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Date
Tuesday, May 19, 2026 at 5 p.m. ET
Call participants
- Chief Executive Officer and Co-Founder — Brett Schulman
- Chief Financial Officer — Tricia K. Tolivar
Takeaways
- Revenue -- $434.4 million, reflecting 32.2% year-over-year growth.
- Same restaurant sales -- Increased 9.7%, driven by 6.8% traffic growth.
- Net new restaurant openings -- 20 in the quarter, bringing the total to 459 locations.
- Average unit volume (AUV) -- $3 million system-wide, with new restaurants exceeding 100% productivity benchmarks.
- Restaurant level profit -- $108.9 million, equating to 25.1% of revenue, up 32.3% from the prior year period.
- Adjusted EBITDA -- $61.7 million, a 37.6% increase.
- Net income -- $23.6 million, compared to $25.7 million in the prior year, resulting in diluted EPS of $0.20 versus $0.22 previously.
- Free cash flow -- $15.5 million during the quarter.
- Liquidity -- $403 million in cash and investments, zero debt outstanding, and access to a $150 million revolver.
- Digital sales mix -- Approached 40% of total revenue, up from approximately 36% in prior years.
- Loyalty program performance -- Increased member engagement and frequency, with progression in tiers matching management's expectations.
- Menu innovation -- Launched pomegranate-glazed salmon nationwide and brought back roasted white sweet potato as a seasonal item, both receiving favorable guest response.
- Guidance update -- Full-year outlook raised: 75-77 net new restaurants, same-restaurant sales of 4.5%-6.5%, restaurant-level margins of 23.7%-24.3%, preopening costs of $22 million–$22.5 million, and adjusted EBITDA of $181 million–$191 million.
- Labor investment -- Ongoing wage increases and the rollout of the Assistant General Manager (AGM) position, with AGMs now present in over 50% of locations.
- AI & data platforms -- Deployment of KavaCore and CavaCurrent early-stage data and commerce systems to enable predictive operations and improved guest personalization.
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Risks
- Tricia K. Tolivar said, "and incorporates a 20- to 40-basis-point headwind to capture a more cautious view on elevated energy cost impacts given ongoing geopolitical uncertainty."
- Introduction of salmon as a menu item "expect to be a margin rate headwind of approximately 100 basis points." through at least the fourth quarter.
- Other operating expenses increased 80 basis points to 13.3% of revenue, largely due to a higher digital sales mix and individually significant, but "fairly onetime," items.
Summary
CAVA Group (CAVA 2.28%) reported substantial revenue growth, robust traffic gains, and expanded its digital engagement, while maintaining disciplined investment in menu and team development. Management highlighted consistent performance across all geographies and income cohorts, with particular strength from lower-income guests. New restaurant openings continue to outperform, supported by focused human capital initiatives and technology integration. Elevated energy costs and commodity investments, especially related to menu innovation, temper the flow-through to margins but are factored into updated full-year guidance. No deterioration in consumer behavior or premium purchase incidence was observed despite geopolitical and macro uncertainty.
- Brett Schulman stated, "We have not seen any shift in our consumer behavior. We talked about we have seen it very consistent across regions, across age cohorts, and across income cohorts."
- The salmon menu offering will remain through at least the fourth quarter, with no commitment to it as a permanent ongoing item.
- National brand awareness increased from 62% to 66%, supporting broadened marketing efforts and market penetration.
- Store-level digital order growth reflects both first- and third-party improvements, with investments in technology such as kitchen display systems enhancing operational efficiency and order accuracy.
- The expansion of the AGM role, focused on high-volume locations, is part of management's broader human capital development to ensure sustainable growth and operational excellence.
- Pilot programs for catering and further menu item testing, including roasted garlic shrimp, remain in market-test stages, illustrating the company's measured approach to scaling new offerings and capabilities.
Industry glossary
- AUV (Average unit volume): The average annual revenue generated by each restaurant unit.
- AGM (Assistant general manager): A leadership role focused on supporting restaurant management and operational execution, introduced as part of talent development initiatives.
- KavaCore: CAVA Group's internally developed data platform enabling unified business data infrastructure and future AI integration.
- CavaCurrent: CAVA Group's real-time modular commerce platform for operations and execution at the restaurant level.
Full Conference Call Transcript
Matt Milanovich: Good afternoon, and welcome to CAVA's first quarter 26 financial results conference call. Before we begin, if you do not already have a copy, the earnings release and related 8-K furnished to the SEC are available on our website. At investor.cabo.com. The purpose of this conference call is to give investors further details regarding the company's financial results, as well as a general update on the company's progress. You will find reconciliations of any non-GAAP financial measure discussed on today's call to the most directly comparable financial measure calculated in accordance with GAAP to the extent available without unreasonable efforts today's earnings release and supplemental deck each of which is posted on the company's website.
Before we begin, let me remind everyone that this call will contain forward looking statements. For this purpose, any statements made during this call that are not statements of historical fact may be deemed to be forward looking statements. Investors should be aware that any forward looking statements are subject to various risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially. From those discussed here today. These risk factors are explained in detail in CAVA's most recent annual report on Form 10-K, as may be updated by its reports on Form 10 Q and other filings with the SEC.
Please refer to these filings for a more detailed discussion of forward looking statements and the risks and uncertainties of such statements. All forward looking statements are made as of today, and except as required by law, CAVA undertakes no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statement. Whether as a result of new information, future developments or otherwise. And now I will turn the call over to the company's Co-Founder and CEO, Brett Schulman.
Brett Schulman: Thanks, Matt, and welcome to the call, everyone. In the 2026, we further solidified our position as the clear leader in the Mediterranean cuisine category. While executing against our long term strategy with discipline and conviction. Despite today's broader macroeconomic environment, and geopolitical uncertainty, we sustained strong momentum delivered exceptional results. Including positive traffic of 6.8%. Guided by the same steady focus that has shaped our business for the past 15 years we will continue building for the long term as we gain market share. With significant white space ahead. While deepening our relationships with guests through a value proposition that clearly resonates.
