Why McDonald’s is more franchisor than restaurant operator
McDonald’s is still commonly discussed like a restaurant stock, with most of the attention going to traffic, menu pricing, and same-store sales. Those metrics matter, but they do not explain where most of the company’s economics actually come from. McDonald’s said in its FY2025 10-K that about 95% of its restaurants worldwide were franchised at December 31, 2025, and it explicitly described its heavily franchised model as designed to generate stable and predictable revenue largely from franchisee sales and the resulting cash-flow streams.
That distinction changes the analytical frame. A conventional McDonald’s franchise arrangement includes rent and royalties based on a percentage of sales, plus minimum rent and initial fees. In other words, McDonald’s is not mainly trying to maximize profits at each company-run restaurant. It is trying to maximize the quality, reach, and sales throughput of a global franchise system that pays the corporation for brand, real estate, and operating infrastructure.
That is why investors can misread the business when they treat it like a typical operator of company-owned stores. Restaurant-level cost pressure still matters, but it matters first because it affects franchisee health and therefore the durability of the rent-and-royalty stream. The core question is less “how profitable is a burger sold in a company store?” and more “how healthy and productive is the system that pays McDonald’s on sales?”
What FY2025 and Q1 2026 reveal about the company’s real revenue engine
The financial split already shows where the center of gravity sits. In FY2025, McDonald’s reported total revenue of $26.8 billion, including $16.5 billion of franchised revenue and $9.69 billion of company-operated sales, according to the FY2025 10-K. Franchised restaurant margins were $13.929 billion for the year, including $6.078 billion in the U.S., $5.954 billion in International Operated Markets, and $1.897 billion in International Developmental Licensed Markets and Corporate.
Those figures matter more than the headline that McDonald’s is a global restaurant chain. The franchised side is not just larger than the company-operated side; it is the part designed to be more stable, more scalable, and less operationally volatile at the corporate level. Company-operated sales actually slipped from $9.78 billion in 2024 to $9.69 billion in 2025, while franchised revenue rose from $15.7 billion to $16.5 billion. That is a strong clue that McDonald’s long-term earnings power is tied more to franchise-system throughput than to owning and operating more stores itself.
The latest quarter reinforced the same structure. In Q1 2026, McDonald’s reported $6.517 billion of revenue, $2.953 billion of operating income, and $1.983 billion of net income, while global comparable sales rose 3.8%. U.S. comparable sales rose 3.9%, International Operated Markets rose 3.9%, and International Developmental Licensed Markets rose 3.4%, according to the Q1 2026 earnings release. Global systemwide sales rose 11% in reported terms and 6% in constant currency to more than $34 billion for the quarter.
That systemwide sales figure is the key. McDonald’s corporate revenue is much smaller than systemwide sales because it only captures its contractual slice of the broader system. Investors who focus only on consolidated revenue can miss that the real economic base is the much larger sales stream moving through franchisee restaurants.
Why systemwide sales, development, and loyalty matter more than a single quarter’s traffic debate
Systemwide sales were over $139 billion in FY2025, according to McDonald’s annual report. That number is far more revealing than any one-quarter argument about whether traffic was soft or whether value offers worked in one geography. If McDonald’s can keep the system growing, then rent and royalty streams can keep compounding even without heavy corporate ownership of stores.
That is also why restaurant development matters so much. Management said McDonald’s opened nearly 2,300 restaurants in 2025 as it works toward 50,000 restaurants by the end of 2027. In a mostly franchised system, new units are not just growth symbols. They are additional long-duration cash-flow nodes. Each productive franchised restaurant expands the base on which McDonald’s can collect royalties and rent.
The loyalty platform fits the same pattern. McDonald’s ended 2025 with nearly 210 million 90-day active loyalty users across 70 markets and said it is targeting 250 million by the end of 2027. In Q1 2026, systemwide sales to loyalty members were over $9 billion for the quarter and more than $38 billion over the trailing 12 months. Those figures matter because loyalty is not just a marketing tool. It is a systemwide sales accelerator that helps push more spending through the franchise base that funds McDonald’s cash flows.
This is why the business should not be judged mainly on whether one quarter’s comparable sales were driven by traffic or average check. That debate matters, but only as an input into the broader systemwide-sales engine. The bigger investment question is whether McDonald’s can keep the franchise system productive, relevant, and expanding.
What investors should watch next: franchisee health, value perception, and mix quality
The biggest risk to the thesis is not that McDonald’s suddenly stops being a famous brand. It is that franchisee economics weaken enough to pressure development, reinvestment, or system sales quality. Management said U.S. comparable sales in Q1 2026 were primarily driven by positive check growth. That is fine in the short run, but it is not as reassuring as broad traffic-led growth. If value perception weakens and traffic remains pressured, franchisees eventually feel that strain before the corporate model fully shows it.
That means investors should watch whether comparable sales are being supported by pricing alone or by healthy transaction volume, whether international markets remain broadly positive, and whether restaurant openings continue at a pace consistent with the 50,000-unit goal. The loyalty platform should also be watched as a conversion tool, not just a user-count metric. If active users grow but do not translate into higher visit frequency and system sales, the strategic value is lower than the headline suggests.
The core takeaway is straightforward. McDonald’s is not best understood as a company that happens to franchise many restaurants. It is better understood as a global franchised cash-flow platform whose economics depend on the productivity and health of a vast sales network. Same-store sales still matter, but mainly because they feed the royalty, rent, and development machine that drives the enterprise.
Key Signals for Investors
Franchised revenue growth relative to company-operated sales should remain the clearest sign that McDonald’s economic center of gravity is still moving toward asset-light cash flows.
Systemwide sales growth matters more than consolidated revenue growth because it expands the underlying base on which rent and royalty income is earned.
Progress toward 50,000 restaurants by the end of 2027 is important because each productive franchised unit can extend the duration of McDonald’s cash-flow stream.
Loyalty sales conversion matters more than loyalty membership optics because the platform only strengthens the thesis if it increases repeat spending through the franchise system.
U.S. comparable sales quality should be watched closely, especially whether traffic improves alongside check growth instead of pricing doing most of the work.




















