JL Beers vs La Pino'z Pizza

Two franchise systems, side by side. For a software vendor, they are not the same opportunity.

More open target
JL Beers
wins 4 of 12 vendor rows

JL Beers wins on budget and terrain, and those are the only dimensions that matter when the alternative has zero operating locations. At $1.4M AUV, each JL Beers unit generates enough revenue to justify a real tech stack—POS, scheduling, and marketing automation aren’t optional at that volume. The approved-supplier procurement model means franchisees can buy independently, so you don’t need to win a corporate mandate; you can close three high-value deals and build a beachhead. The current FDD filing confirms the brand is actively selling franchises, so the three franchised units are likely just the start of a system that will add more well-capitalized operators.

La P

quick_service_restaurant
JL Beers
quick_service_restaurant
La Pino'z Pizza
Total units
10
0
Franchised units
3
0
Unit growth YoY
0%
Average unit revenue (AUV)
$1.44M
Royalty
4%
Ad fund
0.5%
1%
Initial franchise fee
$50K
$20K
Investment range (low)
$2.12M
$215K
Investment range (high)
$3.91M
$1.25M
Procurement model
Approved supplier
Franchisor controlled
FDD fiscal year
2026
2025
Filing freshness
CURRENT
DUE

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Common questions

JL Beers vs La Pino'z Pizza, answered

JL Beers has 10 total units and La Pino'z Pizza has 0, so JL Beers is the larger system.
JL Beers's initial franchise fee is $50K and La Pino'z Pizza's is $20K, so La Pino'z Pizza has the lower fee.
JL Beers's initial investment runs $2.12M–$3.91M and La Pino'z Pizza's runs $215K–$1.25M, so JL Beers requires the larger investment.

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