildout / leasehold | $500,000 | $1,400,000 | Scratch kitchen, drive-thru |
| Equipment & kitchen | $300,000 | $600,000 | Fresh-prep, fryers, POS |
| Signage & decor | $40,000 | $120,000 | Premium image |
| Initial inventory | $15,000 | $35,000 | Fresh food |
| Initial marketing | $25,000 | $60,000 | Grand opening |
| Training & travel | $15,000 | $45,000 | Operator + staff |
| Working capital | $90,000 | $250,000 | First 3-4 months |
| Total investment | ~$1,000,000 | ~$2,500,000 | Capital-heavy |
| Royalty | ~5% of gross | ||
| Advertising fee | ~2%-4% of gross |
Revenue reality: PDQ units can gross $1.5M-$2.5M+ — strong AUVs — but the scratch-cooking model is labor-intensive (32%-38% labor) and capital-heavy, compressing margins relative to a simpler tender QSR. This operational intensity is part of why PDQ retrenched to company operations and scaled back franchising — the model is harder to franchise profitably.
Before pursuing PDQ, confirm whether franchising is currently open. If it's closed, an emerging tender franchise (Huey Magoo's, Slim Chickens, Zaxby's) offers a more accessible path to the same growing niche.
Who Wins With This Path
- Capital required: $1M-$2.5M (if franchising is open), with $400,000+ liquid.
- Time commitment: full-time, operationally intensive scratch-kitchen operation.
- Skills: high-volume fast-casual operations and labor management.
- Geographic fit: high-traffic, growth markets.
- Lifestyle fit: experienced, well-capitalized restaurateur.
The winners are experienced, well-capitalized restaurateurs — if and where PDQ franchising is available.
Who Loses With This Path
- Buyers who assume PDQ is readily franchisable — confirm first.
- Under-capitalized operators facing the $1M+ build.
- Those who underestimate scratch-kitchen labor intensity.
- Single-unit, low-volume locations.
- Operators wanting a simple, turnkey tender QSR (choose an emerging brand).
2027 Market Conditions
- Demand: premium chicken tenders remain popular in a growing niche.
- Franchising status: PDQ is largely company-operated — availability is the key question.
- Capital intensity: scratch-cooking model is costly and labor-heavy.
- Competition: Raising Cane's, Slim Chickens, Huey Magoo's, Chick-fil-A, Zaxby's.
- Alternative: emerging tender franchises offer more accessible entry.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- First: confirm whether PDQ franchising is currently open — it has largely retrenched to company operations.
- If closed, pursue an emerging tender franchise (Huey Magoo's, Slim Chickens, Zaxby's).
- If open, read the FDD and Item 19 AUV/margin data.
- Interview operators about labor intensity, capital, and net profit.
- Validate a high-traffic site and secure $1M+ capital.
- Build and open the scratch-kitchen unit.
- Drive high-volume operations to justify the capital intensity.
Alternative Plays
- Huey Magoo's — emerging premium-tender franchise (see fr0825).
- Slim Chickens / Zaxby's — established tender brands (in the Pulse library).
- Raising Cane's — tender specialist (limited franchising).
- Church's Texas Chicken — value fried chicken (see fr0824).
- Independent premium tender concept — full control, no brand.
- Other fast-casual franchises — adjacent models.
FAQ
Can I actually buy a PDQ franchise?
Confirm directly — PDQ has been primarily company-operated and scaled back franchising. After earlier expansion (including some franchised units), the brand retrenched toward corporate operations, so a new franchise may not be available. Before investing time, verify current franchise availability and terms with the company.
If franchising is closed, pursue an emerging tender brand that actively franchises instead.
Why did PDQ pull back on franchising?
The scratch-cooking, premium model is operationally intensive and harder to franchise profitably. Fresh, made-to-order tenders and hand-spun shakes require higher labor (32%-38%) and capital than a simpler tender QSR, compressing margins and complicating franchise economics.
Brands with simpler operations scale via franchising more easily, which is part of why PDQ leaned toward company operations.
What would a PDQ cost to build?
Roughly $1,000,000-$2,500,000 for the scratch-kitchen, drive-thru format — capital-heavy versus simpler tender concepts. This high capital intensity, combined with labor demands, is a key reason the model is challenging to franchise. If you're considering this level of investment, compare against emerging tender franchises that may offer better franchise-economics and active support.
What are the better-accessible alternatives?
Emerging tender franchises that actively franchise — Huey Magoo's, Slim Chickens, and Zaxby's — offer entry into the same fast-growing tender niche with available franchising, support, and (often) lower capital. If your goal is a chicken-tender business, these are more practical paths than pursuing a brand that has retrenched from franchising.
Validate each brand's Item 19 and operators.
Is the tender niche still attractive?
Yes — chicken tenders are one of QSR's fastest-growing categories, proven by Raising Cane's and Slim Chickens. The niche is attractive; the question with PDQ is access and capital intensity, not category demand. Pursue the niche through an available, well-supported franchise with manageable economics rather than a capital-heavy, largely-corporate brand.
Bottom Line
Approach PDQ with eyes open — it's a high-quality premium-tender brand, but it has largely retrenched to company operations and scaled back franchising, and its scratch-cooking model is capital- and labor-intensive ($1M-$2.5M). First, confirm whether franchising is even open.
If it is and you're an experienced, well-capitalized restaurateur in a strong market, the high AUVs can work. If franchising is closed or you want a more accessible, better-supported entry into the tender niche, choose an emerging franchise like Huey Magoo's, Slim Chickens, or Zaxby's. The tender category is hot — pursue it through an available, manageable franchise rather than a capital-heavy, largely-corporate brand.
Sources
- PDQ corporate and franchising-status information, 2025-2026 — company-operated model
- PDQ Franchise Disclosure Document (if/where available), 2026 filing — Items 5, 6, 7, 19
- Public reporting on PDQ's retrenchment and company-operation strategy
- Technomic — US chicken-tender and fast-casual segment data 2026
- IBISWorld — Chicken Restaurants in the US, 2026 industry report
- QSR Magazine — premium fast-casual chicken reporting 2026
- Statista — US fast-casual and chicken-tender market, 2025-2026
- International Franchise Association (IFA) — 2027 Franchise Economic Outlook
- Nation's Restaurant News — fast-casual chicken trends 2026
- Emerging tender-franchise alternatives (Huey Magoo's, Slim Chickens, Zaxby's), 2026