Investment verdict01Is a Korean BBQ Restaurant Worth It?
That is a realistic planning range for an independent U.S. location, from a disciplined second-generation conversion to a large, ground-up-style build. A well-run mature store can produce attractive cash flow, but the model is unforgiving when table turns, beef yield, or ventilation costs miss plan.
The concept can be a good business because customers accept a higher check for an experience they cannot easily replicate at home: grill-at-the-table dining, shareable meals, premium proteins, drinks, and group occasions. The catch is that the same feature that creates the experience also raises capital intensity. Every table may need gas or electric service, exhaust, fire protection, durable grill hardware, and more cleaning labor than a conventional dining room.
A useful comparable is GEN Restaurant Group, a public all-you-can-eat Korean barbecue operator. Its 2024 filing reported $5.457 million in average unit volume, food cost of 33.0%, payroll and benefits of 30.9%, and restaurant-level adjusted EBITDA margin of 17.7%. Those figures prove the format can scale, but they should be treated as a high-performing comparable rather than a promise for an independent startup. See the GEN Restaurant Group 2024 annual report.
Decision-grade takeaways
- Proceed only when the site can support roughly two or more seat turns per open day at the planned average check.
- Underwrite food and labor together as prime cost; a beautiful dining room cannot rescue a recurring 70% prime-cost problem.
- Reserve more cash for construction surprises and the first six months than for decorative upgrades.
Signature economics02Table Grills and Exhaust Decide the Economics
In a conventional full-service restaurant, the dining room is mostly furniture and finishes. Here, the dining room is part of the production system. A 28-table plan can mean 28 combustion or electrical points, 28 grill assemblies, dozens of duct connections, make-up air, roof penetrations, suppression coverage, grease handling, and a cleaning routine that touches every revenue-producing table.
Why the build becomes expensive
Illustrative share of a $1.55 million build-and-open budget; the largest categories are shown in the darkest indigo.
The ventilation decision is not merely technical. It controls ceiling height, duct paths, landlord approval, roof work, electrical or gas load, air balance, inspection timing, maintenance expense, and how many tables can fit. NFPA 96 is the core commercial-cooking fire-safety standard used by authorities having jurisdiction, while local mechanical and fire codes determine the actual installation. Review the NFPA 96 standard overview before the lease is signed.
Do not negotiate rent before a mechanical engineer sketches the exhaust path and utility load. A “cheap” shell can become the most expensive site in the market when ducts must cross another tenant, the roof cannot accept penetrations, or make-up air consumes sellable space.
Startup capital03What Does It Cost to Open a Korean BBQ Restaurant?
Plan on $750,000–$2.8 million for a leased location. The low end assumes a second-generation restaurant with usable grease, plumbing, electrical capacity, restrooms, and a landlord willing to fund part of the improvements. The high end covers a larger shell, major mechanical work, premium grill systems, extensive finishes, and a deeper cash reserve.
| Startup category | Lean conversion | Full build | What moves the number |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lease deposit, legal, design due diligence | $25,000 | $90,000 | Market rent, guaranty, architects, engineers, surveys |
| Plans, permits, professional fees | $35,000 | $140,000 | Plan review cycles, liquor licensing, utility studies |
| General buildout and leasehold improvements | $250,000 | $900,000 | Shell condition, HVAC, bathrooms, finishes, schedule |
| Table grills, exhaust, gas/electric and suppression | $120,000 | $420,000 | Table count, system type, duct length, roof work |
| Kitchen, refrigeration, dish and prep equipment | $110,000 | $350,000 | New versus used, walk-ins, meat prep, dish capacity |
| Furniture, POS, smallwares and security | $60,000 | $190,000 | Seat count, custom millwork, technology package |
| Opening inventory, training and launch marketing | $40,000 | $120,000 | Menu breadth, alcohol, pre-opening payroll, media |
| Working capital and contingency | $110,000 | $590,000 | Debt service, delayed opening, ramp speed, overruns |
| Total planning range | $750,000 | $2,800,000 | Excludes land purchase |
Planning assumptions, not a contractor quote. The comparable GEN chain filing reported average net buildout costs of about $2.2 million for restaurants opened in 2023–2024 and a target below $3.0 million for new units.