Our first quarter highlights include a 32.2% increase in CAVA revenue, same restaurant sales of 9.7%, driven by 6.8% traffic, 20 net new restaurants, ending the quarter with 459 restaurants, a 20.2% increase year over year adjusted EBITDA of $61.7 million a 37.6% increase over the 2025 net income of $23.6 million and $15.5 million in free cash flow. These results are a direct byproduct of the structural strength of our business and the dominant position we hold as the industry leader in the Mediterranean. A cuisine category we have pioneered defined, and continue to shape. Central to that leadership is a value proposition rooted first and foremost in doing what is right by our team members, and our guests.
While many peers have responded to short term cyclical pressures, with discounting and promotional activity, we have remained unwavering on our long term strategy. This past January, we took an approximate 1.4% price increase price increase, while holding baseball and PETA pricing flat. Over the longer term, we have priced well below inflation, with price adjustments representing only slightly more than half of cumulative CPI since 2019. These decisions deliberate and consistent, have compounded over time, reinforcing the trust we have built with our guests and strengthening the foundation of our brand. And importantly, that value is not 1 dimensional.
Whether a guest is looking for an accessible everyday meal or choosing to lean into 1 of our more premium offerings, we have created the flexibility for them to engage with CAVA on their terms. In a way that fits their needs and moments. Ultimately, this all ties back to our concept essence. Making Mediterranean cuisine accessible to communities across the country while delivering it with warm hospitality. Hospitality that is delivered by our outstanding team members who we support with investments like our Flavor Your Future platform, which I will speak to in more detail later.
The strength of our category competitive positioning of our brand, and the power of our concept have enabled the success we saw this past quarter that we continue to build on for the future. It is that foundation and focus on execution that guides our work across our 4 strategic pillars. Beginning with our first, expand our Mediterranean way in communities across the country. During the first quarter, we opened 20 net new restaurants, ending the quarter with 459 locations across 29 states and the District Of Columbia, Our expansion continues with both intention and incredible momentum. Reflected by recent new market openings in Cincinnati, St. Louis, Columbus and our upcoming entry into Minneapolis, Minnesota later this year.
Further deepening our presence across the Midwest. We are encouraged by the early performance of our 26 cohort is tracking in line with or ahead of the strength of our 25 class, with first quarter new restaurant productivity trending above 100%. As we expand our reach across the country, our culinary innovation remains at the heart of what draws guests to our brand. This past January, we brought back our fan favorite roasted white sweet potato to a warm reception. With guests embracing it as a complimentary meat and using it as a canvas to craft their own Kotlin experience. The launch resonated beyond our existing customer base as well.
Driving increased visit frequency among returning guests while introducing the brand to new ones. We are pleased with the performance of the seasonal favorite, and we look forward to welcoming it back to our menu again in the future. And from beloved returning favorites to new culinary firsts, our pipeline of innovation continues to move forward with discipline and purpose. I am excited to share that we have officially launched our first ever seafood offering. Pomegranate glazed salmon, across all restaurants nationwide, Our roasted flaky fillet is marinated in a subtly sweet blend of pomegranate date molasses, areesa, red wine vinegar, and bold spices.
A protein rich option with omega threes and essential vitamins like B12 and vitamin D delivering both bold flavor and genuine nourishment in every bite. Salmon is a natural extension of our menu. Fitting seamlessly within the Mediterranean diet. While increasing the variety of choices we can offer our guests. This is an important culinary milestone for us and 1 we approached with care. Ensuring it stayed true to our concept essence. We have seen promising early results as guests experience salmon from the first time at their local CAVA. Shifting to our second pillar, deepen personal relationships with guests even as we scale.
We are encouraged by the strength of our loyalty program and the increasingly creative and engaging ways we are bringing it to life for our guests. This past quarter, through our digital experience, we leaned into the cultural touch points that bring our guests together. Finding intersections of joy, connection, and food that feel organic to who we are. Our flavor bracket in app game and recent partnerships with WNBA #1 pick, AZ Fudd, and NCAA men's champion, Donovan Clingan, each with their own digital exclusive bowl, brought the energy of March Madness to life in a way that felt both timely and uniquely common.
Together, these became 1 of our most highly engaged digital experiences to date, and we will continue to broaden our array of engagement tools and tactics like these. Further leverage the loyalty program and first party audience we are growing. From the beginning, it has always been about showing up authentically and becoming a genuine part of what our guests already love. It is through this kind of presence that we continue to deepen the relationships that keep our guests delighted. And coming back. Bringing these relationships to life starts at a fundamental level with our people and our restaurants.
Which is reflected in the progress across our third and fourth pillars, run great restaurants every location, every shift, and operate as a high performing team. Operating as a high performing team requires making foundational investments today that position us for the next decade and beyond. We have spoken before about being on the precipice of a decade of data transformation, a multiyear transformation where data, technology, and AI will reshape how we run our business. I want to take a moment to share the recent progress we have made Earlier this year, we reached a meaningful milestone with the launch of KavaCore. Our modern data platform.
It establishes a unified, scalable foundation for how we manage and use data across the business, enabling fast execution today while positioning us to leverage emerging AI capabilities. Building on that, we are in the early stages of delivering our new edge enabled operating platform, Cava Current, a modular real time commerce platform. CAVA Current is live today actively processing orders across our restaurants, And as it scales, it will drive more consistent execution with improved visibility and faster, more localized actions. Together, KavaCore and KavaCurrent create a connected real time system bringing data, applications, and intelligence together to power our business.
This enables us to deliver more meaningful personalized experiences for our guests, tailored to their preferences and behaviors while also advancing more predictive operations that help our teams anticipate demand and better align staffing and preparation in real time. By building this platform internally, we gain greater control, flexibility, and the ability to scale more efficiently over time. And while this is an important advancement, it is not a discrete initiative. It is a deliberate structural evolution creating the conditions for us to operate as a real time AI enabled business and move faster and more intelligently across every part of our organization.
