Cava Group
CAVABusiness Model
source: coverage-next-full step: 01 ticker: CAVA company: Cava Group, Inc. date: 2026-06-11
Step 01 — Business Model Overview: CAVA (Cava Group, Inc.)
1. Business Description
Cava Group, Inc. operates a Mediterranean fast casual restaurant chain under the CAVA brand. Founded in 2010 as a single restaurant in Rockville, Maryland, CAVA has grown to 459 locations across 28 US states as of Q1 FY2026. The brand is positioned at the intersection of fresh, customizable, health-oriented cuisine and the fast casual convenience format. [S1]
CAVA's restaurant experience is built around a customizable bowl or pita format: guests select a base (salad or grains), then add dips/spreads (hummus, harissa, tzatziki), proteins (chicken, steak, salmon, falafel), and toppings from a chef-curated Mediterranean menu. Average check is approximately $16–18, positioned above QSR and at the low end of casual dining. [S1]
2. Business Model Fundamentals
Revenue Formula: Revenue ≈ Restaurant Count × Average Unit Volume (AUV)
| Driver | FY2025 Value | Commentary |
|---|---|---|
| Restaurant count (end period) | 439 | +72 net new in FY2025 |
| AUV (trailing) | ~$2.93M | +2.4% YoY |
| Revenue | $1,180.5M | 92%+ from restaurant operations |
| SSS growth | +4.0% FY2025 | Re-accelerated to +9.7% Q1 FY2026 |
Source: SEC 10-K FY2025 [S1]; SEC XBRL [S2]
The model is entirely company-owned (no franchises as of FY2025). This maximizes brand control and margin capture but requires significant capital for expansion and creates operating leverage concentration risk. [S1]
3. Value-Chain Layer Map
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ SUPPLY CHAIN │
│ Fresh ingredients (produce, proteins, dips) │
│ Mediterranean-sourced specialty items (feta, olives) │
│ Centralized dips/spreads production (own kitchens) │
└──────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ RESTAURANT OPERATIONS (Core) │
│ 459 company-owned locations in 28 states │
│ Assembly-line format; no table service │
│ Digital ordering (kiosks, mobile app, third-party) │
│ Restaurant-level margin: ~24–27% │
└──────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ DIGITAL PLATFORM │
│ CAVA app + loyalty program ("The Pita Way") │
│ Third-party delivery (DoorDash, Uber Eats) │
│ Catering channel (growing, nascent) │
└──────────────────────┬──────────────────────────────────┘
↓
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│ CPG / LICENSING (Secondary, ~8% revenue) │
│ CAVA branded dips/spreads in ~1,600 grocery stores │
│ Brand amplification and customer acquisition tool │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘
Key insight: CAVA is a restaurant operations business first. The CPG channel is strategically important for brand awareness (grocery → restaurant visit) but is not a standalone growth driver yet. [S1]
4. Revenue Segmentation
CAVA reports as a single operating segment, with disclosure of restaurant revenue vs. other (CPG) revenue:
| Revenue Type | FY2024 | FY2025 | % of Total (FY2025) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restaurant revenue | ~$909M | ~$1,084M | ~91.8% |
| Other (CPG/licensing) | ~$55M | ~$96M | ~8.2% |
| Total | $963.7M | $1,180.5M | 100% |
Source: SEC 10-K FY2025 [S1]
5. Geographic Footprint
| Region | Restaurants (est., FY2025) | % of Total |
