U.S.Pizza is 2.2× cheaper to get into — ₹25 L vs ₹55 L (about ₹30 lakh less). Maple Bear runs the bigger network at 175 vs 90 outlets. U.S.Pizza takes less off the top (5% royalty vs 7%).
Numbers that separate them on a 5-year horizon — not the dealer-pitch summary.
On pure entry capital, U.S.Pizza is 2.2× cheaper than Maple Bear — ₹25 L vs ₹55 L. That gap compounds over a 5-year horizon because working capital and rent deposit scale with format size.
The operational model splits the room: U.S.Pizza expects medium involvement; Maple Bear 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.
U.S.Pizza charges 5% royalty on revenue — recurring, uncapped, and deducted before your own margin is calculated. Factor it into every pro-forma.
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 | U.S.Pizza | Maple Bear |
|---|---|---|
| Entry capex | ₹25 L ↓ Lower | ₹55 L |
| Royalty | 5% ↓ Lower | 7% |
| Gross marginExact margin % + full unit economicsFood-cost, royalty drag and the monthly P&L behind "Higher".Unlock with Pro → | Higher | Lower |
| Min space (sqft) | 1000 ↓ Smaller | 15000 |
| Total outlets | 90 | 175 ↑ Bigger |
| Franchise fee | ₹4 L ↓ Lower | ₹40 L |
| Working capital | ₹5 L | ₹40 L |
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Typical break-even on a International Curriculum 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 ₹25 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.
FRANticc's database lists 2 brands matching this comparison with verified investment data, store counts, and format details. Several more are covered across our full directory. Every data point cites its public source.
Maple Bear operates the largest network among these — 175 outlets. Large networks offer more brand recognition and supplier scale, but also mean denser intra-brand competition in already-saturated markets.
The lowest-investment option here is U.S.Pizza starting from ₹25 L. Remember this is the brand's minimum capex — your actual outlay includes a refundable security deposit, rent deposit (1–6 months), and working capital.
Among these brands, the smallest footprint is U.S.Pizza at 1000+ 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.