Should I open or buy a Big Chicken franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes for an operator who wants a celebrity-backed, fast-growing better-chicken-sandwich brand — Big Chicken (Shaquille O'Neal's concept) offers buzz and momentum at moderate capital, but it's a young system with execution and longevity risk. Big Chicken, founded in 2018 and co-founded by Shaquille O'Neal, franchises fast-casual chicken-sandwich restaurants built around over-the-top crispy chicken sandwiches, tenders, mac-and-cheese, and shakes with a fun, nostalgic brand.
The 2026 FDD lists a franchise fee around $40,000-$50,000, total Item 7 investment of roughly $600,000 to $1,500,000 (plus non-traditional venues like arenas/airports), a royalty near 6%, and an ad fee. Mature units gross $900,000-$1,800,000, with owners clearing $100,000-$280,000.
Its appeal is celebrity marketing power, brand buzz, a growing system, and non-traditional venue access; the challenges are a young brand's longevity risk, the brutal chicken-sandwich competition, execution, and celebrity-dependency.
The Real Numbers
A Big Chicken unit operates as a fast-casual restaurant (1,800-2,800 sq ft, often with drive-thru) or a non-traditional venue (arena, airport, ghost kitchen). Revenue is dine-in, drive-thru, digital/delivery, and event venues, with celebrity-driven brand awareness supporting traffic.
| Line Item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Franchise fee | $40,000 | $50,000 | Per 2026 FDD |
| Buildout / leasehold | $300,000 | $800,000 | Drive-thru raises cost |
| Equipment & kitchen | $160,000 | $350,000 | Fryers, POS |
| Signage & decor | $30,000 | $90,000 | Branded image |
| Initial inventory | $10,000 | $25,000 | Food + packaging |
| Initial marketing | $20,000 | $50,000 | Grand opening |
| Training & travel | $10,000 | $35,000 | Operator + staff |
| Working capital | $60,000 | $150,000 | First 3 months |
| Total Item 7 | ~$600,000 | ~$1,500,000 | Per 2026 FDD |
| Royalty | ~6% of gross | ||
| Advertising fee | ~2%-3% of gross |
Revenue reality: mature units gross $900K-$1.8M with owners clearing $100K-$280K. The Shaq-driven marketing power and brand buzz generate awareness that young brands usually lack, and non-traditional venues (arenas, airports) offer unique placement. The trade-offs are young-system longevity risk (will the buzz sustain?), the brutal chicken-sandwich wars (Chick-fil-A, Popeyes, Raising Cane's, Dave's Hot Chicken), execution risk, and celebrity-dependency (brand tied to Shaq's involvement).
Validate Item 19 and unit-level economics carefully.
Who Wins With This Business
- Capital required: $600K-$1.5M, with $200,000-$350,000 liquid.
- Time commitment: full-time QSR operator; multi-unit/venue potential.
- Skills: fast-casual operations, marketing leverage, and execution.
- Geographic fit: growth markets and non-traditional venues.
- Lifestyle fit: hands-on or multi-unit operator who values brand buzz.
The winners are operators who leverage the celebrity marketing and secure strong sites/venues while executing well.
Who Loses With This Business
- Operators uncomfortable with a young brand's longevity risk.
- Those who can't execute in the brutal chicken-sandwich segment.
- Owners over-reliant on buzz without operational discipline.
- Single weak-site operators.
- Buyers worried about celebrity-dependency without a plan.
2027 Market Conditions
- Demand: better chicken sandwiches remain hot, but the segment is crowded.
- Celebrity power: Shaq's marketing drives unusual awareness for a young brand.
- Competition: Chick-fil-A, Popeyes, Raising Cane's, Dave's Hot Chicken, Wingstop.
- Venues: arenas, airports, ghost kitchens offer non-traditional placement.
- Risk: young-system longevity and celebrity-dependency are real considerations.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Day 1-25: Read the 2026 FDD and Item 19; assess young-system risk.
- Day 26-50: Interview operators; ask about AUV, buzz sustainability, support, and net profit.
