Metropolis Healthcare is the lighter bet on entry — ₹20 L vs ₹25 L (about ₹5 lakh less). Metropolis Healthcare runs the bigger network at 4500 vs 90 outlets. Metropolis Healthcare takes less off the top (0% royalty vs 5%).
Numbers that separate them on a 5-year horizon — not the dealer-pitch summary.
Metropolis Healthcare is expanding fastest here — 100 outlets per year since founding in 1981. High-velocity brands signal momentum but also mean new territory for individual franchisees gets handed out quickly; lock in your preferred area early.
Metropolis Healthcare has 50.0× more outlets than U.S.Pizza (4500 vs 90) — more brand recognition and supplier scale, but also denser intra-brand competition in saturated markets.
On pure entry capital, Metropolis Healthcare is 1.3× cheaper than U.S.Pizza — ₹20 L vs ₹25 L. 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 | U.S.Pizza | Metropolis Healthcare |
|---|---|---|
| Entry capex | ₹25 L | ₹20 L ↓ Lower |
| Royalty | 5% | 0% ↓ Lower |
| 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 | 300 ↓ Smaller |
| Total outlets | 90 | 4500 ↑ Bigger |
| Franchise fee | ₹4 L | ₹1.5 L ↓ Lower |
| Working capital | ₹5 L | ₹1.5 L |
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There's no universal winner. U.S.Pizza suits operators who value brand prestige and larger-format positioning. Metropolis Healthcare suits operators who want to test the market with smaller initial exposure. Your location's traffic profile, your available capital, and your operating style together determine the right answer.
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.
Brand expansion strategies differ: Metropolis Healthcare 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.
For a first-time franchisee, capital preservation matters more than brand prestige. Metropolis Healthcare 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.