The work we are doing today will allow us to continue delivering value for our guests our team members, and our business for years to come. And finally, even the most sophisticated infrastructure only creates value when it is in service of the team members running great restaurants every location. Every shift. A core tenet of this strategic pillar is investing in our team members and talent, and we remain deeply committed to building the next generation of leaders across our system. Our flavor your future initiative continues to show promise, focusing on attracting, developing, and retaining talent across the organization. A recent key action under this was the launch of our new assistant general manager position.
With the critical goal of developing a deeper bench of role ready leaders to support our growth as we scale. Early indicators from the AGM rollout are promising. Restaurants with AGM coverage are outperforming those without. As AGMs provide additional leadership support during peak dinner and weekend shifts, strengthening operations, deepening the development of future team members, and building more sustainable restaurant teams over time. We look forward to sharing more on the broader flavor of your future platform in the quarters ahead. And while the early results of the AGM rollout are encouraging, stories like Adriana Cervantes reflect the broader opportunity we are building toward through Flavor Your Future.
Adriana joined CAVA as a guest experience manager in Sherman Oaks and through her leadership, operational impact, and commitment to our values, quickly progressed into the assistant general manager role before being promoted to general manager earlier this year. Todd, she is already working toward becoming an academy manager. Helping develop future leaders across the organization. Her journey is a powerful reminder that when we invest in our team members create opportunities for growth, we are able to build not just stronger restaurants, but meaningful and lasting careers for our people.
Before I turn the call over, I wanna thank our teams across the country for delivering a strong quarter and for staying true to our mission. it is the consistency, intentionality, and discipline with which we operate that have allowed us to establish ourselves as a clear leader in Mediterranean. The next large scale cultural cuisine category. As we look ahead, we remain committed to bringing heart health, and humanity to food. And with that, I will hand it over to Tricia to walk you through the financials.
Tricia K. Tolivar: Thanks, Brett, and hello, everyone. CAVA revenue in 2026 grew 32.2% year-over-year to $434.4 million. Same restaurant sales increased 9.7% driven by traffic growth of 6.8%. During the quarter, we opened 20 net new restaurants, bringing our total Cava restaurant count to 459. As Brett noted, we are very pleased with our new restaurant openings. Which are tracking ahead of or in line with the strength of our 2025 class. New restaurant openings continue to exceed expectations in both top line and margin performance, with new restaurant productivity above 100%. Our overall system wide average unit volume are now $3 million. CAVA restaurant level profit in the first quarter was $108.9 million or 25.1% of revenue.
Compared to $82.3 million or 25.1% of revenue in the prior year period, representing a 32.3% increase. 29.1% of revenue over the 2025 by 20 basis points. Largely driven by favorable mix. As a reminder, we anticipate Cava's food, beverage, and packaging costs to increase as a percent of revenue for the rest of the year as a result of the recent salmon launch. Cava flavor and related costs were 25.7% of revenue. Approximately flat to the 2025. This was driven by sales leverage, offset by a 2% investment in team member wages which includes the expansion of our AGM role.
Cava occupancy and related expenses were 6.9% of revenue, an improvement of 50 basis points from the 2025 due to sales leverage. Other operating expenses, were 13.3% of revenue, reflecting an increase of 80 basis points from 2025. This increase was primarily driven by a higher mix of third party delivery and other individually significant items. Shifting to overall performance, our general and administrative expenses for the quarter excluding equity based compensation and executive transition costs, were 9.9% of revenue compared with 10.5% of revenue in 2025. This 60-basis-point improvement was driven by leverage from higher sales partially offset by investments to drive future growth and higher performance based incentive compensation.
Preopening expenses were $6.2 million in the current quarter, compared with $4.5 million in the prior year quarter. The $1.7 million increase includes a higher number of unit under construction. Adjusted EBITDA for the first quarter was $61.7 million, a 37.6% increase versus 2025. The increase in adjusted EBITDA was driven by 9.7% same restaurant sales growth The number and continued strength of new restaurant openings partially offset by investments to support growth including higher preopening costs. For the 2026, equity based compensation was $7.7 million.
We continue to expect equity based compensation, which includes our new programs to provide equity grants to GMs and performance based LTI to be between $22 million and $24 million in aggregate for the full year. In the first quarter, our effective tax rate was 21.5%. For the full year fiscal 26, we expect our effective tax rate to be between 23% to 28% with the rate in Q2 being consistent with Q1 based on the timing of equity based vesting. As a reminder, the increase in our tax rate in 2026 versus the prior year is due to the lower permanent benefit from equity based compensation.
Our cash taxes will continue to be immaterial until we fully utilize our net operating losses. During the first quarter, we reported $23.6 million of net income compared to $25.7 million of net income in 2025. Diluted EPS was $0.20 in the first quarter compared with $0.22 in the 2025. The decrease in net income and diluted EPS is due to the previously mentioned higher permanent benefit from equity based compensation within income tax in the prior year. Partially offset by nearly 50% higher earnings before taxes. Turning to liquidity.
At the end of the quarter, we had zero debt outstanding, $403 million in cash and investments, and access to a $150 million revolver with an option to increase our liquidity if needed. Cash flow from operations for the 2026 was $64.1 million compared to $38.6 million during 2025. Free cash flow during the quarter was $15.5 million. Now to our outlook for full year 2026. We are raising our guidance to expect the following.
75 to 77 net new Cava restaurant openings, same-restaurant sales of 4.5% to 6.5%, comma, restaurant level profit margin of 23.7% to 24.3%, preopening costs between $22 million and $22.5 million, and adjusted EBITDA, including the burden of preopening costs between $181 million and $191 million. I would like to provide some additional thoughts on our outlook. Turning to same restaurant sales. We increased our full year outlook to 4.5% to 6.5% growth. Our updated guidance reflects the continued strength we are seeing across the business while remaining appropriately balanced against the current macroeconomic and consumer backdrop. Remain confident in the underlying health of the business, supported by the strength of our unit economic model.