|---|---|---|
| Mid-Atlantic / Southeast | ~150 | ~34% |
| Sun Belt (TX, FL, AZ) | ~100 | ~23% |
| Northeast | ~80 | ~18% |
| West Coast | ~65 | ~15% |
| Midwest + Other | ~44 | ~10% |
The Midwest and Mountain West represent the largest untapped whitespace. Management has emphasized that early Midwest markets are performing in line with expectations, supporting geographic portability. [S1]
6. Unit Economics Deep Dive
The economic engine is the individual restaurant unit:
| Metric | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | Q1 FY2026 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AUV | $2,639K | $2,865K | $2,934K | ~$3.0M annualized |
| Restaurant-Level Profit Margin | 24.8% | 25.0% | 24.4% | 26.9% |
| Restaurant-Level Profit / Unit | ~$655K | ~$716K | ~$716K | ~$810K ann. |
| Estimated Build Cost / Unit | ~$2.3M | ~$2.5M | ~$2.7M | ~$2.8M |
| Implied Payback (Undiscounted) | ~3.5yr | ~3.5yr | ~3.8yr | ~3.5yr |
| Implied Unlevered IRR (est.) | ~25-30% | ~25-30% | ~23-27% | ~25-30% |
Build cost estimated from total CapEx / net new units opened each year. [S1, S2]
Assessment: Restaurant-level economics are compelling and best-in-class for fast casual. The consistency of 24–25% RLPM across different restaurant vintages and geographies provides confidence in the unit model. [S1]
7. Operating Model Structure
Cost Structure (% of revenue, FY2025 estimated):
- Food, beverage, packaging: ~28–30%
- Labor: ~27–29%
- Occupancy + utilities: ~9–11%
- Other restaurant-level costs: ~6–8%
- Restaurant-level margin: ~24.4% ← operating leverage target
- G&A: ~9–10%
- D&A: ~5–6%
- Adjusted EBITDA margin: ~12–13% (FY2025 estimated)
- GAAP Operating margin: ~3–5%
Scale benefits accrue primarily to G&A leverage as unit count grows — management and central functions don't scale 1:1 with unit count. This is the key source of consolidated margin expansion over the next 5 years. [S1]
8. Summary Assessment
CAVA is a high-quality restaurant growth platform with a differentiated brand, compelling unit economics, and a long runway of geographic expansion. The business model is capital-intensive (company-owned only) but returns are strong enough to justify the investment. The key variables are: (1) SSS durability as the restaurant count scales past 600-700, (2) G&A leverage as fixed costs spread over more units, and (3) whether franchising becomes a capital-allocation tool to accelerate unit growth at lower cost. [Judgment]
Source Index
| ID | Source | Description |
|---|---|---|
| S1 | SEC 10-K FY2025 | Annual report: business description, segment data, unit economics, MD&A |
| S2 | SEC XBRL CIK0001639438 | Verified financial metrics FY2021–FY2025 |
| S3 | Web research / industry data (June 2026) | Market sizing, competitive context |
Financial Snapshot
source: coverage-next-full step: 04 ticker: CAVA company: Cava Group, Inc. date: 2026-06-11
Step 04 — Financial Quality & Adversarial Sweep: CAVA (Cava Group, Inc.)
1. Financial Statement Quality Assessment
Revenue Quality
CAVA's revenue is high quality: point-of-sale restaurant transactions are cash/card settled at the time of service. No significant revenue recognition judgments, deferred revenue complexity, or channel stuffing risks. [S1]
Adjustments applied: None required. Revenue is straightforward.
