The Restaurant Capital Journey
Every stage demands a different capital strategy. Most owners only plan for Stage 1.
You Need More Money Than You Think. Full Stop.
The single most common reason a restaurant never reaches its first anniversary isn't bad food, bad location, or bad marketing. It's launching undercapitalized and running out of cash before the concept has a chance to find its audience. Most first-time owners underestimate startup costs by 30–50% and bring zero operating reserve to the table.
The real number for a full-service sit-down restaurant in 2025 is $375,000 to $750,000 depending on market, cuisine, and whether you're building from scratch or inheriting a partially equipped space. Fast casual and counter-service concepts can open for $150,000–$350,000. Ghost kitchens and delivery-only concepts start at $50,000–$120,000 — the most capital-efficient entry in the industry today.
The pre-opening capital stack has four layers that most first-timers conflate into one lump sum. They are not the same, and they don't come from the same sources:
1. Build-out & Tenant Improvement (TI): The physical space. Construction, permitting, plumbing, electrical, hood systems, ADA compliance. This is where costs balloon fastest. Negotiate hard on TI allowances from your landlord — a landlord offering $50/sq ft TI on a 2,000 sq ft space is giving you $100,000 you don't need to borrow.
2. Equipment: Commercial refrigeration, cooking equipment, POS systems, smallwares, furniture. This is where equipment leasing changes the game. Instead of spending $120,000 cash on equipment, an equipment lease spreads that over 48–60 months at manageable monthly payments, preserving your working capital for the harder-to-finance operational period.
3. Pre-Opening Operating Expenses: Staff training, initial food inventory, marketing, uniforms, permits, pre-opening labor. Budget 60–90 days of operating costs before you serve your first customer.
4. Working Capital Reserve: The money you will burn through in months 2–12 while you're below break-even. This is the most underfunded bucket in every restaurant startup and the direct cause of most first-year failures. Minimum: 6 months of projected fixed costs held in reserve before you open.
The best capital structure at startup: personal equity + SBA 7(a) or SBA 504 for the build and real property, equipment leasing for the kitchen, and a business line of credit for working capital. If the SBA route isn't accessible (under 2 years in business, no collateral), a combination of personal funds, equipment leasing, and a term loan from an alternative lender is the practical path.
The First Two Years Will Try to Break You.
You're open. Revenue is coming in. But the math doesn't work yet. You're covering food costs, labor, rent, utilities, and debt service — but the net at the end of the month is still negative or barely positive. This is normal for months 6 through 18. The restaurants that survive this phase do so because they planned for it financially. The ones that don't scramble for capital at the worst possible moment.
In this phase, working capital becomes the obsession. Every dollar that comes in needs a job before it arrives. Your food cost target is 28–32%. Your labor cost target is 30–35%. Together they're called Prime Cost — keep Prime Cost below 62–65% of revenue and you have a chance. Above 70% and you're mathematically unable to survive long-term without a structural change.
When does working capital borrowing make sense? In this phase, borrowing for operating costs is often necessary and not a sign of failure — it's a sign of normal restaurant economics. The question is what you borrow and at what cost.
A business line of credit is the gold standard working capital tool: draw what you need, pay it back when revenue allows, pay interest only on what's outstanding. If you established this before you needed it (ideally during startup), you have an invaluable safety net. Lenders like to give lines of credit to restaurants that don't need them; the moment you desperately need one, approval gets harder.
If a line of credit isn't accessible yet, short-term working capital loans from alternative lenders can bridge gaps. The key discipline: borrow for specific, revenue-generating purposes. Borrowing to make payroll once is survivable. Borrowing to make payroll repeatedly means the business model isn't working and you need a structural fix, not more debt.
This phase ends when you consistently clear break-even and begin building a small reserve. That typically happens between month 12 and month 24. When you first have a three-month cash cushion, you've graduated to Stage 3.
Now You Know It Works. Do You Double Down?
You've made it past the mortality window. The concept works. You have a loyal customer base, a trained team, and for the first time, the P&L is telling you something encouraging. This is the most dangerous moment in the restaurant lifecycle — not because of failure risk, but because of the temptation to expand before you're ready.
Before borrowing to grow, answer these questions honestly: Do you have 6 months of operating capital for your existing location? Do you have documented systems and processes that can be replicated without you personally running every shift? Do you have a general manager — not a great server, not your cousin — an actual operator who can run the first location while you build the second?
When the answers are yes, growth capital becomes the most powerful tool you have. The options at this stage expand significantly because you now have two years of financials, demonstrated revenue history, and (ideally) improving credit. SBA 7(a) loans up to $5 million become more accessible with real P&L history. Equipment leasing for a second kitchen buildout preserves the working capital needed to weather the new location's first six months. A commercial real estate loan starts to make sense if you're acquiring rather than leasing your second space.
The strategic question here isn't just "can I afford to expand?" It's: should I add a location, expand this location, add catering/delivery revenue, or build toward franchise infrastructure? Each path has a different capital profile and a different return on investment.
