U.S. Korean-restaurant growth, past year (demand grows even faster)
CircanaWhy Now, Why This
This business sits where the tide of the times meets a real market opportunity.
01 The K-Wave in America
In America today, Korea is not a fad but a current. K-pop, K-drama and K-beauty paved the road first, and K-food is now rising fast along it — not a passing craze, but a structural wave moving into Americans' daily lives.
U.S. Korean-food demand growth vs. restaurant growth
YelpU.S. annual imports of Korean agri-food (since 2024, U.S. = Korea's #1 market)
MAFRAAug 2025: 40% of U.S. Billboard Hot 100 Top 10 was K-content
BillboardK-culture captured America first
Culture paved the road; food carries it on
- K-Pop Billboard · stadium tours
- K-Drama Netflix · global OTT
- K-Beauty Olive Young · Amazon top-ranks
How far it has spread — signals beyond the numbers
- 9 Korean restaurants on The New York Times’ 2025 100 Best NYC list
- Korea = #1 non-U.S. content on Netflix worldwide (8–9% of viewing)
- U.S. ‘Kimchi Day (Nov 22)’ — 5 states + Congress
- Netflix’s #1 film ever ‘KPop Demon Hunters’ — 500M+ young viewers
- Seoul — Gen Z’s favorite city, 4 years running
- Demand for K-food’s authentic depth, not a localized version (100%)
From a quick bite to a special night out — Korean food's standing in the U.S.
In America, Korean food is no longer just an 'exotic meal.' From street-food spots to upscale restaurants, it has earned a place in both everyday and special occasions.
Objective figures cite public sources (Circana, Yelp, Billboard, The New York Times, Netflix, MAFRA, etc.).
02 Riding the Tailwind
An ‘AI’ label alone doesn't make a business. Real demand, a way to make money, synergy with other strengths, true differentiation — that's where businesses are won or lost. This one stands on all four, riding the globalization of the Korean wave and the AI era on top.
Four real conditions for an AI business — we meet all four
Many companies launch on the ‘AI’ label, but a lot don't last — because being ‘in the AI category’ doesn't fill the fundamentals: demand, profitability, synergy, differentiation. We built all four in from the start.
Is there real ‘demand’?
✗ If this were missing:If K-culture stayed only in pop, drama and beauty while K-food was shunned by local palates? Its business value would have been low.
✓ In our case — Real demand, not a fad. People queue for a $40 set meal, 9 Korean spots made The New York Times' 100 Best in NYC, and most diners are now non-Korean — demand is rising 2.8× faster than restaurants.
Does it make money? — viability
✗ If this were missing:If even one of the four parties — us, the head restaurant, the U.S. agent, the local franchisee — couldn't make money? Goodwill alone keeps no one around for long.
✓ In our case — U.S. franchises earn an ongoing royalty as a % of franchisee sales (≈5–6% in food), so headquarters revenue grows as units grow. And with far higher check sizes and market scale than Korea, it's a favorable environment for franchisees too.
Synergy with other strengths?
✗ If this were missing:Without the huge halo of K-culture, having to sell Korean food from scratch? The same result would cost several times the money and time.
✓ In our case — The biggest synergy is the globalization of K-culture. Authentic Korean cooking rides the very road K-pop, K-drama and K-beauty paved. AI is the tool that carries the value; the engine is the wave already burning.
Differentiated from the market?
✗ If this were missing:If we were no different from the K-food already thriving? In today's climate you could still get in — but among look-alikes, becoming a strong hit is hard.
✓ In our case — Today's K-food is mostly localized and manufactured. We open a market that didn't exist — the authentic deep flavor of Korea's home restaurants — made possible only by an AI that transfers a master's exact touch.
★ Plus our business has its own ‘direct demand’ — local entrepreneurs who, seeing this wave, want to open a Korean restaurant. Until now that was the domain of ‘Korean green-card holders who can cook Korean food’; our cooking-transfer AI removes two barriers — ① geography (no need to come to Korea to learn) and ② language (it teaches in English) — widening the pool to ‘anyone in the U.S. dreaming of starting a restaurant.’
