Numbers that separate them on a 5-year horizon — not the dealer-pitch summary.
Space requirements differ substantially: Tea Post operates from 200+ sqft while Chai Sutta Bar needs 400+ sqft. In metro CBDs where commercial rent is ₹300–600/sqft/month, that difference alone can swing your break-even by 18–24 months.
The operational model splits the room: Chai Sutta Bar expects high involvement; Keventers expects high involvement; Tea Post expects medium involvement; MBA Chai Wala expects high involvement. If you're an absentee investor this matters as much as the capex — the wrong match burns you via under-managed operations.
Primary (flagship) format per brand. Smaller kiosk / express formats may have different economics.
Primary (flagship) franchise format per brand. Some brands also offer smaller kiosk / cloud-kitchen formats at lower capex — check the brand page for full format options.
Bigger networks mean more brand recognition and supplier scale; smaller ones mean less intra-brand competition in your territory.
Average outlets added per year since founding. High velocity = momentum + new territory assigned fast; low velocity = mature, saturated, or dormant.
BrandFit asks 6 visual questions about your operator profile, capital, and location — then ranks all 240 brands by predicted success-fit for your situation. See where these brands really stand for someone like you.
Filter by investment, format, location, margin, royalty — on one screen. The brands above are already picked.
Same data plus galleries, store-locator, margin economics, legal vault — free on every brand page.




Wrapped in FAQPage JSON-LD for SERP rich-result eligibility.
Beyond the advertised capex, factor in: refundable security deposit (₹1–5L), rent deposit (1–6 months of rent), working capital for inventory and salaries (typically ₹5–20L for first 3 months), signage and interior fit-out (often 25–40% of total setup), and ongoing royalty or supply-chain margins. FRANticc separates "at-risk capital" from "refundable capital" on every brand page so you see the real exposure.
Typical break-even on a Chai & Beverages franchise in India is 24–42 months, depending on location traffic, format size, and whether the brand charges recurring royalty. The brands on this page range from ₹10 L upward in capex; pair that with your expected monthly contribution margin to estimate your own payback. FRANticc's per-industry calculators (petroleum, auto, ATM) model this explicitly.
Multi-unit ownership is common in Indian franchising and several Chai & Beverages brands actively encourage it through discounted second/third-unit fees. Check for "master franchise" or "multi-unit development" terms in the contract — these usually require a minimum 3–5 unit commitment within a defined city/region over 24–36 months.
Among these brands, the smallest footprint is Tea Post at 200+ sqft. Tier-2 and Tier-3 city franchisees should verify whether the brand will approve a location at minimum spec — in high-street metros, brands typically insist on 150–300 sqft above their published minimum.