Adding revenue streams to an existing location — private dining, catering, ghost kitchen, retail products — is almost always the highest-ROI capital deployment in Stage 3. The fixed costs are already covered. Any incremental revenue above food and labor cost flows directly to EBITDA improvement, which increases your valuation for every future strategic decision.
3–10 Locations. A Real Business. Now What?
At 3 locations and above, something fundamentally changes. You are no longer running a restaurant — you are running a restaurant company. This distinction matters enormously for how you think about capital, structure, and the decisions ahead. A single-unit owner is an operator. A multi-unit owner is an investor and an executive. The skills required are different, the capital tools are different, and the strategic options are completely different.
At this stage, the right capital structure depends on your answer to one defining question: Are you building to own, building to franchise, or building to sell? These are not competing goals but they are incompatible operating postures, and confusing them is expensive.
The capital question at this stage centers on how to finance unit growth without over-leveraging the operating company. Multi-unit restaurant groups use several sophisticated tools:
Sale-Leaseback: If you own the real estate under any of your locations, a sale-leaseback transaction converts that illiquid equity into working capital while you retain operational control through a long-term lease. This can unlock $500,000 to several million dollars that the operating company can deploy toward new unit development. It's one of the most underused capital tools in multi-unit restaurant finance.
Unitranche & Franchise Development Loans: Specialized lenders offer development capital specifically structured around a multi-unit restaurant expansion plan, underwriting against the entire group's EBITDA rather than any single location. This gives access to larger loan sizes with longer terms than a conventional bank would offer.
Minority Equity Partners: At $1M+ EBITDA, private equity and family offices begin taking interest. A minority equity partner who brings capital, operational expertise, and eventually an exit path can be transformative — but dilution is permanent and investors expect returns. This is not a capital tool to pursue casually.
Franchise, Stay Private, or Go Public?
The three paths available at scale — and the honest capital calculus of each
When Does Equity Make Sense?
Debt and equity are not competitors. They are tools for different jobs — and using the wrong one at the wrong stage is one of the most costly mistakes in restaurant finance.
Use debt when: you have predictable, recurring revenue; you have identifiable assets to secure against; the return on the borrowed capital exceeds the cost of the debt; and you don't want to dilute ownership.
Use equity when: debt capacity is exhausted; you're in a growth phase that won't produce cash returns for 3+ years; you want a partner who brings strategic value beyond capital; or you're positioning for a significant liquidity event and need a co-investor who can facilitate that exit.
The spectrum of equity partners in the restaurant industry runs from friends and family at the startup stage (the most flexible, the most emotionally complex), to angel investors in the $50K–$500K range who typically take 5–20% equity, to family offices at $500K–$5M who prefer minority positions with strong governance rights, to institutional private equity at $5M+ who typically take control positions and bring a defined exit timeline of 4–7 years.
The best restaurant operators use equity as a final accelerant — after they've exhausted all debt capacity at reasonable cost — not as a substitute for getting their unit economics right. An equity partner cannot fix a restaurant with bad prime costs. They can only scale a restaurant with good ones.
| Equity Type | Range | Typical Stake | What They Bring |
|---|---|---|---|
| Friends & Family | $10K – $250K | 5–25% | Patient capital, flexible terms |
| Angel Investor | $50K – $500K | 10–25% | Capital + networks + mentorship |
| Family Office | $500K – $5M | 20–40% | Long-duration capital, light governance |
| Private Equity | $5M – $50M+ | Majority | Full professionalization + exit mgmt |
| Strategic Partner | Negotiated | Varies | Distribution, supply chain, brand reach |
What Is Your Restaurant Actually Worth?
Valuation is not vanity. It is the number that determines every strategic option available to you — and most operators don't know theirs until they've already made expensive decisions.
| Factor | Impact on Multiple | What to Do |
|---|---|---|
| Owner-operated, no GM | −1 to −2× | Hire & train a GM 2+ years before sale |
| Lease < 24 months remaining | −0.5 to −1× | Renew or negotiate option before marketing |
| Clean 3-yr P&L matches taxes | +0.5 to +1× | Run clean books from day one |
| Multiple revenue streams | +0.5 to +1× | Add catering, ghost kitchen, retail |
| Documented systems/SOPs | +0.3 to +0.7× | Build ops manuals 3 years pre-exit |
| Undisclosed MCA stack | Deal killer | Resolve before going to market |
| Franchise-ready systems | +1 to +3× | Invest in infrastructure before franchising |
Exit Is Not the End — It's the Payoff.
Every restaurant owner will exit eventually. The ones who plan for it 3–5 years in advance receive multiples that reward the work. The ones who exit under duress leave money on the table every time.
Selling to another independent operator or small group. The most common exit for single and multi-unit operators. Buyers are typically SBA-financed, which means the deal must meet SBA underwriting standards — clean books, positive EBITDA, real lease term remaining.
