SKU: 97869983940

Big Boy Franchise Financial Model 2026

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Description

Big Boy Franchise Financial Model 2026What Does the Big Boy Franchise Financial Model Contain? This franchise startup cost calculator provides a complete toolkit for analyzing unit economics, from CAPEX and staffing to 5 year P&L and cash flow statements. [dynamic_pic1] All in one Dashboard Core inputs and core outputs [dynamic_pic2] Low Base High Three scenario analysis [dynamic_pic3] Professional Charts Presentation ready [dynamic_pic4] ROE Components DuPont analysis [dynamic_pic5]

What Does the Big Boy Franchise Financial Model Contain?

This franchise startup cost calculator provides a complete toolkit for analyzing unit economics, from CAPEX and staffing to 5-year P&L and cash flow statements.

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All-in-one Dashboard

Core inputs and core outputs

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Low/Base/High

Three scenario analysis

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Professional Charts

Presentation ready

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ROE Components

DuPont analysis

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Revenue Inputs

Researched revenue assumptions

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Bank-Ready Reports

Lender-friendly financial outputs

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Revenue Breakdown

Revenue stream detailed view

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KPI Dashboard

Performance metrics benchmark

Six Questions Your Big Boy Franchise Financial Model Must Answer

We built this franchise unit profitability analysis using detailed research on the concept's operational requirements. The model comes pre-loaded with data like $2.25M in year-one revenue and a $1.15M initial investment, but you can defintely edit every cell to match your local market reality. It's designed to help you move from guessing to knowing before you sign the lease.

Profitability Timeline

Profitability Timeline

This unit hits its stride quickly, reaching breakeven by March 2026, just three months after launch. While year-one EBITDA is strong at $726,000, the model accounts for rising labor and food costs as you scale. Managing food cost is the key to keeping margins healthy.

Boost Unit Margins

  • Optimize food waste
  • Control overtime pay
  • Upsell beverage items
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Capital Allocation and Startup Costs

Capital Allocation

You'll need roughly $1.15M to get this unit off the ground in the US market. This covers everything from the $50,000 franchise fee to the $450,000 in leasehold improvements. We also factor in $250,000 for kitchen equipment and a $106,000 cash buffer to handle the early months.

Major Startup Costs

  • Leasehold Improvements: $450,000
  • Kitchen Equipment: $250,000
  • Dining Furniture: $120,000
  • Digital Kiosks: $80,000
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Investor Returns and Payback

Investment Returns

The model shows a 4-year payback period, which is standard for a high-CAPEX food service financial projection template. With an IRR of 4.09% and a Return on Equity of 2.52, the focus here is on long-term stability rather than a quick flip. Steady EBITDA growth suggests a solid foundation for expansion.

Key Return Metrics

  • 4-Year Payback Period
  • 4.09% Internal Rate of Return
  • 2.52 Return on Equity
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Break-Even Point Analysis

Break-Even Analysis

You reach the break-even point in month 3, assuming you hit your monthly revenue targets. The biggest drag on this number isn't the food-it's the $18,000 monthly rent and the $85,000 GM salary. If traffic dips, fixed costs become very heavy, very fast.

Accelerate Break-Even

  • Drive breakfast volume
  • Minimize pre-opening labor
  • Negotiate rent abatement
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Cash Runway and Buffer Requirements

Cash Management

Your lowest cash point is $106,000 in March 2026 during the initial ramp-up. This is the danger zone where construction delays or slow hiring can eat your buffer. We recommend keeping at least three months of operating expenses in reserve to handle the ramp-up phase without stress.

Protect Your Cash

  • Phase furniture delivery
  • Use equipment financing
  • Manage opening inventory
  • Delay non-essential hires
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Scenario and Sensitivity Analysis

Scenario Modeling

The difference between a Low and High case often comes down to local marketing execution and throughput. In a high scenario, pushing revenue toward $3.2M early significantly improves your IRR and shortens the payback. A 10% drop in dine-in sales can push your break-even date out by months.

Drive High Performance

  • Maximize curbside speed
  • Use loyalty app data
  • Focus on guest retention
  • Optimize staff scheduling

Finance: update unit break-even and payback model by Friday.

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Big Boy Franchise Financial Model Template Features & Benefits

Fully Customizable Financial Model

FlexibleExcel Framework 

This franchise unit financial model template is built in Excel, meaning you can tweak every variable to fit your specific territory. It includes pre-filled formulas for revenue and costs, but you can easily adjust the inputs for local labor rates or rent. It's a tool for real-world planning, not just a static sheet.

  • Editable assumptions and formulas
  • Revenue and pricing drivers
  • Staffing and payroll inputs
  • Operating expense categories
Comprehensive 5-Year Financial Projections

Long-TermGrowth Forecasts 

Planning for a single unit requires looking past the grand opening. This food service financial projection template maps out five years of performance, from the initial ramp-up to mature operations. You'll see how a 10% annual revenue growth-climbing from $2.25M to over $3.29M-impacts your bottom line over time.

