Acquire a newly built (2023) 8,030 SF freestanding retail building. Golden Glaze owner-occupies ~75%; the in-place Mr. Froze leaseback covers the remaining ~25% — financed with an SBA 504 loan at roughly 10% down.
A corner-lot, modern metal-construction retail building with drive-through capability and ample parking. The seller offers an immediate-income leaseback on ~2,000 SF, leaving 6,030 SF for Golden Glaze to occupy — which is exactly what unlocks SBA owner-occupied financing.
Because GG occupies well above 51%, the building qualifies for SBA 504 / 7(a). You keep Mr. Froze as a paying tenant in the other 25% (SBA allows leasing up to 49% of an existing building) and that rent helps your coverage.
For a real-estate-heavy, owner-occupied purchase, the SBA 504 is the cheapest capital available — lowest down payment and a long-term fixed rate you can't get on a conventional or 7(a) loan.
Conventional first mortgage from your bank. ~25-yr amortization, market rate. Often the lead lender originates this piece.
SBA-backed debenture through a Certified Development Company. 25-yr fixed rate — you lock today's rate for the life of the loan. This is the magic of 504.
Borrower injection. Lowest of any commercial structure (conventional wants 25–30%). Can sometimes be partly a seller note on standby.
Built 2023, but you're buying an already-built building, not constructing it with loan funds — so SBA treats it as existing and the 51% rule applies (which you clear). The stricter 60%-now / 80%-in-10-yr rule only hits ground-up construction. Expect the lender to confirm this classification; it's routine.
Asking price is $2,200,000 (Crexi) — about $274/SF on 8,030 SF. After a full research deep-dive (3 tracks, Jun '26) the honest read is: $274/SF is fair — at-to-slightly-above replacement cost for a metal building, not a discount. The earlier "below market / below replacement" framing was overstated. The corridor "comps" don't hold up like-for-like, and the value drivers are the 2023 vintage, the drive-through, the corner, and the in-place Mr. Froze income — not a cheap basis. Underwrite on income and unit economics, not on a price-per-SF bargain. deep-dive corrected, Jun '26
Build-it-new lands ~$212–449/SF (mid ~$319). The $274 ask sits in the lower-middle — you're paying roughly cost-to-replace and skipping 6+ months of construction + lease-up risk. Asterisk: the biggest layer is QSR fit-out — if GG rips out the existing kitchen, that's value you discard, which makes $274 look rich. Walk the kitchen before anchoring.
GG is franchisee/owner-operator credit, not corporate — underwrite the leased portion at ~7.5%, not the ~5.8% a broker will pitch. The cap rate only governs the ~25% leased to Mr. Froze; the rest is owner-occupied and valued on replacement, not yield.
The earlier $404 & $440/SF "comps" are mirages: 5625 is a 75-year-old 2,100 SF two-building infill parcel (PSF is a land/optionality artifact); 8247 is a 2005 multi-tenant strip priced on rent roll, not construction. Both are conventional, not metal, and neither is an owner-user QSR. The Son-of-a-Butcher trades were all ground leases (land only, no price disclosed) — not usable as building comps. No 2023-vintage metal QSR drive-thru resale exists in the corridor — the SBA appraiser will need CoStar/MLS closed sales.
Ground leases are common in this exact submarket/developer ecosystem (the Son-of-a-Butcher pads all were) — confirm the land conveys. The fit-out scope GG actually keeps and the true lot size are the two assumptions that move the answer most.
Sources: Crexi / LoopNet / @properties (subject + corridor listings), Tarrant Appraisal District (parcel records), Partners DFW Retail Q1 2026, Matthews TX QSR H1 (net-lease avg $742/SF, 5.8% cap), InvestmentGrade Q1 2026 (franchisee QSR cap rates), Boulder Group / Northmarq net-lease, Hanley Investment Group (Son-of-a-Butcher / Portillo's DFW drive-thru ground leases, Sep 2025), Star Building Systems / American Steel / BuildingsGuide (PEMB cost), Maxx Builders / EB3 / Terrapin (TX construction & QSR fit-out cost). Deep-dive validated by 3-track research team, Jun 2026.
Drag the inputs to pressure-test the deal. Two coverage lenses — the consuls forced this split (see §06): Store-profit DSCR leans on the new shop's cash flow, Rent-roll DSCR underwrites the building on market rent alone (GG pays itself + Mr. Froze), which is how a lender sizes the real estate. Lenders want ≥ 1.25×.
| Bank loan (1st lien) | |
| CDC / SBA debenture | |
| Borrower down payment | |
| Bank payment / mo | |
| CDC payment / mo | |
| Total debt service / mo | |
| Total debt service / yr |
| GG store revenue / yr | |
| Store cash flow before occupancy | |
| + Mr. Froze rent / yr | |
| Cash available for debt service | |
| Annual debt service | |
| Surplus / (shortfall) after debt |
| GG market rent / yr (paid to itself) | |
| + Mr. Froze rent / yr | |
| Total rent roll | |
| Annual debt service | |
| Rent-roll DSCR |
Green ≥ 1.25× · Amber 1.00–1.25× · Red < 1.00× (at current rate & sales inputs)
| Margin ↓ / Price → | $2.0M | $2.2M | $2.4M | $2.6M |
|---|
From "I want this" to keys in hand. SBA 504 typically closes in 45–75 days when the package is clean and you use a Preferred Lender.