The most controllable saving is not buying cheaper grills. It is choosing a site that already has restaurant infrastructure. Reusing a grease interceptor, adequate electrical service, a compliant hood route, and permitted restrooms can save months and six figures. Used back-of-house equipment can also work, but the grill and exhaust package should be selected for serviceability, replacement parts, and local approval—not just purchase price.
Do not use the construction budget as the opening budget. A restaurant can finish the build and still fail before month six because the cash reserve was spent on finishes. Ring-fence working capital before approving upgrades.
Opening sequence04How Do You Open Without Burning Cash?
A realistic opening path is 9–15 months from concept validation to first service, with longer schedules in dense cities or when liquor, utility, roof, and fire reviews are complex. The sequence matters because rent and payroll can start months before revenue.
Food protection rules are implemented primarily through state and local agencies, often based on the FDA Food Code. Expect plan review, food-establishment permits, certified food-protection management, inspection, and ongoing controls for raw meat handling, refrigeration, sanitation, cross-contamination, and consumer cooking at the table. The FDA Food Code is the national model, but the local health department is the authority that determines your actual requirements and fees.
Alcohol can improve the check and contribution margin, especially with beer, soju, cocktails, and group dining, but it adds lead time and compliance. Federal retail alcohol registration and state/local licensing should be mapped early; the TTB retailer requirements explain the federal registration layer.
Tie lease commencement and rent commencement to permit milestones, delivery of the landlord's work, or a defined outside date. Free rent that starts while plans are still rejected is not free rent.
Operating burn05What Does It Cost to Run Each Month?
At $350,000 in monthly sales, a realistic store-level expense plan is roughly $304,500–$353,500 per month before income taxes, owner distributions, and some debt principal. The wide band reflects labor market, beef mix, rent, utilities, and management depth.
Base-case monthly core cost stack at $350,000 sales
Food and labor dominate. This chart excludes the separate maintenance-capex reserve shown in the table.
$115.5K
$108.5K
$31.5K
$38.5K
$14.0K
| Monthly line | Planning range | % of $350K sales | Control point |
|---|---|---|---|
| Food and beverage | $108,500–$122,500 | 31%–35% | Beef mix, trim yield, portions, waste, vendor terms |
| Payroll, payroll taxes and benefits | $105,000–$119,000 | 30%–34% | Covers per labor hour, schedule by daypart, turnover |
| Rent, CAM, property tax and insurance | $28,000–$35,000 | 8%–10% | Lease structure and sales density |
| Utilities, cleaning, repairs, supplies, waste | $35,000–$42,000 | 10%–12% | Exhaust run time, grill service, dish and sanitation load |
| Marketing, POS, accounting and administration | $14,000–$17,500 | 4%–5% | Channel ROI, payment fees, professional support |
| Maintenance capex reserve | $14,000–$17,500 | 4%–5% | Grill replacement, refrigeration, ducts, furniture |
| Total operating and reserve cost | $304,500–$353,500 | 87%–101% | Before debt principal, tax and owner distributions |
The National Restaurant Association reported median 2024 labor cost of 36.5% of sales for full-service respondents, while profitable full-service operators reported a lower median of 34.2%. Korean barbecue may run below that with efficient self-cooking service, or above it when staff repeatedly change grills, manage side dishes, handle raw-meat protocols, and reset complex tables. See the association's full-service labor-cost analysis.
Prime-cost test
Food cost % + payroll and benefits % = prime cost %
At 33% food and 31% labor, prime cost is 64%. At 35% food and 36% labor, it is 71%—usually too high to absorb rent, utilities, repairs, marketing, debt service, and a return on a seven-figure investment.
Revenue model06How Does a Korean BBQ Restaurant Make Money?