While same restaurant sales trends in the second quarter are in line with the first quarter and tracking above our revised full year guidance, our updated outlook contemplates a more moderate mid single digit comp assumption for the balance of the year. Overall, we believe our guidance appropriately balances the momentum we are seeing in the business today, with a prudent view of the external environment. Shifting to restaurant level margin, our outlook reflects strength of our business and incorporates a 20- to 40-basis-point headwind to capture a more cautious view on elevated energy cost impacts given ongoing geopolitical uncertainty.
On the labor front, our guidance embeds further investments in team member wages and other opportunities to deliver on an exceptional guest experience. As a reminder, beginning in the second quarter, we introduced salmon nationally, which we expect to be a margin rate headwind of approximately 100 basis points. Reopening expenses reflect increased investments in operator readiness including onboarding general managers earlier, to allow for more comprehensive training ahead of opening. We believe these investments help position our teams to execute consistently at a high level. Finally, shifting to general and administrative expenses. While we experienced leverage in the quarter driven by outsized sales performance, our general and administrative outlook for 2026 remains unchanged.
And we continue to expect G&A as a percentage of revenue be relatively flat year over year as we remain committed to making targeted investments to support the long term growth of the business. Before we open the line for questions, I wanna thank our team members across the organization for their continued hard work and commitment to delivering for our guests every day. Is because of their passion and dedication that we are able to fulfill our mission of bringing heart, health and humanity's food and create meaningful experiences for our guests. With that, we will open the line for questions.
Operator: We will now begin the question and answer session. Please limit yourself to 1 question. To ask a follow-up, please rejoin the queue. You would like to ask a question, please press *1 to raise your hand. To withdraw your question, please press *1 again. We ask that you pick up your handset when asking a question to allow for optimum sound quality. If you are muted locally, please remember to unmute your device. Please stand by while we compile the Q&A roster. Your first question comes from the line of Sara Senatore from BoA. Sara, your line is now open.
Analyst (Sara Senatore): Thank you. Just I guess a question about the new strip productivity. Obviously, very yeah, very impressive. I think, you know, in the past, we have talked about a hunting period it is been a relatively modest drag. So I do not wanna overstate it. I think maybe 100 basis points. But I guess anything you can share about the new stores, any commonalities across which markets have the highest NFTs? You know, and based on a 2025 cohort, you are those highest volume stores the ones that have the honeymoon period, or are 2 things, I guess, not correlated? Just trying to think through, you know, as we think through the as they enter the comp base.
And then just a quick clarification, you said, I think, Cava's food, beverage and packaging costs will increase for the rest of the year because of salmon. So does that mean you plan to keep it on the menu through the end of the year? I guess I thought the Initially it was it is targeted through 3 q. Thank you. Sara.
Tricia K. Tolivar: Thank you for the question. So talking about new store productivity first, we are very pleased with the openings of our new restaurants again in 2026. Our new restaurant openings are exceeding our expectations with AUVs of $3 million. And performing at 100% or greater productivity. We are finding that across all geographies, all types of formats, all markets, and cannot find any commonalities and trends that tying them to a particular behavior overall other than we have not found a market yet that does not love CAVA, and we are very happy with their performance.
What we are seeing with those 2024 openings, as they come into 2026, while we talked about the honeymoon last year, what we are seeing with the '24s and entering into the comp base or in the comp base in 2026 is that they are outpacing our expectations. And that they are performing better than we expected. And after 18 months continue to show positive momentum and are contributing significantly to overall same restaurant sales performance. The 2025 vintage in 2026 is performing very similar to 2024. So no significant difference there. And we would expect them to perform, 2024 as we move forward, and that is how we have reflected it in our guidance.
Your second question was regarding cause and the impact of salmon. So yes, we launched salmon at the beginning in the second quarter. it is anticipated to run-in the second quarter and third quarter, and our guidance reflects that impact in the fourth quarter as well. Thank you.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of David Tarantino from Baird. David, we are just opening your line. It is now open.
Analyst (David Tarantino): Brett. Thank you. My question is on the margin outlook. Tricia, I You raised the comp guidance, which is encouraging. But did not really touch the restaurant level margin guidance. Very much. And I think you called out energy costs, but I guess is are there other factors that are limiting the flow through on the additional revenue that are worth calling out, or is this all about an assumption that energy costs will be higher for the balance of the year?
And then secondly, I wonder if you could just comment specifically on the other operating cost line because I think that line surprised you know, at least some of us this quarter, and just we can unpack, you know, the fairly big variance in that line versus maybe where we had it modeled? Thanks.
Tricia K. Tolivar: Yeah. Appreciate that, David. So regarding the margin outlook, our model is incredibly robust and has tremendous flow through, and we are seeing that continue to perform. But there are a number of factors that we included in our guidance that we want to specifically touch on. 1 is salmon, so that is certainly going to have an impact overall on margin rates. But remember that salmon is priced to be, penny profit neutral, so the dollars will be the same. The other piece is the energy cost impact, it hits a couple of different line items.
And as we called out in the prepared remarks, we are contemplating an additional 20 to 40 basis points of an impact related to those that would likely more significant in the third and fourth quarter. As fuel surcharges will kick in. We are starting to see early signs of that, but that if this persists, will continue to escalate as you go into the remainder of the year. And then you are also going to see some potentially utility impacts on any other operating expense line. And then within input costs related to food, beverage, and package you have got polyethylene costs that are anticipated to also be impacted, and we have built all that into our guidance.