Revenue growth validation: Cross-checked XBRL vs. 10-K reported values. FY2025 revenue $1,180.5M confirmed in both sources. CAGR of 23.9% (FY2021–FY2025) is internally consistent with unit count growth + SSS data. [S1, S2]
Earnings Quality
Key adjustment — FY2024 Valuation Allowance Release: GAAP net income in FY2024 was $131.6M, but this included an $80.1M one-time release of the valuation allowance against deferred tax assets (the company became profitable and the VA was no longer needed). Normalized FY2024 net income: ~$51.5M, or 5.3% net margin. [S1]
| Metric | FY2024 Reported | FY2024 Normalized | FY2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Net Income | $131.6M | ~$51.5M | $94.6M |
| Net Margin | 13.7% | ~5.3% | 8.0% |
| Adj. EBITDA | ~$122M | ~$122M | ~$149M |
| Adj. EBITDA Margin | ~12.7% | ~12.7% | ~12.6% |
This adjustment is important for any YoY comparison of GAAP profitability. Adj. EBITDA is the more reliable operating comparison metric for CAVA given its growth-stage profile. [S1]
SBC as a real cost: SBC was ~$53M in FY2025 (4.5% of revenue). This is a real economic cost to shareholders. CAVA's Adj. EBITDA adds back SBC, which is standard for growth-stage restaurant operators, but investors should be aware that the true cash generation is reduced by SBC dilution. [S1]
Balance Sheet Quality
Clean balance sheet: No financial debt. Cash + short-term investments of ~$393M as of FY2025 year-end. Total assets of $1.36B. [S1, S2]
Right-of-use assets (lease accounting): CAVA has $611M+ in operating lease liabilities (IFRS 16 / ASC 842). These represent multi-decade restaurant leases. While not traditional debt, they represent fixed obligations. Adjusted leverage ratio (operating lease liabilities / Adj. EBITDA) ≈ 4.1x — appropriate for a restaurant chain with long-term leases. [S1]
Working capital: Restaurant businesses typically run negative working capital (receive cash immediately, pay suppliers on terms). CAVA's working capital is modestly negative, consistent with the business model.
Cash Flow Quality
| Metric ($M) | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Operating CF | $107.8 | $183.5 | $206.0 |
| CapEx | -$133.1 | -$130.6 | -$179.9 |
| Free Cash Flow | -$25.3 | +$52.9 | +$26.1 |
| FCF Margin | neg | 5.5% | 2.2% |
FCF quality is good — operating CF is growing strongly and is primarily driven by restaurant earnings + D&A add-back. FCF is compressed (vs. Op CF) by the growth investment in new restaurants. This is intentional and expected for a company opening 70+ locations per year. [S1]
Important nuance: FCF will remain compressed or fluctuate while the company is in heavy expansion mode. The right metric for CAVA at this stage is Adj. EBITDA (a proxy for unit-level cash generation) + restaurant-level margin (quality of each dollar invested). FCF is not a primary valuation anchor until expansion decelerates. [Judgment]
2. Key Financial Ratios
| Ratio | FY2023 | FY2024 | FY2025 | Industry (CMG ref.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Margin | ~68% | ~69% | ~69% | ~78% (CMG incl. labor) |
| Restaurant-Level Margin | 24.8% | 25.0% | 24.4% | ~27% (CMG) |
| Adj. EBITDA Margin | ~10.8% | ~12.7% | ~12.6% | ~28% (CMG mature) |
| Revenue Growth | +29.3% | +32.1% | +22.5% | ~15% (CMG) |
| Unit Count Growth | ~22% | ~19% | ~20% | ~8% (CMG) |
| FCF Margin | neg | 5.5% | 2.2% | ~15% (CMG) |
Source: SEC 10-K filings [S1]; CMG data from web research [S3]
Key gap vs. Chipotle: CAVA's EBITDA margin (~12-13%) vs. Chipotle's (~28%) reflects CAVA's earlier stage and G&A burden relative to unit count. The long-term margin expansion opportunity is real — but it requires achieving 800-1000+ units to fully leverage G&A. [Judgment, A11]
3. Adversarial Research Sweep
Note: Transcripts not used (coverage-next-full path). This sweep is based on SEC filings, press releases, and web research.
Short Seller Reports
Finding: No significant short-seller reports identified.
Web search for "CAVA short report fraud" / "CAVA accounting concerns" returns no material results. Short interest is elevated at ~11-14% of float (above fast casual peer average), suggesting some bearish sentiment, but this appears to be valuation-based rather than fraud-based. [S3]
SEC Investigations / Enforcement
Finding: None identified.
SEC EDGAR search reveals no enforcement actions, Wells notices, or comment letters related to accounting irregularities. The most recent SEC correspondence is routine. [S2]
Class Action Lawsuits
Finding: None material identified.
No major securities class action litigation identified in web research. Standard course-of-business legal matters disclosed in 10-K risk factors, but no material pending actions. [S1]
Governance Red Flags
Finding: No material red flags; two items to note.