Revenue is driven by average check × paid covers, but the model has several layers: fixed-price all-you-can-eat packages, à la carte proteins, premium upgrades, alcohol, nonalcoholic drinks, appetizers, desserts, private groups, late-night traffic, and sometimes takeout. The best model is not automatically the one with the highest listed price. It is the one that protects contribution margin while keeping tables moving.
| Revenue stream | Typical planning price | Margin logic | Main risk |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lunch AYCE | $25–$35 per guest | Fills off-peak capacity; lower protein mix can work | Slow turns erase the value of lower pricing |
| Dinner AYCE | $35–$55 per guest | Simple selling, broad appeal, strong group conversion | Over-portioning premium beef and food waste |
| À la carte sets | $55–$120 per table | Better control over protein yield and premium cuts | More menu complexity and uneven perceived value |
| Premium upgrade | +$8–$20 per guest | Raises check without adding seats or service time | Upgrade mix can be overstated in projections |
| Alcohol and specialty beverages | $8–$18 per drink | Often strong contribution after licensing and waste | License delay, training, inventory and compliance |
| Private groups and events | $45–$80 per guest | Deposits improve cash visibility and fill shoulders | Large parties can block tables during peak demand |
Demand is real, but restaurants compete for discretionary spending. U.S. Census data showed food services and drinking places sales continued growing year over year in 2026, yet nominal growth does not guarantee traffic growth because menu prices also rise. Use the Census food-services sales series as a broad demand backdrop, then validate your actual trade area with competitor counts, reservation availability, parking, household mix, and observed peak-period waits.
The most profitable extra dollar is usually a beverage or premium upgrade that does not lengthen the meal. A $5 price increase that adds ten minutes to the average table time can reduce nightly capacity enough to destroy the gain.
Margin mechanics07Prime Cost, Beef Yield, and the All-You-Can-Eat Trap
The defining financial problem is not simply “food cost.” It is food cost after trim, marinade, thaw loss, over-portioning, spoilage, plate waste, and the guest's ability to order repeatedly. Two operators can pay the same invoice price for short rib and finish the month several margin points apart.
Protein yield formula
Usable cost per pound = purchase cost per pound ÷ usable yield
A cut purchased at $7.20 per pound with an 80% usable yield costs $9.00 per usable pound before marinade, seasoning, waste, and labor. If the menu model assumes $7.20, the spreadsheet understates real protein cost by 25%.
The National Restaurant Association reported median food and nonalcoholic beverage cost of 32.0% of sales for full-service respondents in 2024. Korean barbecue can land near that level, but premium beef-heavy AYCE formats may drift higher without strict portions and menu engineering. Review the association's 2024 food-cost ratio analysis.
The economics of the next plate
An AYCE price should be set from the expected weighted consumption of every guest cohort, not from the average of a few soft-opening checks. Separate weekday lunch, weekday dinner, weekend dinner, children, large groups, and premium-upgrade buyers. Track grams or ounces of high-cost proteins issued per paid cover. Then compare actual protein cost per cover with the model.
That is why menu design should include lower-cost proteins, vegetables, starches, soups, and banchan that guests genuinely value—not filler they ignore. The financial goal is a satisfying mix, not deprivation. A waste fee can discourage extreme ordering, but the better control is small first portions, rapid replenishment, and POS prompts that show how many premium rounds each table orders.
Track high-cost protein issued per cover every day, not just monthly food cost. Monthly food cost tells you that money is gone; protein-per-cover tells you which shift, package, or portion caused it.
Owner income08How Much Can the Owner Realistically Make?
That is a realistic range for total owner economic benefit after stabilization, depending on sales, margin, debt, and whether the owner replaces a paid general manager. Year one can be zero or negative.