Which does have an impact on the overall flow-through. To a lesser extent, we did layer in some average wage investments and some flexibility to make some investments in our guest experience in terms of labor that will be less impactful but is included in our guidance overall. And keep in mind, David, we did increase the top end of our level margin guidance range by 10 basis points, going back to the robustness of the model itself. But contemplating the uncertainties that are out there and how they might impact our performance overall. The other OpEx line as we called out, digital mix is impacting that. So you are seeing some increase in overall fees on that line.
Digital is designed to drive, profit neutrality, so it is a little bit of an optic impact as you look at that. And then there are other fairly immaterial amounts across a number of different categories, but between other operating expenses, and those are fairly onetime in nature. However, as we think about other OpEx, as we go through the remainder of the year, it will be a little bit above where we were on the full year basis as a percentage of revenue versus 2025, and that is largely due to the digital mix. That I mentioned earlier.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Danilo Gargiulo from Bernstein. Your line is now open.
Analyst (Danilo Gargiulo): Thank you. I have, first of all, a clarification on, Tricia, on your statement that April or, you know, the recent data is tracking on track with the first quarter actual. So I was wondering whether you were referring to the average that you have achieved in the first in the first quarter or whether you were referring to the exit rate. Then stepping back, maybe this is more for Brad.
Like, if you were to think about the swinging factors, that you have at your disposal, for this year what do you think is going to be driving you to get to the high end of the guidance versus the low end given that you have significant opportunities ahead of you and you have already demonstrated that in the first quarter? Thank you.
Operator: So regarding your question about our same restaurant sales assumptions and what we are experiencing, our same restaurant sales trends in the second quarter are in line with our overall same restaurant sales in the first quarter.
Tricia K. Tolivar: And tracking above our revised full year guidance.
Brett Schulman: And, Danilo, to the second question, gonna stay steadfast in our long term strategy with consistent methodical menu innovation to excite our guests that does not create operational complexity Tricia talked about some of the potential investments that we have accounted for in restaurant level margin to lean in and elevate our warm Mediterranean hospitality. And continuing our operational execution while mitigating menu price increases. We are very focused on making sure we do not have to pass through any inflationary pressures to our guests. And that has been something we have worked very hard on in recent years.
That whether it is underpricing peers by more than half, whether it is taking less than half the price increase of CPI, that has delivered great value every day that we think drives that traffic over the long haul. So we will continue to focus on those. And, again, also, we talked in the past about the opportunity to continue to lean in and pull our marketing lever. It has been a smaller portion as a spend of our percentage of revenue versus our peers. And we see opportunities to continue to be, you know, very cost effective with our marketing. But elevate the awareness. We have grown our awareness now from 62% to 66% across the country.
So that certainly helps drive more people to try CAVA. And when they try it, they like it, and they come back more frequently.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Andrew Charles from T. B. Cohen. Andrew, your line is now open.
Analyst (Zach Ogden): Brett. Thank you. This is Zach Ogden on for Andrew. So the acceleration you saw in same store sales to start the year is contrary to what most of your peers saw. So do you stock rank the drivers of that acceleration between white sweet potatoes, any marketing investment, any improvement in your consumer, or maybe some other factors as well?
Tricia K. Tolivar: And so certainly, when we look at same restaurant sales in Q1, we believe it is a combination of our amazing culinary brand cuisine where taste and health unite to guests across the country. At a time where it is meeting the needs of the modern consumer and meeting their desires from a, a experience standpoint. Also, bundling that with warm hospitality and delivering on what Brett talked about is a great value every day. And those things together are significant contributors to the overall performance. You mentioned white sweet potatoes. You know, we brought back a fan favorite of white sweet potatoes, and our guests just love it.
It drove frequency, brought in new guests, and created a unique option for our guests as a complimentary main item. It does not appear to be a single factor that was driving the overall same restaurant sales performance. When you look at the comps across the country, saw great strength in every region of the country, see great strength across all of our vintages. And in fact, when you look at our restaurants based on their median household income in their market, all of those cohorts are performing very well and our lower income cohorts continue to outperform as we bridge this K shaped economy.
Analyst (Zach Ogden): Brett. Thank you.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Gregory Francfort From Guggenheim Securities. Your line is now open.
Analyst: Hey. Hey. Thanks for the question. I just wanted to maybe unpack the digital sales and I think you hit almost 40% this quarter. And just a few years ago, was maybe 35%. And how much of that is being driven by 3P delivery versus your 1P digital channels and I guess, what is the strategy or goal for that for that breakdown over time? Thanks.
Tricia K. Tolivar: Yeah, Greg. When we look at our digital mix, we are seeing improvements. And going back to what I said earlier, we designed our channels to drive the same level of profitability on a dollar space that is across the board regardless of how they choose to dine with us. And when we look at the quarter itself, we are seeing improvement in third party delivery mix overall, and we are seeing improvement in other channels as well with digital that are driving to that increase from the 36% level in prior years, closer to 40% today.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Brian Harbour from Morgan Stanley. Your line is now open.
Analyst (Brian Harbour): Thanks. Good afternoon. I guess, you know, could you comment on what you have seen from Salmon so far? I guess, the core date kinda suggests it is doing well, but, you know, anything about new customers, about frequency, Are you sort of happy with the consistency of the product when you know, look across your store base? And then, I guess, the you know, it sounds like you expected to sort of remain there through the balance of the year. Know, is the assumption that this is kind of the permanent seafood offering at this point?
Brett Schulman: Hey, Brian. We are pleased with the performance of salmon. It is in line with what we saw in our market tests and to our expectations. And very proud of the team. They did a rigorous stage gate process to test and ensure that we could execute a delicate protein at a high level for our guests. And so we have been very pleased with the execution across the fleet and have not committed to salmon being an everyday item but do expect it to run through the fourth quarter at minimum.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Christopher O'Cull from Stifel. Your line is now open.
