If you love fast-casual F&B and want a slice of the booming Mexican-inspired market in India, California Burrito (often branded “Cali Burrito”) is one of the faster-growing homegrown players. Founded in Bengaluru, the chain has expanded quickly across metros and emerging cities — and that makes it an attractive franchise option for new and seasoned F&B entrepreneurs. Below I break down the likely investment, the franchise model and revenue expectations, who’s eligible, and a practical step-by-step of how to apply. I used recent industry coverage and brand sources to give realistic numbers and tips.
Quick Snapshot (what to expect)
- Brand: California Burrito (Burrito Restaurants Pvt Ltd) — fast-casual Mexican (burritos, bowls, tacos, salads).
- Number of outlets (2024–2025): 100+ stores across Bangalore, Delhi NCR, Hyderabad, Chennai, Pune and other cities.
- Typical overall investment range reported in public franchise directories: ₹8 lakh – ₹40 lakh depending on format (express/kiosk vs. full dine-in) and city — smaller delivery/quick-service models sit at the lower end, mall/standalone dine-in set-ups at the higher end.
Franchise Model & formats
California Burrito typically offers multiple formats so franchisees can choose based on budget and location:
- Delivery/Cloud Kitchen / Kiosk — minimal seating, focused on online orders and takeaway. Lower capex and faster ramp-up.
- QSR / High-street Outlet — small dine-in area with takeaway; mid-range investment.
- Mall / Foodcourt / Full Service Casual Dining — higher fit-out costs, more staff, higher revenue potential in premium locations.
The brand supports site selection guidance, training, supply-chain integration, and brand marketing — typical of organized quick-service franchises. Exact available formats and territory models should be confirmed with the franchisor.
Investment Breakdown & Recurring Costs

Public franchise listings and press pieces suggest these ballpark numbers (all figures INR):
- Franchise fee: Many directories do not publicly disclose a fixed fee; estimates and various listings put a franchise fee anywhere from not disclosed to ₹5–15 lakh depending on format and location. Treat this as negotiable and verify with the company.
- Setup / fit-out & equipment: ₹5–25 lakh (kiosk/ cloud: lower; full dine-in: higher).
- Working capital: ₹2–10 lakh to cover initial salaries, raw materials, and operating expenses.
- Total rough investment range: ₹8 lakh – ₹40 lakh (many sources cluster around ₹10–25 lakh for new franchise openings).
Monthly recurring costs to plan for: royalties/marketing fees (if applicable — confirm exact %), raw material purchases, staff wages, rent, utility bills, aggregator commissions (Zomato/Swiggy), and local marketing. Some directories show breakeven windows of 2–5 years depending on location and operating discipline.
Expected ROI & Revenue Drivers
ROI depends heavily on location, ticket size, and order mix (dine-in vs. delivery). Key revenue drivers:
- Average order value (AOV) — usually higher for dine-in and buffet/meal combos; delivery AOV varies by city.
- Delivery penetration — heavy use of delivery aggregators can boost volume but compress margins due to commissions.
- Operational control — food cost management, portion control, staff productivity.
Public press and franchise listings indicate payback windows varying widely: conservative breakeven in 36–60 months for many outlets, with high-performing high-street/mall stores achieving payback sooner. Use conservative forecasting (assume 12–18 months to build steady monthly sales in a new location).
Eligibility & Must-Haves for Applicants
Most franchisors look for:
- Sufficient net worth / liquid capital to cover franchise fee + setup + 6–12 months working capital. Public listings suggest having access to ₹10 lakh+ for smaller formats and significantly more for dine-in.
- Relevant business experience — retail/F&B experience is preferred though some brands train new entrepreneurs.
- Site ownership or long lease (franchisor often requires 3–5 year lease minimum).
- Ability to follow SOPs (recipes, food safety, brand guidelines), willingness to use the brand’s supply chain and POS systems.
Documents & compliance to prepare
- Identity & address proofs, company/sole-proprietor registration documents, bank statements, GST registration (or readiness to get one), PAN, proof of funds/loan sanction (if any), proposed site details (NOC/lease). Also prepare a brief business plan and location footfall data to accelerate approvals.
Step-by-step: How to Apply
- Research formats & shortlist — decide cloud kitchen vs. high-street vs. mall. Check brand presence in your city to ensure territory availability.
- Contact franchisor — use official enquiry form or email from the brand site (californiaburrito.in) or their franchise portals/ad pages. Save all correspondence.
- Attend discovery call/meeting — franchisor typically shares FDD-style info (investment range, support, revenue model). Ask for itemized costs and sample P&L.
- Site selection & approval — submit site details; brand will evaluate catchment and footfall. Negotiate lease terms to match franchisor requirements.
- Sign franchise agreement — get legal review, check term, renewal, exit clauses, and intellectual property use.
- Fit-out, training & launch — follow brand SOPs, source approved equipment, complete staff training, and soft-launch with local marketing and aggregator onboarding.
Tips for success
- Negotiate for a clear cap on royalty/marketing fees and transparent supply costs.
- Run pilot promotions with food aggregators but control costs — aggregator commissions can erode margins quickly.
- Invest in staff training and quality control — brand consistency is the backbone of fast-casual ROI.
Bottom line
California Burrito is a proven, rapidly expanding Indian fast-casual brand with franchise options across formats. Investment ranges widely (roughly ₹8 lakh to ₹40 lakh) depending on format and city; realistic breakeven is often 2–5 years. If you have the capital, a strong site, and a willingness to run operations tightly, a Cali Burrito franchise can be a scalable way to enter F&B — but always verify current fees, royalty/marketing percentages, and exact support from the company before committing.

Shashi Kant is the Founder and Editor of BusinessScroller.com, a leading platform for business insights, finance trends, and industry analysis. With a passion for journalism and expertise in business reporting, he curates well-researched content on market strategies, startups, and corporate success stories. His vision is to provide valuable information that empowers entrepreneurs and professionals. Under his leadership, BusinessScroller.com has grown into a trusted source for in-depth articles, customer care guides, and financial expertise.