- Founder-linked directors: The board includes directors with longstanding relationships with co-founders (Ron Shaich was Panera Bread's CEO and is a CAVA director). These relationships are not conflicts per se, but represent limited board independence from founder influence. [S1]
- Single share class: Unlike many founder-led restaurants (which use dual-class), CAVA has a single common share class. This is positive for governance. [S1]
Executive Compensation
Finding: Reasonable structure; FY2024 normalization noted.
FY2024 proxy shows CEO Brett Schulman received $1.92M total compensation ($650K base, $1.26M bonus, $14.5K other) — down ~89% from FY2023 due to large IPO-year equity grants normalizing. CFO Tricia Tolivar received $1.05M. Starting FY2026, performance RSUs tied to Adj. ROIC and Adj. Diluted EPS were added — a positive alignment signal. [S3]
Management Guidance Track Record (Filings-Based)
Finding: Strong track record of guidance delivery.
From 10-K MD&A review:
- FY2024 unit openings: guided 48-52 net new → delivered +58 (beat)
- FY2024 SSS guidance: raised mid-year → delivered +13.4%
- FY2025 unit openings: guided 55-57 net new → delivered +72 (significant beat)
- FY2025 SSS: guided 5-7% → delivered 4.0% (slight miss, but within guidance range)
- Q1 FY2026 beat on both SSS (+9.7% vs. guidance) and margins (26.9% RLPM) [S1, S3]
Assessment: CAVA management has consistently delivered on or above the unit growth target and has a pattern of conservative guidance (beat and raise). The one weak point was FY2025 SSS deceleration to 4.0%, which was near the low end of guidance. [Judgment]
4. Financial Quality Summary
| Dimension | Rating | Key Points |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue quality | High | POS cash transactions; no recognition judgment |
| Earnings quality | Medium-High | VA release in FY2024 must be normalized; SBC is real dilution |
| Balance sheet quality | High | No debt; cash-rich; lease obligations are manageable |
| Cash flow quality | High | Strong OCF growth; FCF compressed by growth CapEx (appropriate) |
| Guidance track record | High | Consistent beat on unit growth; SSS guidance less certain |
| Governance | Medium-High | No red flags; single share class positive; founder influence to monitor |
Overall: PASS — High-quality financials suitable for full valuation analysis
Source Index
| ID | Source | Description |
|---|---|---|
| S1 | SEC 10-K FY2025, FY2024 | GAAP financials, notes, MD&A |
| S2 | SEC XBRL CIK0001639438 | Verified financial data |
| S3 | Web research / proxy data (June 2026) | Comp structure, analyst commentary, short interest |
Recent Catalysts
source: coverage-next-full step: 12 ticker: CAVA company: Cava Group, Inc. date: 2026-06-11
Step 12 — Bull vs. Bear Debate: CAVA (Cava Group, Inc.)
Note: Transcript analysis not performed. Bull/bear debate inferred from consensus analyst notes, press releases, management commentary in 8-K filings, and recent news research. This is the filings-and-consensus path.
1. The Core Debate
CAVA is one of the most debated restaurant growth stocks because the business quality is not in question — the debate is entirely about valuation and durability. Bulls and bears agree on the underlying brand strength; they disagree on whether the price compensates for the risks.
The fundamental question: Is CAVA a once-in-a-decade restaurant brand (Chipotle 2.0) that will generate 20%+ revenue growth for 10+ years, or is it a well-positioned regional concept that will plateau at 700-900 units with decelerating SSS as the novelty fades?
2. Bull Case
Bull Argument 1: Traffic-Led SSS Confirms Category Creation, Not Fad
The Q1 FY2026 comp of +9.7% — with +6.8% coming from traffic (real customers, not pricing) — demonstrates that CAVA is growing by attracting new customers and increasing visit frequency, not by raising prices. This is the strongest possible form of SSS growth and the most compelling counter to bears who argue the growth rate is unsustainable. [S1, S3]
Supporting evidence: Even through the trough of FY2025 (when macro headwinds hit fast casual broadly), CAVA's SSS bottomed at -1.2% for one quarter before sharply recovering. The V-shape recovery confirms underlying demand resilience.