Analyst: Brett. Thanks, guys. This is Patrick on for Christopher. Brett, I know you talked about testing roasted garlic shrimp last quarter, and I was curious if you could give an update on that in the Stage Gate process. I know we have seen some emails here in our local market, but I am not sure if that is indicative of the fact that rolled it out nationally yet or if we are in the test.
And Just more broadly, in on the LTOs in general, how are you guys thinking about pace and sequencing of LTOs maybe relative to past years when a lot of peers have seemed to accelerate the pace of innovation and clearly you have a lot of momentum, but curious to get your thoughts on what your customer is telling you, what the business is telling you in regards to what that right pace is for CAVA.
Brett Schulman: Yeah, I am guessing he might be in Northern New Jersey. That is where or, I am sorry, or Nashville. Where our market tests are going on, on roasted garlic shrimp. So that has moved to the next stage of stage A process. Originally, it was a market test or sorry, an operations test. We are now in a market test, which is a broader test which would be the last stage of proof points before we would take it to a more national launch. So again, it is following the same discipline process we have been doing for a number of years now and what our culinary roadmap has.
And a tent pole moment each year bracketed by seasonal moments. And we think that is still the right pace for us. That is the, I think, the balance we are trying to strike. To have the right amount of newness and excitement for our guests without over complicating operations. We are focused on delivering exceptional operations every restaurant, every shift with warm hospitality, And so we want to be mindful of how much newness we drive in and operational complexity on our operators. While balancing the excitement our guests have when we bring them new culinary. So I would continue to expect a tentpole moment each year.
Bracketed by a few seasonal moments like you saw with roasted white sweet potatoes, have a few fun things coming this summer. Or even collaborations like we did with Azzi and Donovan around the NCAA tournament tag.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Brian Mullan. From Piper Sandler. Your line is now open.
Analyst (Brian Mullan): Thank you. And Brett, you just mentioned operations. My question is on operations. With Doug Thompson having a bit more time in the role, can you just talk about what he is been the most focused on so far? You know, what are the most important priorities for that role as you see it for the balance of the year? And if you just want to layer on, you know, your very strong growth in traffic and how that might influence timing or order of priorities. Anything would be great.
Brett Schulman: Yeah. 3 main priorities. First and foremost for Douglas is people development. Douglas is an experienced leader of people, a developer of future leaders. Very excited to have him on board. So building out our pipeline, which that AGM investment is part of, of future leaders, not only to help maintain operational integrity across all shifts, both lunch and dinner and weekends. But as well as building a deeper pipeline of future leaders to open those new restaurants with operational integrity. And then new restaurant opening excellence is another given the intense volumes we are seeing and new restaurant productivity. Want to make sure that we protect those guests' experiences when they come in.
And they experience the best version of Cava and put our best foot forward Very excited at some of the you know, the additions we have made in our recent Ohio openings that have really helped deliver better experiences on these NROs. And then lastly, and but not least is hospitality. it is been core to our brand essence. it is not just our Mediterranean cuisine where taste and health unite. But it is our warm Mediterranean hospitality and I think we are we are good at delivering that across the country, but we wanna be great and exceptional at it. I think we have some opportunities to do that consistently again across every restaurant, every shift.
And this is something Douglas has great decades of experience in delivering. And I am excited for him to bring that experience to Cobb and help us elevate from good to great.
Operator: Thank you. Your next question comes from the line of John Ivankoe from JPMorgan. Your line is now open.
Analyst (John Ivankoe): Hi. Thank you. First, and I am sorry if I missed this, an operations related question first. On catering, Brett, can you talk about your experience of catering, particularly in some of the busier, more urban stores, you do want to do it out of existing CAVA outlets or, if, maybe some purpose built assets would kind of make sense, you know, to better achieve the catering daypart. that is the first question. And then secondly, you guys have long talked about, I guess, human resources developing talent. Probably the number 1 gating factor to the speed of growth. Which I think makes a lot of sense.
But Tricia, you did mention on the balance sheet, you do have $400 million of cash. You have a $150 million undrawn revolver. You are generating cash. I mean, it seems like you might be in a pretty good position to maybe think about some asset types of deals that could potentially be converted to COVID at some later date. So just as an idea, so where are we in terms of potentially using the balance sheet and your overall cash flexibility to maybe accelerate development? Obviously, not this year, but over the next couple of years as opportunities arise. Thank you.
Brett Schulman: Yeah, John. I will address catering, then I will let Tricia address the balance sheet question. We have a market test going on in Houston that we have spoken to in the past. We plan to expand that to a second city, a second market later this year. And 1 of the goals of the test and really, we think is the critical aspect of it is understanding capacity management and load balancing. We have tremendous demand in catering. We know there is a lot of demand that is out there, but we wanna make sure we position our operators to successfully meet that demand and meet our commitment experience on the catering front.
And so to your point, we do have 20-plus purpose-built locations that include, we have spoken about, our hybrid kitchens and our digital kitchens. Have extra capacity hub central production capacity, And we are testing in regular CAVA restaurants to understand strategically how do we want to move forward. Is it more purpose built centralized production? Complemented with the regular Cava restaurants? Or is it just that centralized production? And we wanna be very patient, methodical, and disciplined because we know that revenue potential is out there for us, but we want to make sure when we do open the spigots or roll out catering that we need it with operational integrity and more to come.
But, again, we will expand it later this year to a second market test to make sure we are understanding how we want to move forward with our load balancing and capacity management.
Tricia K. Tolivar: And, John, as it relates to our balance sheet, we are in a very strong position there that you called out and certainly have the highest and best use of our cash are investing in new restaurant openings. And as you rightfully acknowledged, the biggest governor to that growth is ensuring we have a bright pipeline of role-ready leaders to open those restaurants successfully. So we will consider and evaluate asset deals and understanding how to further augment our very robust real estate pipeline that we have. But wanna be thoughtful and not go after assets that we were not able to support.