Three advisors were spun up to attack this model, not bless it. They converged on one thing: the original 1.32× standalone DSCR was optimistic. Corrected for the phantom-rent double-count, a Year-1 ramp, and real SBA costs, the building does not self-fund as real estate — it clears on Golden Glaze's global cash flow, not its own. The deal still has a strong floor (sub-replacement-cost price), but the cash-flow story needed rebuilding.
Verdict: Qualified go on price, no-go on the model's cash-flow story. Honest Year-1 standalone DSCR is below 1.0×; it lives or dies on the other businesses carrying year one.
Verdict: Wait — unless Watauga was independently chosen as shop #8 before this building came up. That single fact flips it to proceed.
Bottom line: Corrected, this is ~0.95–1.0× rent-roll DSCR with ~$370–390k cash to close (15% down + soft costs), not 1.32× at $220k. It does not clear as drawn — it needs higher contracted GG rent, more equity, or documented store-profit support without the double-count.
Three parallel research tracks (live web, Jun '26) rebuilt the comp set from primary records. Headline: $274/SF is fair — at-to-slightly-below replacement cost, not a discount. The earlier corridor "comps" don't hold up like-for-like, and the Son-of-a-Butcher "sales" were ground leases with no disclosed price. Full detail, confidence flags, and sources below. asking ≠ closed sale — SBA appraiser will need CoStar/MLS closed comps
A 75-year-old, 2,100 SF two-building infill parcel. The $404/SF is a tiny-denominator land/optionality artifact, not a QSR construction comp. ~8+ months on market.
A stabilized multi-tenant investment asset priced on rent roll / cap rate — not an owner-user freestanding QSR. Wrong asset class for this comparison.
| Property | SF | Structure | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Son of a Butcher — Grapevine (SH-114) | 2,389 | 15-yr NNN ground lease | n/a |
| Son of a Butcher — Fort Worth (Alliance) | 2,247 | 15-yr NNN ground lease | n/a (off-mkt) |
| Portillo's — Grapevine (SH-114) | 6,250 | 10.5-yr NNN ground lease | n/a (rent >$300k/yr) |
All three were ground leases — the investor bought the land, the tenant owns the building, and no sale prices were disclosed. Not usable as building-$/SF comps. (Hanley Investment Group, ~Sep 17 '25.) A real fee-simple analog — a 2,500 SF Starbucks drive-thru in Gadsden AL — sold May '25 at $3.0M / $1,200/SF / 6.29%, but that's corporate-credit net-lease investment pricing, the opposite world from an owner-user.
| Segment | Cap rate |
|---|---|
| All franchisee QSR (avg) | 6.80% |
| Franchisee QSR, 15–19 yr term | 6.30% |
| Franchisee QSR, under-10-yr term | 7.55% |
| All corporate-credit QSR (avg) | 5.82% |
| TX QSR net-lease avg (Matthews H1) | 5.8% · $742/SF |
GG is franchisee/owner-operator credit, so underwrite the Mr. Froze leaseback at ~7.5%, not the ~5.8% corporate comp. The $742/SF TX net-lease average is investment-world PSF (capitalized rent) — it does not apply to an owner-user purchase and shouldn't be used to call $274/SF "cheap."
| Layer | Low | Mid | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Land (~0.85 ac corner pad, est.) | $225k | $370k | $610k |
| PEMB finished shell w/ MEP | $361k | $482k | $602k |
| QSR fit-out / kitchen (blended) | $723k | $1,044k | $1,365k |
| Drive-thru + sitework | $200k | $300k | $430k |
| Soft costs (15–25%) | $193k | $365k | $599k |
| All-in total | ~$1.70M | ~$2.56M | ~$3.61M |
| $/SF (÷ 8,030) | ~$212 | ~$319 | ~$449 |
The $2.2M / $274/SF ask sits in the lower-middle of the $212–449/SF replacement range (mid ~$319). You're paying roughly cost-to-replace, minus 6+ months of construction + lease-up risk. Two assumptions move the answer most: (1) lot size — modeled at 0.85 ac, confirm at TAD (swings land ±$200k); (2) fit-out you keep — if GG rips out and rebuilds the donut line, strip $300–600k of "value to you" and $274 looks rich. Seller's likely 2023 basis is ~$2.0–2.1M, so the ask is priced at basis — anchor opening at ~$1.9–2.0M ($237–249/SF).
Sources (live, Jun '26): 5625 Watauga (@properties) · 8247 Rufe Snow (Crexi) · 5624 subject (LoopNet) · Tarrant Appraisal District · Hanley — SoaB/Portillo's DFW ground leases · InvestmentGrade — QSR cap rates Q1 '26 · Matthews — TX QSR H1 · Star Building Systems — PEMB cost · BuildingsGuide — metal prices · Maxx Builders — DFW construction · EB3 — QSR drive-thru cost · Terrapin — TI buildout cost
The question on the table: should GG buy 5624 Watauga as the vehicle to execute the centralized-kitchen plan (the $1M raise)? Four seats debated it independently.
Flip: a signed Mr. Froze lease (term + escrow) plus a renewed pro-forma DSCR ≥ 1.25x on the building standalone.
Flip: GG drops retail/drive-thru and dedicates the full 8,030 SF to production.
Flip: Watauga was independently the chosen next commissary site on the merits — before this listing surfaced.
Flip: a long-term Froze (or signed replacement) lease that pushes true DSCR comfortably above ~1.25x standalone.
PASS — as the commissary vehicle Pursue the commissary via the raise + leased Mid-Cities space. Revisit Watauga only if it decouples from the raise and a long-term lease lifts standalone DSCR ≥ 1.25x.