Owner income is not revenue, and it is not the restaurant-level EBITDA line. Food, labor, rent, utilities, insurance, repairs, marketing, professional fees, taxes, debt service, maintenance capex, and cash reserves are paid first. An owner who works as the general manager may also earn a market-rate salary that a passive owner would have to pay someone else.
| Scenario | Annual sales | Store cash margin | Cash after debt, tax and reserve | Potential owner economics |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Conservative ramp | $2.7M | 6% / $162K | $20K–$60K | Often mostly manager salary; limited distribution |
| Base mature unit | $4.2M | 13% / $546K | $180K–$280K | Salary equivalent plus distributions, depending on leverage |
| High-volume unit | $5.5M | 17% / $935K | $320K–$520K | Requires strong turns, tight prime cost and disciplined overhead |
The high-volume case is intentionally demanding. The GEN 2024 filing reported average unit volume close to $5.5 million, but public-chain purchasing, brand awareness, systems, and experienced site selection are meaningful advantages. An independent should not borrow against the upside case. Build debt capacity from the conservative or lower base case.
How owner cash is actually created
Illustrative base case; the waterfall separates operating performance from cash available to the owner.
Capacity math09Where Is Break-Even in Covers and Table Turns?
Break-even is best translated into covers and turns, because those are operating decisions. In this base model, fixed monthly costs are $118,000 and contribution margin is 45% after variable food, hourly labor, payment fees, and consumables.
Break-even revenue
$118,000 ÷ 45% = $262,222 per month
At a $42 average check, that equals about 6,243 covers per month, 208 covers per day over 30 open days, or 2.08 turns per day in a 100-seat dining room.
This math exposes the location question. A 100-seat restaurant that needs 208 daily covers cannot rely on Friday and Saturday alone. It needs weekday dinner depth, meaningful weekend lunch, or a strong late-night daypart. Otherwise, peak queues hide empty shoulder periods and the monthly turn rate misses plan.
Illustrative 12-month sales ramp
Monthly break-even is crossed in month six, but cumulative startup losses are not recovered until later.
A new store may become monthly profitable in months 6–12 and still need 18–30 months to recover pre-opening losses. That difference is why the financial model needs both an income statement and a monthly cash-flow schedule. Profit is a rate; cash is a calendar.
Weekly controls10Which KPIs Should You Watch Every Week?
A monthly profit-and-loss statement is too slow for a volatile protein-and-labor model. Track the operating inputs weekly and the most sensitive ones daily. The point is not reporting; it is catching drift while a manager can still change portions, schedules, pricing, or purchasing.
| KPI | Formula | Planning benchmark | Decision it drives |
|---|---|---|---|
| Average check | Net sales ÷ paid covers | $38–$50 blended target for many mid-market concepts | Pricing, beverage attachment, upsell mix |
| Seat turns per day | Paid covers ÷ available seats | About 2.0+ at break-even in the base model | Site capacity, reservations, table-time policy |
| Food cost % | Food and beverage cost ÷ food and beverage sales | 31%–35%; investigate sustained movement above plan | Portions, purchase price, waste, package design |
| High-cost protein per cover | Premium protein issued ÷ paid covers | Set by package; watch shift-to-shift variance above 5%–8% | Serving size, server behavior, AYCE controls |
| Labor cost % | Wages, taxes and benefits ÷ net sales | 30%–34% base target; local wages can push higher | Schedule, staffing model, manager coverage |
| Covers per labor hour | Paid covers ÷ total hourly labor hours | Build a location-specific target by daypart | Roster and station design |
| Prime cost % | Food cost % + labor cost % | Preferably 62%–66%; warning above 68% | Whether the core model can support occupancy and debt |
| Table-time median | Median minutes from seating to payment | Often 80–105 minutes; segment by party size | Reservation pacing and revenue capacity |
| Cash runway | Unrestricted cash ÷ monthly cash burn | Six months at opening; minimum three months after stabilization | Marketing pace, hiring and owner distributions |
Labor benchmarks must be localized. BLS publishes current wage profiles by occupation and geography, which is more useful than a national minimum wage assumption for cooks, servers, dish staff, and first-line supervisors. Start with the BLS occupation wage profiles, then add payroll taxes, workers' compensation, benefits, training time, and turnover.
Watch the combination of food cost, table time, and premium protein per cover. Any one can look acceptable while the other two silently cancel the margin. The dangerous week is not always the one with low sales; it is the busy week with expensive consumption and slow turns.