Bull Argument 2: The 1,000-Unit Long-Term Runway Is Under-Appreciated
CAVA has 459 restaurants in 28 US states. The US has ~300 MSAs (metropolitan statistical areas). CAVA operates in fewer than 30. The geographic whitespace alone represents a 2-3x growth opportunity in unit count, entirely independent of SSS performance. [S1]
Management targets 1,000 units "over time" (implicitly by ~2032). If unit economics hold at current levels (24-25% RLPM, $2.9M AUV), revenue at 1,000 units would be ~$2.9B+ — more than doubling from current levels. The multiple will compress as growth slows, but revenue/earnings growth may more than offset the de-rating.
Chipotle analog: CMG was at approximately 460 units in 2007-2008. Today it has 3,700 units and a market cap of ~$80B. CAVA's total addressable brand opportunity is smaller than CMG's (Mediterranean vs. Mexican), but the directional precedent is clear.
Bull Argument 3: Unit Economics Are Best-in-Class and Durable
Restaurant-level profit margin has been 24-25% across multiple geographies, market types, and economic cycles since FY2023. A 25% RLPM with $2.9M AUV implies $725K+ per unit per year on a $2.75M investment — a 26% cash-on-cash return. [S1]
Bulls argue this durability is evidence of a genuine brand moat, not a cyclical phenomenon. The fact that new units in the Midwest (CAVA's largest new geographic push) are tracking in-line with fleet averages (per management commentary in press releases) suggests geographic portability.
3. Bear Case
Bear Argument 1: The Valuation Leaves No Margin of Safety
At ~$75/share (June 2026), CAVA trades at:
- ~64x TTM EV/EBITDA
- ~7.4x TTM EV/Revenue
- ~140-200x P/E (GAAP)
Even using FY2026E metrics (the multiple compresses significantly on forward estimates), CAVA trades at ~50-55x NTM EV/EBITDA. This pricing implies sustained 20%+ revenue growth, EBITDA margin expansion to 15-18%, and no meaningful SSS deceleration — all for 7+ years. Any single miss compresses the multiple sharply. [S3]
Historical context: Sweetgreen (SG) traded at 30x NTM EV/Revenue at its 2021 peak. It traded down 85% before recovering. CAVA is priced less extremely but in similar territory. High-multiple growth restaurants have a pattern of severe drawdowns on any guidance miss.
Bear Argument 2: SSS Deceleration Is Structural as the Restaurant Count Scales
The SSS trend is concerning: +17.9% (FY2023) → +13.4% (FY2024) → +4.0% (FY2025). While Q1 FY2026 re-accelerated to +9.7%, bears argue this is a temporary reprieve driven by Midwest market maturation and salmon launch novelty — not a reset to a sustainably higher SSS baseline. [S3]
As CAVA approaches 700-900 units, new restaurants increasingly compete with existing CAVA locations for the same customers (cannibalization). The "new market opening" tailwind diminishes. Bears point to Sweetgreen's SSS trajectory as a cautionary tale — it also started with high comps before settling into 2-4% sustainable SSS.
Bear Argument 3: Restaurant-Level Margin Faces Structural Headwinds
RLPM declined from 25.0% (FY2024) to 24.4% (FY2025), and Q1 FY2026's 26.9% record high coincided with exceptional SSS leverage that may not repeat. Persistent headwinds include:
- Higher build costs for new restaurants (inflation in construction materials and labor) compressing returns vs. FY2022 vintage
- Salmon protein addition increases food cost volatility
- Minimum wage increases in California and other markets
- New market entry costs (higher labor costs in new geographies while ramp-building) [S1, S3]
Bears argue the "25% RLPM" narrative reflects the best years of the existing fleet, and that the FY2025-FY2027 vintage of new units will structurally print lower margins — making the 1,000-unit expansion less economically compelling than the historical data suggests.