And at the same time, as we have looked at opportunities to invest in real estate through different acquisitions, there is we find that it is often better to just wait and acquire those assets on their own through different means, and it is a more effective, deployment of capital in the end and less of a distraction to the business. So what our balance sheet provides is lots of flexibility and options We are always evaluating different investments that we can make in cash to drive incremental returns for the business. But at this time, that is highest and best use of capital is in new restaurant openings.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Brian Vaccaro from Raymond James. Your line is now open.
Analyst (Brian Vaccaro): Hi. Thanks, and good evening. You noted the strength in the third party delivery channel and just curious what you would attribute that to Are there tangible improvements in execution, order accuracy, accuracy, etcetera, or any changes in the agreement with third party delivery that are worth noting? And then just a follow-up on the AGM program. Could you just remind us what percentage of the store base today has an AGM in place? Thank you.
Brett Schulman: Hey, Brian. If you remember last year, we spoke about our kitchen display screen investment and rollout. And that is absolutely driving better productivity, better order accuracy, better digital order management. So that is driven both growth in our 3 p channels as well as our 1P channel and digital ordering pickup and pickup by car. So that, again, has helped equip our team with the tools to be more successful and deliver on our guest commitments, which is driving overall growth in the digital chats.
Tricia K. Tolivar: With regards to AGMs in our restaurants, we are focused at those restaurants with higher volumes in placing AGMs in those locations, so I have not yet disclosed the actual number. I would say it is approaching above 50% of the locations. But it is progressive process.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Jacob Aiken-Phillips from Melius. Your line is now open.
Analyst: Brett. Thanks so much for the question. This is Sam on for Jacob. I just wanna focus in on the KavaCore and the data infrastructure that you guys mentioned in the prepared remarks. Is that rolled out? Where do you expect the earliest medical benefits to show up? Is it demand forecasting, labor deployment, something else? And is the bigger opportunities near term restaurant execution or more longer term guest engagement? Thanks. Yeah.
Brett Schulman: I think it is both of those and a third, which is you have got restaurant operational efficiency you have got guest engagement, and you have got business intelligence insights at the corporate level. And what we are seeing already is some significant productivity enhancements across our enterprise from when you think about automating a lot of manual and spreadsheet type tasks, whether it is in the finance function or other functions. And then at the restaurant, what this does is it gives us a foundation to now leverage for predictive prep, predictive cook, labor scheduling, and inventory management.
So this sets the foundation for us to be able to pull those levers, take that complexity off our team members' mindshare, and help position them to deliver again fresh food, mitigate waste, and deliver on our operational commitments. Without having to do a lot of the manual computations and tasks themselves. So very excited for what this lays the groundwork for. I have talked about in our shareholder letter the last couple years. This is the early stages, I think, of a decade plus of transformation. And what it will do is enhance our team members' experience across both our support centers and the restaurants. We always talk about using technology to enhance the human experience, not replace it.
And this will empower our team members to be more productive, be more powerful, be more successful And ultimately, at the restaurants, free them up to deliver that heart health and humanity through hospitality.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Maggie Makde from Wolfe Research. Your line is now open.
Analyst: Guys. Thanks for taking my question. I first wanted to just ask, Brett, you said that national awareness built I just wanted to understand how are you guys scaling your marketing investments in newer markets to build awareness ahead of unit growth? And then I just also wanted to ask, Brett. I think a couple quarters ago, you said that the 25 to 35 year old cohort had lost some frequency. Would it be fair to say you are seeing that recover? Thank you.
Brett Schulman: Yes. From a marketing standpoint, last year, we increased from about 1% of revenue to 1.2% of revenue, so we continue to lean into it. it is not specific to new markets. it is just general across country. We have so much pent up demand when we open in these new markets. We have not needed to add any additional or incremental marketing other than the general awareness and word-of-mouth and excitement in preparation for our openings. At this point, though, we are focused on driving broader general brand awareness. And you saw that Salmon launch campaign and a couple of activations we did or some of the collaboration.
So we think this is something we continue to lean into from a brand building aspect. But opening new restaurants has certainly helped bring that awareness as we across the country. Yeah. And they said 35 to 45. I think when I had referenced in the past was the 25- to 34-year-old cohort. Back late last summer, early fall, where we said coming out of our last quarterly earnings, that we were seeing that cohort firm up at the end of the year, and that carried into this year. And we have seen that momentum sustain year to date.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of Logan Reich from RBC Capital. Your line is now open.
Analyst (Logan Reich): Hi there. This is Amira Dairywala on for Logan. You mentioned continued strong momentum despite the current geopolitical and macro backdrop. I was just hoping if you could provide any color on changes, if any at all, that you might have seen in consumer behavior post the start of the Middle East conflict relative to before the start of the conflict?
Brett Schulman: We have not seen any shift in our consumer behavior. We talked about we have seen it very consistent across regions, across age cohorts, and across income cohorts. And even noted, which may be a bit counterintuitive to what we have seen across some industry peers, is that the lower end of the income strata is actually performed the strongest. We have seen strength across all income cohorts, but the best performance across that bottom half of the income strata. And that gets us excited to be able to welcome more people to our table.
What we are trying to do every day, make our food more accessible, more affordable, and the ability also in a sense to bridge that k shaped economy where we have that premium offering and experience for folks maybe at the higher end of the income strategy that wanna lean into our new pomegranate-glazed salmon or the grilled steak, have that accessible everyday value for folks that are a bit more price sensitive potentially. And the other thing I would say is we have not seen any deterioration in our premium incidents or rate. That has held very steady.
So, again, we are very mindful We try to incorporate in the guidance of the challenges that consumers are facing around them and the uncertainty from the geopolitical conflicts and the increase of the price of the pump. So we have tried to incorporate that in our guidance but have not seen a deterioration or impact so far in the current year.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of J.P. Wollam from Roth Capital Partners. Your line is now open.