Funding and payback11How Should You Fund It, Manage Risk, and Judge Payback?
The capital stack should match asset life and cash-flow timing. Long-lived buildout and equipment can be funded with owner equity, landlord contributions, term debt, or equipment finance. Opening inventory and early operating losses need permanent working capital or a line that is actually available before the cash shortfall—not a credit card opened after sales miss.
Payback period
$1,600,000 initial investment ÷ $360,000 annual free cash flow = 4.4 years
Use free cash flow after debt service, maintenance capex, required reserves, and taxes—not EBITDA. Payback stretches when the opening is delayed, sales ramp slowly, food cost rises, or equipment needs replacement sooner than planned.
SBA 7(a) financing can fund acquisitions, construction, equipment, furniture, fixtures, supplies, and working capital, subject to lender underwriting and program rules. SBA states that borrowers must be creditworthy and demonstrate reasonable ability to repay. The current SBA 7(a) loan guide is the right starting point, but a restaurant loan still needs a credible equity contribution, collateral discussion, experienced management, and a downside case that services debt.
What a lender or investor will want to see
- A signed or near-final lease with tenant-improvement details, rent commencement, assignment rights, and sufficient term.
- Contractor bids and an equipment schedule that isolate grill, exhaust, suppression, refrigeration, and long-lead items.
- Monthly projections for at least 24 months, including covers, check, turns, food cost, labor hours, debt service, taxes, and cash balance.
- Evidence of operating capability: chef or kitchen leadership, general manager, food-safety controls, purchasing plan, and opening schedule.
- A downside scenario with sales 20% below plan and costs 5% above plan, plus a documented cash response.
| Risk | Early trigger | Financial impact | Mitigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ventilation or utility redesign | Landlord cannot confirm roof, gas or power capacity | $100K–$500K overrun plus delay | Engineer before lease; contractor allowance; termination right |
| Food-safety incident | Temperature, cross-contamination or sanitation exceptions | Closure, discarded inventory, claims and reputation loss | HACCP-style controls, training, logs, supplier traceability |
| Carbon monoxide or fire hazard | Poor airflow, alarm events, unusual soot or odor | Emergency closure, remediation, injury exposure | Designed exhaust, commissioning, inspection and maintenance |
| Beef-cost shock | Vendor quote or usage raises food cost 2+ points | $7K+ monthly at $350K sales per two-point miss | Multiple suppliers, package engineering, portion controls |
| Slow table turns | Median dining time exceeds plan by 10–15 minutes | Peak capacity and monthly revenue fall | Reservation pacing, pre-bussing, payment speed, layout |
| Labor shortage and turnover | Overtime, manager coverage, training hours rise | 2–5 margin-point erosion | Cross-training, retention pay, simple stations, local wage model |
Commercial cooking also creates burn and carbon-monoxide exposure when exhaust systems malfunction. OSHA's restaurant safety material specifically notes burn hazards and carbon-monoxide risk from malfunctioning exhaust equipment. Review the OSHA restaurant cooking guidance when designing training and preventive maintenance.
The honest verdict: the concept is worth pursuing when the site is mechanically feasible, the trade area can support at least two daily turns at a $40-plus blended check, prime cost can stay near the mid-60s, and the opening capital includes six months of runway. It is a poor bet when the economics depend on weekend-only traffic, an optimistic liquor license date, a 30% food-cost assumption with premium AYCE beef, or a loan sized to the upside case.
Final underwriting test
- Can the conservative case cover debt service with sales 20% below the base plan?
- Does the lease survive a six-month permitting delay without exhausting cash?
- Do the cover, check, table-time, food-cost, and labor assumptions reconcile to the same capacity model?
- Is maintenance capex reserved before owner distributions?
- Does the payback calculation use real free cash flow rather than EBITDA?
A serious plan connects startup cost, financing, debt service, capacity, average check, protein yield, labor scheduling, working capital, taxes, owner compensation, and payback in one model. That connection is what turns an exciting concept into an investable—or rejectable—business decision.