Price: 2–4× EBITDA. Timeline: 6–18 months to close. Advantages: simpler process, buyer motivated to maintain concept. Disadvantages: limited buyer pool, lower multiples, SBA deal requirements constrain deal structure.
Simpler process
Buyer motivated
SBA facilitates
Lowest multiple
Limited buyers
Slower close
A PE firm acquires majority control, typically as a platform acquisition or add-on to an existing restaurant portfolio. Often structured as a partial exit — you may retain 20–40% equity and participate in a second, larger exit 4–7 years later ("two bites of the apple").
Price: 4–7× EBITDA. Minimum bar: $1M+ EBITDA, proven unit economics. Advantages: liquidity now plus upside later, professional support, faster growth. Disadvantages: loss of control, defined exit timeline not always aligned with your preferences.
Higher multiple
Two bites of apple
Resources to scale
Loss of control
PE timeline pressure
Culture change
A larger restaurant group, hospitality company, or food brand acquires your concept for its brand equity, locations, customer data, or geographic presence. They pay above financial value because of the synergies your business provides to their existing portfolio.
Price: 5–10× EBITDA or more. Advantages: highest possible multiple, fastest liquidity, often all-cash. Disadvantages: concept may be changed or absorbed; requires a nationally recognizable or regionally dominant brand; the process is long and requires investment bankers.
Highest multiple
All-cash possible
Brand legacy
Concept may change
Long process
Requires advisors
Transitioning the business to a family member or key management team through a structured buyout. The buyer typically uses an SBA loan (including an ESOP structure in some cases) to finance the acquisition. Most tax-efficient for the seller in many cases.
Price: 2–4× EBITDA (often negotiated, not market-tested). Advantages: preserves culture and staff, simpler transition, emotionally satisfying. Disadvantages: family dynamics, potentially below-market price, buyer may not qualify for financing without seller carry.
Legacy preserved
Smoother transition
Tax efficiency
Below-market price
Seller carry risk
Family dynamics
Does a Restaurant Ever Stop Borrowing?
The straight answer — and what every owner needs to hear regardless of where they are in the journey.
The question most restaurant owners carry but rarely ask aloud: at what point does all this borrowing end? The answer is not what most people expect.
The most successful restaurant businesses never stop using financing strategically. The McDonald's Corporation has billions in debt on its balance sheet. Darden Restaurants — the parent of Olive Garden and LongHorn Steakhouse — regularly accesses the debt markets for expansion and share repurchases. The discipline isn't avoiding debt; it's using debt only when the return on the borrowed capital exceeds its cost.
What changes is the reason for borrowing. At Stage 1, you borrow to survive. At Stage 2, you borrow to stabilize. At Stage 3, you borrow to grow. At Stage 4, you borrow to scale. At Stage 5, you borrow to optimize — to buy out a partner, to renovate for maximum exit value, to fund a final expansion that increases the sale price by more than the debt costs.
What you should aim for is the point where you're borrowing by choice, not by necessity. That psychological shift — from survival financing to strategic financing — is the moment when a restaurant owner becomes a restaurant entrepreneur. It usually happens somewhere in Year 3 to Year 5 for operators who made good capital decisions from the start.
- Always raise more capital than you think you need — the gap will find you
- Preserve working capital — lease equipment, don't buy it cash in year 1
- Establish your line of credit before you need it — access disappears when you're desperate
- Never stack MCAs more than once without a restructuring plan
- Prime Cost above 70% is a structural problem, not a capital problem
- Know your EBITDA at all times — it is your valuation, your borrowing power, and your leverage
- Equity is expensive — exhaust debt options first at every stage
- Build exit-ready systems 3 years before you want to exit
- The lease is the second most important financial document you'll sign (after your personal guarantee)
- A great broker is not a luxury — it's the difference between the right capital at the right cost and a crisis at the wrong time
Whatever Stage You're In, We've Seen It — and Funded It.
Liberty Capital Group has worked with restaurant operators at every stage of the lifecycle — from the first equipment lease before opening day to multi-unit SBA packages to restructuring MCA debt before it becomes fatal. We don't just lend. We tell you the truth about what you need and why, even when the truth is uncomfortable. That's been our model for 20 years.
🍽 Restaurant Equipment Leasing
Preserve your working capital by leasing commercial kitchen equipment instead of buying it. Refrigeration, cooking equipment, POS systems — structured to match your revenue cycle. Available for startup concepts and established operators alike.
💼 Working Capital & Business Lines
Lines of credit, short-term working capital loans, and revenue-based financing for restaurant operators at every stage. We underwrite based on real business performance — not just credit scores — and we move fast when you need it.
🏗 Growth & Multi-Unit Financing
SBA 7(a) and 504 programs, conventional bank loans, and alternative growth capital for restaurant operators building from one unit to many. We know the restaurant credit box — and we know how to structure deals that banks say no to.