  • 5-year revenue forecasts
  • Profit and cash flow projections
  • Balance sheet view
  • Long-term profitability analysis
Franchise Fee and Royalty Management

Royaltyand Fee Tracking 

The franchise royalty fee structure is a major factor in your store-level margin. This model accounts for the 5% royalty and 3% marketing fund contributions right off the top. By tracking these alongside the $50,000 initial fee, you get a clear picture of the total cost of brand alignment.

  • Initial franchise fee inputs
  • Royalty expense calculations
  • Marketing fund contributions
  • Ongoing franchise cost tracking
Startup Costs and Break-Even Analysis

Investmentand Break-Even 

Estimating break-even point for new restaurant franchise locations is critical for managing your cash runway. With a total setup cost near $1.15M, you need to know exactly when the doors pay for themselves. This tool breaks down leaseholds, equipment, and furniture to show you the path to positive cash flow.

  • Total startup investment
  • Fixed and variable cost analysis
  • Break-even sales estimates
  • Margin and contribution view
Built-In Industry Benchmarks

OperationalPerformance Benchmarks 

We've baked in industry standards to help you sanity-check your restaurant franchise business plan. Whether it's food costs starting at 14.5% or labor allocations for a full staff, these benchmarks act as a guardrail. If your numbers stray too far from these norms, you'll know where to dig in.

  • Labor cost benchmarks
  • Occupancy cost benchmarks
  • Gross margin ranges
  • Revenue driver benchmarks

How to Use the Template

Download and Open

Simply purchase and download the financial model template, then access it instantly using Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets. No installation or technical expertise required-just open and start working.

Input Key Data:

Enter your business-specific numbers, including revenue projections, costs, and investment details. The pre-built formulas will automatically calculate financial insights, saving you time and effort.

Analyse Results:

Leverage the investor-ready format to confidently showcase your financial projections to banks, franchise representatives, or investors. Impress stakeholders with clear, data-driven insights and professional reports.

Present to Stakeholders:

Leverage the investor-ready format to confidently present your projections to banks, franchise representatives, or investors.