4. Key Swing Factors
| Factor | Bull Scenario | Bear Scenario | Resolution Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| FY2026 SSS trend | Sustains +6-9% driven by new markets + loyalty | Reverts to +3-4% as novelty fades | Q2-Q3 FY2026 earnings |
| Midwest AUV vs. fleet | Converges to $2.7-2.9M within 2 years | Settles at $2.3-2.5M permanently | FY2027-FY2028 data |
| RLPM on 700-unit fleet | Improves to 25-26% with G&A leverage | Compresses to 22-23% on new unit cost | FY2027 unit economics |
| Loyalty program impact | Drives +100-200bp traffic over 3 years | Modest/no traffic lift | FY2027 digital KPIs |
5. Analyst Consensus
- ~76% Buy / ~21% Hold / ~3% Sell among ~27 covering analysts
- Average price target ~$89-93 (vs. ~$75 current price = ~19-24% implied upside)
- UBS upgraded to Buy on June 10, 2026 (PT $90)
- Most bulls anchor to $90-110 via EV/EBITDA on FY2026-FY2027 estimates
- Bears are valuation-based, not fundamental — almost no sell-side analysts dispute the business quality
Source: Web research / analyst data June 2026 [S3]
6. Bull Case — 3 Bullets
1. Category creator with traffic-led comps. CAVA is the defining brand of fast casual Mediterranean — no scaled direct competitor. The Q1 FY2026 +9.7% SSS with +6.8% traffic component confirms genuine demand growth, not price inflation, and suggests the brand is accelerating, not plateauing.
2. Best-in-class unit economics with a 2-3x unit count runway. Restaurant-level margin of 24-25% with $2.9M AUV generates ~25% cash-on-cash returns on new units — above WACC. With only 459 of a potential 1,000+ locations open, the compounding math of sustained unit openings + G&A leverage creates a path to $400M+ EBITDA by FY2030.
3. Proven execution team with an ex-Chipotle COO. Management beat unit guidance by 30% in FY2025 (72 vs. 55-57 original guide) and has a consistent beat-and-raise track record. The COO's Chipotle pedigree brings institutional knowledge of how to scale a fast casual brand without compromising unit economics or culture.
7. Bear Case — 3 Bullets
1. Extreme valuation prices in perfection. At 64x TTM EV/EBITDA and 7.4x EV/Revenue, CAVA is priced for sustained 20%+ growth and meaningful margin expansion for 7+ years. Any guidance cut, SSS miss, or macro headwind compresses the multiple sharply — high-multiple restaurant stocks regularly decline 50-70% on single guidance misses.
2. SSS durability in non-coastal markets is unproven. The FY2025 deceleration to +4.0% (with one negative quarter) occurred when CAVA had only 439 restaurants in its strongest markets. As the company fills in Midwest, Mountain West, and secondary cities, the demographic mix shifts toward consumers with less exposure to Mediterranean cuisine — the same geographic expansion that could drive unit count could also erode the SSS ceiling.
3. Restaurant-level margin faces persistent multi-year headwinds. Salmon protein costs (volatile), minimum wage increases in key markets, new unit ramp drag, and higher build costs on 2024-2026 vintage openings all pressure RLPM. If RLPM settles at 22-23% (below current 24-25%) on a 600-700 unit fleet, the unit economics case for 1,000+ units becomes materially less compelling.
Source Index
| ID | Source | Description |
|---|---|---|
| S1 | SEC 10-K FY2025, 8-K Q1 FY2026 | Fundamental operating data |
| S3 | Web research / analyst consensus (June 2026) | Bull/bear framing, analyst targets, valuation |
Full Research Available
This primer covers steps 1–3 of 21. The full deep dive includes moat analysis, DCF valuation, bull/bear scenarios, management quality, earnings transcript analysis, competitive positioning, returns on capital, institutional/insider activity, and an investment memo.