The smart funding structure behind one restaurant's 2nd location [case study]
He had turned one restaurant into a name people crossed town for. So when the space two neighborhoods over came up, the call was easy. Paying for it was not. Here is how he structured the funding so the payments stayed light during the build and stepped up only once the new location was open and busy.
Ask any owner with a packed restaurant what comes next and most say the same thing: a second location. The idea is the easy part. The hard part is the stretch between signing a lease and the night that second dining room is finally full.
This is the story of one owner outside Tampa who closed that gap, and the way his funding was structured so the buildout ran on financing instead of the working capital his first location needed to keep running. We have kept his details private. The structure is real, and it is one we build often.
The spot that would not wait
Good locations do not sit empty for long. When the right one opens, the clock starts that day.
He had run one location for about four years. Full tables most nights, a crew that stuck around, regulars who knew the staff by name. Then a storefront opened a few minutes away, in a spot he had quietly watched for months. He knew the street. He knew it would work. He also knew that if he hesitated, someone else would sign the lease first. The only things between him and a second restaurant were the money and the calendar.
What a second location really costs
The build is only part of it. The bigger number is everything you spend before the doors open.
Buildout, kitchen, furniture, signage, permits, opening inventory, and payroll for a team that has to be hired and trained before a single guest walks in. For his space it came to roughly $200,000. Pulling that out of the first location would have starved it right when it needed to be strong, heading into a busy season. Most owners hit the same wall: the opportunity is obvious, the cash to grab it is not, and a slow lender can cost you the lease.
The plan, built around the opening
Opening a restaurant happens in two stages: the months you spend money with nothing coming in, then the months it starts bringing in sales. His funding was built to match both.
The logic is simple once you see it laid out. Sales are lowest at the start, while the build is still underway, so the payment is at its lowest then too. Sales pick up as the location fills, and the payment steps up to match. The structure follows the restaurant through its own opening, instead of demanding a full payment on day one when there is nothing coming in to cover it.
Most owners ask for a number. The better question is how the money should be shaped. We set the payments light during the build and stepped them up only once the second location was open and busy, so the plan matched how the business actually grows.
The same $200K, structured two ways
Plenty of lenders would have handed him a plain 24-month loan and called it a day. Same amount, very different outcome. Here is what each looks like by the time the new location breaks even, around month 12.
The 24-month loan is not a bad product. For a fast, defined need with quick payback, it is the right tool. It is the wrong shape for a buildout. Asking a half-built restaurant to carry a five-figure payment every month is how good ideas run out of cash before they ever get going. He avoided that not by borrowing less, but by borrowing in a way that matched when the money would actually come in.
The deal, by the numbers
What it looked like once the pieces were in place.
He applied on a Tuesday, had an answer the next day, and the funds were in his account within about seven business days. He signed the lease, built out the space, and opened in under five months. The new location is open and bringing in sales, and the payment stepped up to match once it was open. One real outcome, and a fair picture of how these deals tend to go when the numbers line up.
Which funding this was, and the alternatives
His plan used two of our three programs back to back. Here is how the options compare, so you can see why this combination fit a buildout.
For a second location, the line of credit did the heavy lifting in year one. Interest-only payments meant the buildout did not have to compete with a loan for cash, and he only paid on the balance he had actually drawn. A plain short-term loan would have forced full payments from month one, before the restaurant opened. That is the wrong shape for a project with a long lead time.
Once the doors opened and revenue was steady, converting into a long-term loan stretched the payoff over three years at a payment a running restaurant could absorb. Same money, two stages, two structures. The difference is not the rate or the amount. It is matching the payment to where the business actually is.
Common reasons restaurants look for funding
Expansion is one reason owners reach for funding. These are the others we see most, and roughly how often.
Whatever the reason, the move is the same: put the money toward the growth move, and keep the business that already works out of the line of fire.
- Opening a second location. Buildout, equipment, inventory, and opening payroll, repaid as the new spot ramps.
- Equipment. An oven, a walk-in, a new line, or a fast replacement when something fails mid-service.
- Remodels and more seating. A patio, a bar, or a refresh that lifts the average check.
- Slow-season bridge. Cover a quiet stretch and keep your team and your standards intact.
- Inventory and supplier deals. Buy ahead of a busy season or take a bulk discount that beats the cost of the money.
How fast it actually moves
When a lease is on the line, weeks matter. Here is the real timeline, start to funded.
You can start the application in a few minutes. Most restaurants begin with a short-term loan or a line of credit, with long-term loan options for larger, established spots. Compare any of that to a bank that wants weeks to say maybe, and you see why timing alone pushes a lot of owners here.
Will my business qualify?
Most restaurants open at least six months with steady sales can get approved. The starting bar is simple.
These are the minimum requirements across all of our programs. Each program has its own qualifications, so a line of credit, a short-term loan, and a long-term loan can each ask for something a little different. Approval leans on your sales and bank statements more than your credit score. Close but not quite there yet? Still worth a look. We will tell you straight, and if you are a few months out, we will tell you what to aim for.
Questions owners ask
Can a restaurant get funding with bad credit?
How fast can a restaurant get funded?
How much can my restaurant borrow to expand?
Can I use the funds to open a second location?
Do I need collateral or to give up equity?
Will checking my options affect my credit score?
See what your business qualifies for
We fund businesses in every industry. No credit impact to check, no documents to start, and a real funding manager who helps you structure it right.