Mercedes-Benz is 1.9× cheaper to get into — ₹8 Cr vs ₹15 Cr (about ₹700 lakh less). Mercedes-Benz runs the bigger network at 140 vs 90 outlets.
Numbers that separate them on a 5-year horizon — not the dealer-pitch summary.
One-time franchise fees are worth noting: Audi India charges ₹2 Cr upfront on top of the setup capex. This is a non-refundable sunk cost before revenue begins — bake it into your at-risk capital calculation.
Space requirements differ substantially: Mercedes-Benz operates from 5000+ sqft while Audi India needs 25000+ sqft. In metro CBDs where commercial rent is ₹300–600/sqft/month, that difference alone can swing your break-even by 18–24 months.
On pure entry capital, Mercedes-Benz is 1.9× cheaper than Audi India — ₹8 Cr vs ₹15 Cr. That gap compounds over a 5-year horizon because working capital and rent deposit scale with format size.
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.
Which brand's outlets are rated higher by customers, aggregated across locations. Exact star rating and review volume are in Brand Health.
Direction only — the underlying rating & review count are Pro data.
Every verified data point. Green badge marks the more favourable value for a typical first-time operator.
| Metric | Mercedes-Benz | Audi India |
|---|---|---|
| Entry capex | ₹8 Cr ↓ Lower | ₹15 Cr |
| Royalty | 0% | 0% |
| Gross marginExact margin % + full unit economicsFood-cost, royalty drag and the monthly P&L behind "Higher".Unlock with Pro → | Lower | Higher |
| Min space (sqft) | 5000 ↓ Smaller | 25000 |
| Total outlets | 140 ↑ Bigger | 90 |
| Franchise fee | — | ₹2 Cr |
| Working capital | — | ₹15 Cr |
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.
Open this pair plus BMW India and MINI (the next-largest Luxury Auto brands by network size) side-by-side in the full comparison tool. Add or swap brands to fit your decision.
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For a first-time franchisee, capital preservation matters more than brand prestige. Mercedes-Benz has the lower entry capex here, which caps downside if the location underperforms. That said, first-time operators should also weigh how much hand-holding the brand provides in site selection, training, and SOP enforcement — not just the sticker price.
Territorial exclusivity varies sharply across Luxury Auto operators and is rarely enforced uniformly. Most Indian franchise agreements carve out a "protected radius" (typically 500m–2km) rather than exclusive geographic zones. Always read the "Non-Competition" and "Protected Territory" clauses of the franchise agreement — and verify by asking existing franchisees if the brand has honoured them.
The lowest-investment option here is Mercedes-Benz starting from ₹8 Cr. Remember this is the brand's minimum capex — your actual outlay includes a refundable security deposit, rent deposit (1–6 months), and working capital.
Mercedes-Benz operates the largest network among these — 140 outlets. Large networks offer more brand recognition and supplier scale, but also mean denser intra-brand competition in already-saturated markets.
Brand expansion strategies differ: Mercedes-Benz and brands with 200+ outlets typically have active Tier-2/3 pipelines; smaller or premium brands often focus Tier-1 metros first. FRANticc's store locator on each brand page shows existing cities — if a brand already has 3+ outlets in your tier, expansion policy likely permits new franchises there.