Franchise Financial Metrics

Sales-to-Investment Ratio: The Economic Engine Test

This metric answers a simple but critical question: how much revenue does each dollar of invested capital actually produce?

What This Page Gives You

  • A unit-level productivity screen
  • A way to test revenue power before profit
  • A calculator for sales-to-investment ratio
  • A framework for seeing whether the engine can scale
The Core Formula

Sales-to-Investment Ratio

Annual Unit Revenue ÷ Total Initial Investment

The Sales-to-Investment Ratio measures how efficiently capital is converted into revenue. It does not measure profit. It measures throughput.

This Is an Economic Engine Metric

Capital Tie-Up measures time. Cash-on-Cash measures return. Sales-to-Investment measures whether the unit has enough revenue power to support everything else.

Sales-to-Investment Ratio Calculator

Use this calculator to estimate how much annual revenue each dollar of total initial investment produces.

1.63x Strong revenue productivity

The unit is producing meaningful revenue for each dollar invested, assuming the revenue is durable and repeatable.

Important: This does not measure profit. It measures whether the unit has enough revenue throughput to create room for labor, occupancy, margin, debt service, and reinvestment.
Operator Lens

What This Metric Actually Controls

Labor Efficiency

Higher sales per dollar invested gives the unit more room to absorb labor cost and scheduling mistakes.

Occupancy Leverage

Higher sales help keep rent and occupancy costs manageable as a percentage of revenue.

Margin Potential

More revenue throughput improves the chance that fixed costs are absorbed and margins can improve.

Scalability

If the revenue engine is weak, every new unit adds capital burden without enough economic power.

The Key Insight

If this ratio is weak, every other metric must work harder to compensate.

Contrast Pattern

Two Models, Same Investment

Model A

$700,000 investment

$1,400,000 annual sales

Sales-to-Investment Ratio: 2.0x

Model B

$700,000 investment

$900,000 annual sales

Sales-to-Investment Ratio: 1.3x

Even with identical margins, Model A has more room to absorb costs, improve profitability, survive downturns, and support multi-unit growth.

Metric Comparison Band

How Operators Read Sales-to-Investment Ratio

< 1.0x Weak Revenue Engine

Capital is not generating enough revenue. Profitability must come from unusually strong margins.

1.0x–1.5x Conditional Engine

May work, but margins, occupancy, and labor discipline must be strong.

1.5x–2.5x Strong Engine

The unit is generating meaningful revenue for each dollar invested.

> 2.5x Exceptional Throughput

Very attractive, but operators will verify whether sales are repeatable across markets.

Downside Test

What Happens If Sales Drop?

The 15% Sales Stress Test

  • High Sales-to-Investment Ratio: the unit may still have enough revenue power to remain viable.
  • Low Sales-to-Investment Ratio: the unit can move quickly into margin pressure and cash-flow stress.

This is why operators care about revenue productivity before they even finish the profitability analysis. Revenue is upstream of profit. If the engine is weak, profit has to fight uphill.

Diagnostic Callout

Where Franchisors Get This Wrong

  • Highlighting top-performing revenue instead of system averages
  • Understating full buildout and opening costs
  • Using outdated AUV numbers
  • Ignoring how revenue changes by market, format, and operator type
  • Failing to stress-test sales against rising labor and occupancy costs

If revenue per dollar is weak, everything else must compensate.

Framework Connection

How This Fits the Three-Metric System

Capital Tie-Up

How long is capital exposed before the business earns it back?

Cash-on-Cash

How much annual return does the invested equity produce?

Sales-to-Investment

How strong is the revenue engine underneath the model?

The Real Question

Does the unit have enough revenue power to support profit, return, capital recovery, and growth?

Strategic Choice

If the Revenue Engine Is Weak, You Have Three Choices

Increase Revenue

Improve pricing, throughput, marketing, product mix, or unit-level sales execution.

Reduce Investment

Simplify buildout, reduce footprint, lower opening costs, or improve site design efficiency.

Change Format

Introduce smaller, lower-cost, or more efficient formats that improve revenue productivity.

Final Thought

Revenue Is Upstream of Profit

Sales-to-Investment Ratio does not tell you whether a franchise is profitable. It tells you whether the unit has enough economic power to make profitability, return, and scalability possible.

A weak revenue engine forces every other part of the model to work harder.

Continue Your Franchise Evaluation

Serious operators don’t rely on a single metric. Use all three to evaluate whether a franchise actually works.

Sales-to-Investment

How strong is the revenue engine underneath the model?

Return to Sales to Investment Calculator →

Capital Tie-Up

How long is your capital exposed before it comes back?

Use Capital Tie-Up Calculator →

Cash-on-Cash Return

How much return does your equity generate each year?

Use Cash on Cash Calculator →

Start from the beginning: If you’re evaluating a franchise for the first time, follow the full framework.

How Much Money Can I Make Owning a Franchise? →