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SKU: 97869983940

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Verified Purchase
Yolando G.
San Leandro, US
★★★★★ 5
Good choice
I like the design it looks sturdy. Te Number or ports is very useful
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Reviewed in the United States on June 11, 2026
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Aaron
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
Great 10gbps USB-C Hub, worked with Anker support through compat issues with PD4 iteration 1
Original Review (updates below): ----- The moment I noticed this thing on Amazon, I bought it and it literally just arrived. Finally, 4K60 over just USB-C with other ports (including making up to 10Gbps available to them) for a reasonable price. Unfortunately, the first two things I've done with it were both disappointing. I'll cut to the chase, the power delivery pass through isn't working with one of their own chargers. The first device I tried connecting this with is my Anker PD4 with one USB-C cable as the only thing plugged into it so I can test the truly up to 100W (-15 for its own power) claims. I've tried connecting it with Apple's 2m USB-C charge cable (100w capable) and an equivalent CableMatters cable that also supports 100W. When plugged directly into my laptop, both of these cables immediately start charging it and show up as 100W power sources. When this Anker hub is plugged in and either of them is connected to the power delivery port on the side of it, the laptop does not charge (laptop is a 16" Macbook Pro, I've tried multiple ports just for the heck of it). My second complaint is that when absolutely nothing is plugged into it, it becomes fairly warm to the touch. Why, when it's doing nothing, is it hot? I'm clearly not running data or even power through it so I have low hopes for it under load. The fact that it doesn't work in exactly the scenario they want it to most (a MacBook Pro with one of their own chargers) seems like a pretty big fail. I've got lots of USB-C things though so I thought I'd grab a couple and try those. Using an Apple 96W USB-C charger, the device does pass through power delivery properly. It shows up as providing 79W to the laptop (siphoning off 17W in this instance). I also have a 56W Aukey charger that splits power between a USB-A port and a USB-C port that can provide 45W of power delivery. When plugged into that charger it does appear to work as well and appears in macOS as a 30W power source. Maybe the problem is the Anker PD4? But it works fine providing power to the laptop directly. Would love to hear from Anker about these two products working together and what I should actually expect. Having it be unreliable for power delivery isn't great, but power and heat aside (it is getting a little bit warmer now that it's providing power from the Apple power adapter, but still definitely holdable), the hardware looks and feels good and the cable feels durable. Worth also noting that there's a white LED ring on the side of it that appears to be always on when it's plugged in. Don't know why it needs an LED. ----- Update, June 22, 2020: I've done some more testing and Anker has reached out to me to investigate what might be the issue. I can say that the hub works as I would expect from a quick test with my iPad Pro 11" with the above functioning chargers. It was able to pass through power with the 96W Apple Charger on the other end to both the iPad port as well as a Magic Keyboard port. The ethernet adapter showed up in iOS settings and an external drive was functional. When connected via the Magic Keyboard, which is a power only connection, as expected it provided only power. Still no power passthrough of any kind when connected to the PD4. ----- Update July 1, 2020: I've written back and forth with Anker and they've sent me a replacement hub. It also doesn't work with the PD4. I've tried multiple USB-C cables but they have also shipped a cable to test with it. For now I'm increasing the review from 2 to 3 stars because I am more and more suspicious about the PD4 and less about this hub. They claim that they have tested the setup I have separately without issue, and I've sent video showing the problems I've encountered, so the troubleshooting is ongoing. Have had a chance to use Ethernet on it without issue. Still need to try to test out its throughput when trying to use a 10Gbps USB-C enclosure and a 4K60 monitor at the same time (+ ethernet). More updates to come. ----- Update July 10, 2020: I've continued to talk with Anker support and they shipped me a replacement PD4. The one I had was labeled as "Iteration 1" on its barcode, the one I got back was labeled "Iteration 2". I tested it out and it works perfectly with this hub, passing through the correct amount of power to multiple Macbook Pros and fast charging an iPad Pro. Clearly the fault doesn't lie with this hub and is instead an issue with the first iteration PD4, so I'm updating my review accordingly. Working with Anker support was great. I've also been able to test USB-C throughput (without driving a display as well so far) and it properly utilizes 10Gbps. I've attached some extra images showing various devices connected to it (keyboard dongle, SD card, USB-C 10Gbps external SSD enclosure, USB sound card, ethernet).
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Reviewed in the United States on June 19, 2020
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Verified Purchase
Juan Muratalla
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent Quality and Reliable Performance from Anker’s 8-in-1 USB-C Hub
I’m really impressed with this Anker USB-C Hub with Ethernet (8-in-1). The build quality feels premium, setup was completely plug-and-play, and all ports work flawlessly with my laptop. The Ethernet connection is stable and fast, which has been perfect for work calls and large file transfers. I also love how compact and portable it is while still offering plenty of connectivity options. HDMI output looks great, USB ports transfer quickly, and the SD card reader is very convenient for photo and video work. Anker continues to deliver reliable products, and this hub is no exception. Highly recommended if you need a dependable all-in-one USB-C hub for productivity or travel.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 20, 2026
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Tommy
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Works great (quick test)
Just got this and tested and works great I attached to my MacBook with Ethernet and had a solid connection I tested my steam deck by plugging in Ethernet then adding HDMI then adding power and everything worked as it was plugged in I tested my Nintendo switch even though it clearly states it's not supported and it did not work at all. Even the power pass through did nothing. This is not even remotely a problem since it was advertised as such but I figured it was with a try and worth noting
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Reviewed in the United States on May 31, 2026
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kunoh
Natrona Heights, US
★★★★★ 4
Despite some caveats; this is a versatile hub
The Anker 555 8-in-1 USB-C Hub is a good buy if you’re looking for a hub from a reputable brand. I use it with an M1 Macbook Air, and it has been reliable so far. This hub has the following ports: 1 USB-C data port, 1 USB-C Power Delivery Port, 2 USB-A data ports, 1 HDMI port, an Ethernet port, and a microSD/SD card reader. Charging, PD (Power Delivery): To keep my Macbook charging, I connect a PD (Power Delivery) capable cable to the USB-C port meant for PD. (The other USB-C Port on this hub is meant only for data.) Once connected, the hub will eventually become warm to the touch, but this hasn’t caused any problems so far. Video Performance - no problems in 1440p I can connect my 1440p 144hz monitor to this hub’s HDMI port and my Macbook Air has no problem outputting a refresh speed of 144hz, as well the lower refresh rates of 120hz and 60hz. (I do not have a 4k monitor, so I could not test that.) USB-A Ports - works flawlessly I’ve tried keyboards, USB Drives, and even gaming Mice. All of these devices work as expected when connected to the USB-A Ports. Ethernet - Excellent speed I've connect this hub using an Ethernet cable to Gigabit speed Internet. The speed is just as fast as other computers on the network, and there is no slowdown at all, even with most of the ports on the hub being used. Gaming Keyboards with USB-C connectors - some issues. Some peripherals such as keyboards with USB-C connectors may not work on the USB-C ports on this hub. I tried using a Glorious GMMK Mechanical Keyboard and it did not work with this hub’s USB-C ports. (Of course you could try to simply use a USB-C to USB-A adaptor and then connect via the other USB ports on the hub instead.) Extension Cable - Use a Thunderbolt 4 cable Although this is totally optional, I like to use a small, 6-inch USB-C Extension cable to allow this hub to have more slack away from my laptop when connected. To allow this to work, I had to use a Thunderbolt 4 extension cable. I've tried other cables such as a Thunderbolt 3 extension cable. However, some of the attached devices on the hub were not recognized. Only the the Thunderbolt 4 extension cable allowed all my attached devices to be recognized. Other devices I have successfully connected an external SSD via the USB-C data port on this hub. I also regularly use an external DAC using the USB-A ports connecting to an IFI HIP DAC. Both of these devices work perfectly with this hub. Data transfer speed is rated at 10Gbs, though I haven't actually confirmed that. It works well enough for my purposes of transferring text documents and the occasional batch of vacation photos to my external SSD. Conclusion This hub from Anker is rated at 10Gbs which is plenty for me. But if you regularly transfer large amounts of data (like for video editing), I would instead recommend a powered docking station such as those from CalDigit. But for me, this portable hub does everything I need, and for much less money.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 28, 2023

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