Should I open or buy a Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes for an operator who wants into the booming Mediterranean fast-casual category with a build-your-own concept at moderate capital — Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh offers a proven assembly-line Med model, though it's a mid-size system competing against Cava's scale. Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh, founded in 2007 in Colorado, franchises fast-casual Mediterranean restaurants with a build-your-own pita, plate, bowl, and salad line featuring shawarma, falafel, hummus, and fresh-baked pita.
The 2026 FDD lists a franchise fee around $35,000, total Item 7 investment of roughly $400,000 to $850,000, a royalty near 5%-6%, and an ad fee. Mature units gross $700,000-$1,400,000, with owners clearing $80,000-$220,000. Its appeal is the fast-growing Mediterranean category, moderate capital, an efficient assembly-line model, fresh-baked pita, and catering; the challenges are competition (Cava, others), food/labor cost, mid-size brand awareness, and site selection.
The Real Numbers
A Garbanzo operates as a fast-casual unit (2,000-2,600 sq ft) with a build-your-own Mediterranean assembly line and fresh-baked pita, serving dine-in, takeout, delivery, and catering.
| Line Item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Franchise fee | $35,000 | $35,000 | Per 2026 FDD |
| Buildout / leasehold | $220,000 | $470,000 | Fast-casual fit-out |
| Equipment & line | $110,000 | $230,000 | Line, pita oven, POS |
| Signage & decor | $20,000 | $58,000 | Brand image |
| Initial inventory | $10,000 | $25,000 | Fresh food + packaging |
| Initial marketing | $14,000 | $38,000 | Grand opening |
| Training & travel | $10,000 | $28,000 | Operator + staff |
| Working capital | $40,000 | $110,000 | First 3 months |
| Total Item 7 | ~$400,000 | ~$850,000 | Per 2026 FDD |
| Royalty | ~5%-6% of gross | ||
| Advertising fee | ~2%-3% of gross |
Revenue reality: mature units gross $700K-$1.4M with owners clearing $80K-$220K. The booming Mediterranean category (validated by Cava), moderate capital, efficient assembly-line model, and fresh-baked pita differentiator support solid economics, with catering adding incremental revenue.
The trade-offs are competition from Cava and other Med concepts, food/labor cost, and mid-size brand awareness. Operators who ride the category trend, leverage fresh pita, drive catering, and control cost earn the most. Validate Item 19 against Cava and peers.
Who Wins With This Business
- Capital required: $400K-$850K, with $150,000-$225,000 liquid.
- Time commitment: full-time fast-casual operator; multi-unit potential.
- Skills: fast-casual operations, catering sales, and cost control.
- Geographic fit: health-conscious suburban/urban/office markets.
- Lifestyle fit: hands-on or multi-unit operator.
The winners are operators who ride the Mediterranean trend and execute well in strong sites.
Who Loses With This Business
- Operators who can't differentiate against Cava's scale.
- Those who can't control fresh-food and labor cost.
- Owners in weak sites or markets without Med demand.
- Buyers who ignore catering and fresh-pita differentiation.
- Under-capitalized operators.
2027 Market Conditions
- Demand: Mediterranean is the fastest-growing fast-casual category.
- Differentiation: fresh-baked pita adds a quality edge.
- Catering: incremental high-margin channel.
- Competition: Cava, The Simple Greek, Roti, Luna Grill, Taziki's.
- Cost: fresh-ingredient and labor cost pressure margins.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Day 1-25: Read the 2026 FDD and Item 19 economics.
- Day 26-50: Interview 8+ operators; ask about AUV, catering, food/labor cost, and net profit.
- Day 51-70: Validate a health-conscious site with catering demand.
- Day 71-120: Build and staff the unit.
- Day 121-150: Open and launch catering; promote fresh-baked pita.
- Leverage the fresh-pita differentiator and control cost.
- Ride the Mediterranean category trend; consider multi-unit.
Alternative Plays
- Cava — Mediterranean leader (largely corporate/limited franchising).
- The Simple Greek / Roti / Luna Grill / Taziki's — Med concepts (see fr0839, fr0841-fr0843).
- Salsarita's / Pancheros — fresh-Mex assembly-line (see fr0836, fr0838).
- Playa Bowls / Clean Juice — health fast-casual (in the library).
- Independent Mediterranean concept — full control, no brand.
- Other fast-casual franchises — adjacent models.
FAQ
How much does a Garbanzo owner make?
Owners typically clear $80,000-$220,000 per unit, on $700K-$1.4M AUV. The moderate capital, efficient model, fresh-baked pita, and catering support solid economics when food/labor cost is controlled and the category tailwind drives traffic. Operators who drive catering and leverage the fresh-pita edge earn more.
Review Item 19 and benchmark against Cava and Med peers before committing.
What makes Garbanzo different?
Fresh-baked pita and a build-your-own Mediterranean line. Garbanzo bakes pita fresh in-house and offers a customizable assembly-line model (pita, plate, bowl, salad) with shawarma, falafel, and hummus. The fresh-pita differentiator and multi-decade-validated category give operators a quality story.
It competes in the same space as Cava but at moderate capital with an established mid-size system.
Why is Mediterranean booming?
Health-conscious eating, bold flavors, and customization drive the category, validated by Cava's rapid growth and IPO. Mediterranean food aligns with strong dietary trends (lean proteins, vegetables, healthy fats) and broad appeal. The category is the fastest-growing in fast-casual, giving brands like Garbanzo a powerful tailwind.
Operators benefit from riding this durable, growing demand.
How important is catering?
Catering is a meaningful incremental, high-margin channel. Mediterranean food caters well (platters, bowls, group orders) for offices and events, adding revenue without proportional dine-in cost. Operators who build catering relationships boost AUV and profitability. Treating catering as a core channel is a key lever for Garbanzo's unit economics in the growing Med segment.
Is Garbanzo a good multi-unit play?
Yes — the moderate capital and proven model suit multi-unit growth. Operators can build several units, spreading overhead and leveraging catering across locations, while riding the category tailwind. The established mid-size system (since 2007) reflects a stable model.
Confirm development terms and ensure each site is strong — multi-unit works only when individual units are profitable and well-located in Med-receptive markets.
Bottom Line
Open a Garbanzo if you want a moderate-capital entry into the booming Mediterranean fast-casual category with an efficient build-your-own model, a fresh-baked-pita differentiator, and catering, you can ride the category trend and control cost, and you're in a health-conscious market. Its moderate capital, booming category, fresh-pita edge, and catering are genuine strengths.
Skip it if you can't differentiate against Cava, can't control costs, or are in a weak market. Validate Item 19 against Cava and peers. For execution-strong operators riding the Mediterranean trend, Garbanzo offers a solid entry into one of fast-casual's hottest categories — category tailwind, fresh-pita differentiation, catering, and cost control are the keys.
Sources
- Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh Franchise Disclosure Document (2026 filing) — Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20
- Garbanzo official franchise site — investment range and fresh-pita model
- Entrepreneur Franchise listings — Garbanzo Mediterranean Fresh
- Technomic — US Mediterranean fast-casual segment data 2026
- IBISWorld — Mediterranean & Fast-Casual Restaurants in the US, 2026 industry report
- Statista — US Mediterranean fast-casual market and growth, 2025-2026
- Nation's Restaurant News — Mediterranean category growth reporting 2026
- International Franchise Association (IFA) — 2027 Franchise Economic Outlook
- QSR Magazine — Mediterranean fast-casual trends 2026
- Franchise Business Review — restaurant-franchise satisfaction data