- Day 51-70: Validate a strong site or non-traditional venue.
- Day 71-130: Build and staff the unit.
- Day 131-160: Open and leverage the celebrity marketing.
- Execute operations with discipline (buzz won't fix bad ops).
- Expand units/venues if early results validate.
Alternative Plays
- Dave's Hot Chicken — fast-growing hot-chicken brand (in the Pulse library).
- Wingstop / Popeyes — established chicken franchises (in the Pulse library).
- Huey Magoo's / Slim Chickens — tender brands (see fr0825).
- Church's Texas Chicken — value fried chicken (see fr0824).
- Independent chicken-sandwich concept — full control, no brand/buzz.
- Other celebrity/emerging QSR franchises — adjacent models.
FAQ
Does the Shaq connection actually help?
Yes — celebrity marketing drives awareness that young brands rarely achieve. Shaquille O'Neal's involvement generates media, social buzz, and non-traditional venue access (arenas, events) that lower customer-acquisition friction. But buzz drives trial, not retention — operational execution determines repeat business.
The celebrity is a real asset, but you must run great operations to convert awareness into a durable, profitable unit.
How much does a Big Chicken owner make?
Owners typically clear $100,000-$280,000 per unit, on $900K-$1.8M AUV. The celebrity-driven awareness can boost traffic, but food and labor cost control and site quality determine profitability. As a young brand, results vary — review Item 19 and validate with operators.
Non-traditional venues (arenas, airports) can add high-traffic, high-margin placements.
What are the risks of a young, celebrity-backed brand?
Longevity risk and celebrity-dependency. A young system has a shorter track record and evolving support, and a celebrity-tied brand raises the question of what happens if the celebrity's involvement changes. The chicken-sandwich segment is also brutally competitive.
Mitigate by validating unit economics, operational support, and the brand's substance beyond the celebrity before investing.
Can I operate non-traditional venues?
Yes — Big Chicken has pursued arenas, airports, and ghost kitchens, offering placements beyond standard storefronts. These high-traffic venues can generate strong volumes and leverage the brand's entertainment association. Venue deals have different economics and operational demands than a freestanding unit — confirm terms, capital, and support for any non-traditional format in the FDD.
Is the chicken-sandwich segment too crowded?
It's very competitive, but still growing. Chick-fil-A, Popeyes, Raising Cane's, and Dave's Hot Chicken dominate, yet demand for better chicken sandwiches remains strong. Big Chicken differentiates through celebrity buzz and an over-the-top product. Success requires strong sites, execution, and a differentiated experience — the segment rewards operators who stand out and run disciplined operations.
Bottom Line
Open a Big Chicken if you want a celebrity-backed, buzz-driven, fast-growing chicken-sandwich brand, you can leverage the marketing while executing disciplined operations, and you're comfortable with a young system's longevity and celebrity-dependency risks. Its Shaq-driven awareness, brand buzz, growth momentum, and non-traditional venue access are genuine strengths.
Skip it if you need a proven low-variance system, can't execute in the chicken wars, or are worried about celebrity-dependency without a plan. Validate Item 19 and operators carefully. For execution-strong operators who can convert buzz into repeat business, Big Chicken offers a differentiated entry into the hot chicken-sandwich segment — sites, execution, and brand substance are the keys.
Sources
- Big Chicken Franchise Disclosure Document (2026 filing) — Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20
- Big Chicken official franchise site — investment range and concept
- Entrepreneur Franchise listings — Big Chicken
- Technomic — US chicken-sandwich segment and celebrity-brand data 2026
- IBISWorld — Chicken Restaurants in the US, 2026 industry report
- QSR Magazine — emerging and celebrity-backed brand reporting 2026
- Statista — US chicken-sandwich and QSR market, 2025-2026
- International Franchise Association (IFA) — 2027 Franchise Economic Outlook
- Nation's Restaurant News — better-chicken-sandwich growth data 2026
- Franchise Business Review — QSR-franchise satisfaction data