Had even one of these been missing, all that's left is the ‘AI business’ label. Because we have all four — AI is not a hollow ‘goal’ but the most powerful ‘tool’ to carry an authentic head restaurant's value to the world.
03 Why Enter the U.S. Directly
Why start in the U.S. rather than Korea? Korea's self-employment ratio is more than triple America's, and a falling birth rate is shrinking the consumer base. Pushing more franchises into an already-saturated market — fueling a race to the bottom — is good for no one. So we placed our starting line in the U.S. from the very start.
Korea closure-to-startup ratio (’24, up from 60.6% in ’20)
KOSTATShare of Korean self-employed aged 60+ (from 18.4% in ’11)
KOSTAT5-year business survival — U.S. vs Korea (51% vs 20%)
public dataU.S. vs Korea Korean-food prices (signature dishes)
public dataCites public statistics (KOSTAT, OECD, public data); does not state or imply financial performance.
In the U.S., the same Korean food sells at these prices
In a saturated Korean market, raising the check size is hard. In the U.S., the same Korean food sells at a wholly different price — and locals still line up.



Menus/prices cite each restaurant's public listings (2023–24; may be higher now) and do not state, guarantee, or imply this business's revenue.
04 One Brand per Category
However large the U.S. market and however strong the Korean wave, Korean food will never be Americans' staple. Anywhere in the world, people are drawn to restaurants that are busy and have a wait. So rather than overreaching, we bring one brand per category, in turn, with care.
One per category
One brand per category. Even after every category is filled once and a next cycle comes, the rule stays the same — one per category.
Careful launches
One at a time, at the right moment, in close consultation with agents. Success never becomes an excuse to flood the market.
Protect the goose
We don't cut open the goose that lays golden eggs. We choose lasting value over short-term greed — which is also how we avoid burdening the wider K-culture.
Why one per category — overlapping the same category cannibalizes both
- Grilled & BBQ Selected later, in turn
- Korean fried chicken Selected later, in turn
- Stews & soups Selected later, in turn
- Rice bowls Selected later, in turn
- Street food Selected later, in turn
- Noodles Selected later, in turn
- Dessert & café Selected later, in turn
- Other Korean Selected later, in turn
05 What Acquisitions Tell Us
A restaurant brand is itself a tradable, priced asset. But that price is never set by 'how many stores' alone. M&A and public markets value a brand by multiplying store count with per-store sales (system-wide revenue) and the trust and growth behind it.
Brand value is a multiplication
Store count alone tells you little — real value appears only when per-store sales and trust are multiplied in.
Strong per-store sales — premium value without a vast store count
Price-to-sales 5.6× — well above the ~3.78× industry average.
~400 U.S. stores (vs McDonald's 40,000) — premium by per-store strength.
~315 stores for $1B — few stores, big value.
Korean brands are already on that stage
Bonchon
Korean-style fried chickenAcquired by Korean PE firm VIG Partners in 2018 — then 325 stores across 8 countries. It later moved its global HQ to the U.S., and a sale to a new owner is underway in 2026.
THE INVESTOR · AVCJGen Korean BBQ
Korean BBQListed on the U.S. Nasdaq in 2023 (GENK) with ~30 stores. Target AUV for new units is ~$5M — above Shake Shack. A Korean BBQ brand, valued directly on U.S. public markets.
SEC · NRNLikelihood PE firms take interest in acquiring the brand once established in the U.S.
As the cases above show — many real deals. Company outlook, not a guarantee.
And so, our model
The home restaurants we work with are authentic, decades-old establishments. Authenticity and scarcity (one per category), the halo of K-culture, and high U.S. check sizes — all of these lift both per-store sales and trust. The value built that way becomes a brand weight that M&A and public markets recognize.
Above all, the root of this value is the effort and responsibility of home restaurants that held their place in Korea for many years. We honor that labor above all.
Deal sizes, per-store sales (AUV) and multiples cite external public reports/filings (THE INVESTOR, QSR, SEC, etc.) and do not state or imply this business's revenue. No future outcome is guaranteed.