Analyst: Brett. Appreciate you guys taking my questions. If I could just ask on unit cadence, it looks like about 20 a little more than 25 percent of the full year guide came in 1Q. Just curious if that was kind of some pull forward of a few units that snuck in there. Or, you know, just how you are thinking about kind of unit opening cadence for the rest of the year. Thank you.
Tricia K. Tolivar: Keep in mind that we had 16 weeks in the first quarter. So there was an outsized number of weeks in the quarter. The rest of the year has 12 week quarters in them. And I would expect the cadence of those things to be fairly ratable over the remainder of the year.
Operator: Your next question comes from the line of John Tower from Citigroup. Your line is now open.
Analyst (Jon Tower): Brett for taking the question. Maybe for Brett, you know, you would mentioned earlier that what the brand has taken a lot less pricing versus the industry. Versus the pre COVID levels. And, you know, I am curious, 1, you know, it does seem like your guests are recognizing it. In the form of traffic to your stores, but I am curious if you actually have the data behind that suggests they are choosing you over going to competitors because of that price point.
And then I guess the other question I have on top of it is, you know, seeing the strength in traffic that you have in a relative and absolute basis, and the pressures on the business, that are picking up? Sounds like more recently on energy prices. Would you consider, you know, taking some price in the balance of the year to offset some of that?
Brett Schulman: Yeah, John. We would not look to take price. I mean, I think we have tried to reflect in our restaurant level margin guidance that we look to absorb some of those fuel surcharges that we are expecting and some other inflationary pressures and not pass along to our guests. I think it is incredibly important mindful of the pressures everyone's facing. And I think when you think about choosing versus peers, we have done and we do internal brand health surveys We do biannual brand health surveys. We just did another run of the health survey recently. And we score very well on value.
And we score very well on we even ask a question about recreating this food at home, and we are very unique and distinct in that. And so it is a good, you know, it is a good comparison to someone who is looking to make food at home. We are a differentiated, unique opportunity for them to basically us be their outsourced cook. And so we have seen that comparison in a sense be very strong, whether it is our peers, whether it is food at home, and strong value scores. And that is what we want to continue to focus on and make sure we can invite more people to our table.
I think too when we go back and look over time when we have chosen not to take price. For example, a couple years ago when AB 28 went into effect California, we chose not to increase price of many other did at the time. Our traffic based on looking at black box data out west at California was much stronger as a result of that change. So are data points out there that would suggest that being thoughtful around it is translating into traffic performance.
Operator: Thank you for your question. Your next question comes from the line of Matt Curtis from D.A. Davidson. Matt, your line is now open.
Analyst: Yeah. Thanks for taking the question. Just circling back on the lower income cohort that performed, I was just wondering if you could explain why your value proposition is attractive to them given that they are just so price sensitive. And then separately on development, I was just wondering if you are seeing any pressure from higher energy bleeding into your construction cost at this stage.
Brett Schulman: Yeah. I will take the first question and hand it to Tricia for the second question. It is -- we do not view value as just price. We view it as a combination of factors. it is the quality of the ingredients we serve. it is the relevance of our unique Mediterranean cuisine, the convenience in which our guests can access it, and the experience that we deliver when they visit us and share a meal with us. And so it is really bang for the buck. We are not going to be the lowest price out there. That is not why guests come to us. We are not serving freezer to fryer food. We are serving fresh Mediterranean cuisine.
But we need to serve it at the most reasonable price that we can deliver it with great hospitality. And that is what we have been focused on, and that is what is been resonating with guests. And so while they may be more discerning, with where they are spending their dollars, our numbers reflect that they are choosing to spend their dollars at Kaaba.
Tricia K. Tolivar: And as it relates to development, at this point, we have not seen any pressure. From as a result of the energy surge. Surcharges, but the team is very active in always staying ahead of challenges that they are facing and doing the best that they can to make sure that we are mitigating those challenges in the best way possible and continuing to drive outsized cash on cash returns that they have done effectively over time.
Operator: Your last question comes from the line of Sagarika Jaisinghani from BofA. Your line is now open.
Analyst: Brett. Thank you for taking the question. Brett quarter guidance. You know, just connecting, you know, to the prior question about traffic trends. You know, I was curious to know how, you know, loyalty is connected to traffic. Like, you know, you revamped the program. About 18 months back. You know, last few quarters have been very strong. Curious to know if, you know, that you are seeing increased engagement in the loyalty program that is getting converted to Because it seems like, you know, that can be a sustainable trend.
You know, any color you can share on, like, you know, member growth, outperformance of loyalty contribution compared to the total company And, you know, our members, like, gearing up from, like, you know, C-suite to even us. Just curious any color you can share and connect it to the traffic trend as well. Thank you.
Tricia K. Tolivar: Yeah. Our loyalty programs have been effective. They have increased our loyalty pool. We are seeing improved frequency as a result and seeing progression in tiers that is meeting our expectations. So really happy with what we are seeing there. And we can see that the loyalty program can drive engagement, and offers that we are creating can build excitement And it is an opportunity for us to continue to leverage that data to build and deepen those connections with those guests to direct improved performance over time as well.
Operator: There are no further questions at this time. I will now turn the call back to Brett Schulman, cofounder and CEO for closing remarks.
Brett Schulman: Thanks everyone for joining us today and your continued support. As we look ahead, we remain focused on building this business with the same long term mindset and discipline that has guided us from the beginning. Staying true to our mission, investing in our people, and continuing to make Mediterranean cuisine more accessible to communities across the country. Before we wrap, I want to again thank our nearly 15 thousand team members whose passion, care, and commitment make it possible for us to deliver on our mission to bring heart, health, and humanity to food. Every day. Their dedication is what makes CAVA special, and we are incredibly grateful for all they do for our guests and 1 another.
With Memorial Day weekend approaching, we wish everyone a safe and meaningful holiday weekend and we look forward to speaking with you again next quarter.
Operator: This concludes today's call. Thank you for attending. You may now disconnect.



