Coffee Shop Franchise Guide: Costs, Returns, and Which Brands Are Worth It

Starbucks does not offer traditional franchising to individual investors; its international expansion uses licensed operators (typically large hospitality companies) rather than independent franchisees. Understanding this distinction is essential before comparing franchise options across coffee brands. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

The coffee shop franchise market generates misleading expectations in both directions. Published statistics about the coffee industry (the UK coffee shop market is worth £4.1 billion, global coffee consumption is at record highs, the sector grew through the 2008 recession) are accurate but describe the market as a whole, not the returns available to a single franchise operator with one or two locations. The investment decision requires understanding what a franchise actually costs, what it realistically returns, and how the major brands differ in their franchise terms. The franchise fee is a small fraction of the total investment required; the working capital requirement and the rent obligation are the numbers that determine whether a coffee shop survives its first three years.

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The Real Cost of a Coffee Shop Franchise

Franchise disclosure documents (required in the US under FTC rules; voluntary in the UK but standard practice) list the initial franchise fee, typically £10,000 to £50,000. The actual investment required to open a site is substantially higher:

  • Franchise fee: £10,000 to £50,000 (one-time; buys the right to operate under the brand)
  • Equipment: £15,000 to £40,000 for commercial espresso machines, grinders, refrigeration, and brewing equipment. Mandated brand-specific equipment (franchisors often require specific machines and charge above market rates) can push this higher.
  • Fit-out and construction: £50,000 to £200,000 depending on the site condition, brand specification requirements, and location. High-street sites with bespoke brand design requirements are at the high end.
  • First and last months' rent plus deposit: Varies by location; a medium-traffic high street site in a UK regional city might require £8,000 to £15,000 per month in rent, requiring £24,000 to £45,000 in initial rent payment. Central London sites are significantly higher.
  • Working capital: 3 to 6 months of operating costs before the site becomes cash-flow positive. For a mid-sized site, this is £30,000 to £80,000.
  • Training fees and opening support: Some franchisors charge separately for mandatory pre-opening training, typically £2,000 to £10,000.

Total investment for a single coffee shop franchise site: £130,000 to £400,000 in the UK. US figures run $180,000 to $600,000 depending on brand and market.

Major Coffee Franchise Brands: What They Actually Offer

Costa Coffee (UK, Whitbread/Coca-Cola)

Costa Coffee operates approximately 2,700 UK stores (the largest coffee chain in the UK) and offers franchise opportunities primarily for non-traditional locations: service stations, airports, hospitals, universities, and leisure venues rather than high-street standalone stores. Standard high-street Costa stores are company-owned. The franchise model is structured differently from most: franchisees pay a lower upfront fee (£25,000 to £35,000) but operate from within an existing venue and share revenue with that venue. Net margins in Costa franchise operations typically run 10% to 15% of revenue after royalties (6% of gross sales) and costs, with £250,000 to £400,000 in annual revenue representing a strong-performing site.

Tim Hortons (UK/International)

Tim Hortons entered the UK market in 2017 and operates over 60 UK locations, with franchise opportunities available. The total investment required for a Tim Hortons UK franchise is £400,000 to £700,000 for a standalone drive-thru or high-street location, with a £50,000 franchise fee and a 6% royalty on gross sales. The brand has stronger awareness in Canada (where it holds over 30% of the coffee market) than in the UK, where the value proposition relative to Costa and Greggs is still establishing itself.

Esquires Coffee (UK/International)

Esquires Coffee is a smaller franchise brand (approximately 80 UK sites, 200+ worldwide) that positions itself as an ethical, Fairtrade-certified alternative to the major chains. Initial investment: £90,000 to £180,000 for a standard site. Franchise fee: £19,500. Royalty: 6% of net sales plus 2% marketing contribution. The lower investment requirement makes Esquires more accessible for first-time franchise operators; the smaller brand profile means lower built-in footfall than Costa or Tim Hortons.

Starbucks: Not a Standard Franchise

Starbucks does not offer individual franchise ownership in the UK, US, Canada, or most major markets. International expansion uses licenced operators (companies like Alsea in Mexico and Southern Europe, or Alshaya in the Middle East) who operate stores under a licensing agreement rather than as independent franchisees. Individual investors cannot buy a Starbucks franchise. This is one of the most persistent misconceptions in coffee franchise research.

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What the Numbers Look Like in Practice

A typical mid-performing coffee franchise unit with £300,000 in annual revenue, a 6% royalty structure, and UK average costs would generate approximately:

  • Revenue: £300,000
  • Cost of goods sold (coffee, milk, food, packaging): £90,000 (30%)
  • Labour (2 to 3 full-time equivalent plus part-time): £90,000 (30%)
  • Rent and rates: £45,000 to £60,000 (15% to 20%)
  • Royalties and marketing contributions: £24,000 (8%)
  • Utilities, insurance, maintenance: £15,000 to £20,000
  • Net profit before owner salary and debt service: approximately £20,000 to £40,000 per year

Against an investment of £200,000 to £300,000, this represents a 7% to 20% annual return in Year 3 to 5 (most franchises take 2 to 3 years to reach stable profitability). The return is reasonable for the risk and the active management requirement, but it is not passive income and it is not guaranteed. Failure rates for coffee shop franchises are lower than for independent coffee shops (where approximately 60% fail within 5 years) but are not zero; undercapitalization and poor site selection are the two primary causes of failure.

Questions to Ask Before Signing

  • What is the median unit EBITDA (earnings before interest, tax, depreciation, and amortisation) across all franchisees, not just the best-performing quartile?
  • What percentage of franchisees renew their agreement at the end of the initial term?
  • What percentage of franchisee units are currently for resale?
  • What happens to the franchise fee if the site fails to open, or if the location is rejected after due diligence?
  • What territorial exclusivity is provided, and how is it enforced against company-owned stores?
  • Is the supply chain open or mandatory? (Mandatory supply through the franchisor at above-market prices significantly reduces margins.)

Related: How to Start a Coffee Shop: The Complete Guide | Office Coffee Machines for Small Business: Best Options in 2025

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