InicioHome
InversoresInvestors
Sobre NosotrosAbout
Blog
ContactoContact
Reservar llamada gratuitaBook a free call

Recursos y BlogResources & Blog

Guías prácticas, análisis y perspectivas sobre gestión de restaurantes, escritas por operadores reales. Practical guides, analysis and perspectives on restaurant management — written by real operators.

Artículos recientesRecent articles

Lo que realmente importaWhat really matters

Control operativo en sala — Gastro Partners

Gestión OperativaOperations

Cómo reducir el coste laboral sin perder calidad ni equipoHow to reduce labour cost without losing quality or team

El coste laboral es la mayor palanca de rentabilidad. Cómo optimizarlo sin destruir el equipo. Labour cost is the biggest profitability lever. How to optimise without breaking the team.

5 min5 min read LeerRead
Desarrollo de carta y producto — Gastro Partners

Ingeniería de MenúMenu Engineering

Qué platos eliminar (y cuáles doblar la apuesta)Which dishes to cut (and which to double down on)

No todos los platos contribuyen igual. La matriz estrella-vaca-perro aplicada a tu carta. Not all dishes contribute equally. The star-cow-dog matrix applied to your menu.

7 min7 min read LeerRead
Apertura y puesta en marcha — Gastro Partners

AperturasOpenings

Los 5 errores más caros al abrir un restauranteThe 5 most expensive mistakes when opening a restaurant

Los hemos visto todos. Lista obligatoria para cualquiera que esté planeando una apertura. We've seen them all. Required reading for anyone planning an opening.

8 min8 min read LeerRead
Expansión y franquicia — Gastro Partners

FranquiciasFranchising

¿Vale la pena una franquicia en Valencia en 2025?Is a franchise in Valencia worth it in 2025?

Análisis honesto desde la experiencia de haber abierto y gestionado franquicias durante cinco años. Honest analysis from the experience of opening and managing franchises for five years.

10 min10 min read LeerRead
Control de KPIs y P&L — Gastro Partners

Control de GestiónManagement Control

Los 7 KPIs que todo propietario debería revisar cada semanaThe 7 KPIs every owner should review weekly

Sin métricas claras, gestionas por instinto. Los indicadores que marcan la diferencia. Without clear metrics, you manage on gut feel. The indicators that make the difference.

6 min6 min read LeerRead
Desarrollo de concepto gastronómico — Gastro Partners

ConceptoConcept

Cómo definir tu concepto antes de diseñar el localHow to define your concept before designing the space

El concepto es la base de todas las decisiones. Si no está claro, todo lo demás costará más. Concept is the foundation of every decision. If it's not clear, everything else costs more.

6 min6 min read LeerRead
International restaurant investment in Spain — Gastro Partners

InversiónInvestment

Cómo invertir en un restaurante en España como inversor internacional (guía 2026)How to Invest in a Restaurant in Spain: A 2026 Guide for International Investors

Guía para inversores del Reino Unido, Europa y EE. UU. que evalúan poner capital en hostelería española. Las cuatro vías, lo que cuesta realmente, y los errores que se cobran caros — desde la perspectiva de un operador con +12M€ en P&L gestionado.A guide for UK, EU, and US investors evaluating Spanish hospitality. The four routes in, what it actually costs, and the mistakes that get expensive — from operators who've jointly managed €12M+ in P&L.

8 min LeerRead
Operator-led vs passive restaurant investment in Spain — Gastro Partners

InversiónInvestment

Inversión operador-liderada vs pasiva en hostelería española: ¿qué modelo devuelve capital?Operator-Led vs Passive Restaurant Investment in Spain: Which Returns Capital?

Los tres modelos para invertir en hostelería española, las expectativas reales de retorno de cada uno, y por qué la mayoría del capital extranjero pasivo se pierde. Desde la perspectiva de quien ha operado los dos lados.The three models for putting capital into Spanish hospitality, the actual return expectations of each, and why most passive foreign capital gets lost. From someone who's operated both sides.

7 min LeerRead

Por Kamil · InversiónBy Kamil · Investment

Este artículo está dirigido a inversores internacionales y está disponible en inglés. Ver el resto del blog en español →

Most international investors who lose money in Spanish hospitality lose it in the same structure: a passive equity position with no operational control, no governance rights, and a charming local "partner" who manages the business without accountability. They didn't fail because Spain is hard. They failed because they chose the wrong model.

There are three practical ownership structures for foreign capital in Spanish restaurants. Each has a defensible return profile, a real risk picture, and a specific type of investor it suits. Picking the wrong one is the most expensive decision you'll make in this market — usually more expensive than picking the wrong site, the wrong concept, or even the wrong city.

Model 1: Owner-operator (you run it yourself)

You move to Spain, you take operational control, you run the business day to day. Either alone or with a small team you've hired.

Return profile: 15-25% on invested capital in a well-located, well-concepted site, with a 3-4 year payback in steady state. The upside is that you keep 100% of the operating margin (no operator fees, no partner cuts). The downside is that you have an unpaid full-time job for 5+ years.

Who this suits: investors who want to relocate to Spain anyway, have hospitality operating experience from another market, and treat the investment as a lifestyle business plus capital appreciation. Common among UK retirees, US lifestyle entrepreneurs, and Latin American family-owned operations.

The reason most investors don't choose this: running a single restaurant well requires more hours than people expect (typically 55-65 per week for the first 18 months), in a country whose hospitality customs differ meaningfully from the UK / US / Northern European norm. Most people who try this without prior operating experience overestimate how transferable their management skills are. Spanish hospitality has its own labour-law dynamics, its own supplier conventions, and its own customer behaviour patterns. Operating across those without local instinct is harder than it looks.

Model 2: Operator-led (you hold equity, an operator runs it)

You retain equity ownership. A specialist operating firm runs the business under a formal management agreement. You receive monthly P&L, quarterly reviews, and distributions when EBITDA allows.

Return profile: 10-20% on invested capital after operator fees, with a 4-5 year payback. Lower than owner-operator (because you're paying for the operating expertise), but achievable from passive geography. The variable component of the operator's compensation should be tied to your operating outcomes — typically 30-50% of total operator comp is variable on EBITDA hurdles.

Who this suits: investors who want exposure to Spanish hospitality returns but aren't relocating. UK family offices, Dutch and German hospitality-portfolio investors, US capital looking for golden-visa-eligible operating businesses. The standard structure for institutional capital.

The key structural question: alignment. A well-structured operating agreement makes the operator share in upside and downside. A poorly structured one pays the operator a flat fee regardless of P&L outcome. The first is a partnership. The second is a service contract dressed up as a partnership — and it's the structure most often associated with foreign capital losses, because the operator has no financial reason to fight for your bottom line in difficult months.

What this should look like in practice: a base retainer (covering the operator's fixed costs of managing your site — typically €3,500-€8,500 per month depending on site complexity), plus a variable component tied to EBITDA above a defined hurdle (typically 10-20% of EBITDA above the hurdle). Total operator compensation in a healthy operator-led structure usually lands between 6-10% of revenue.

Model 3: Passive equity in someone else's operation

You take an equity position in a business someone else is building or already running. You're a silent partner. Decision-making, hires, supplier relationships, lease negotiation — all sit with the controlling operator.

Return profile (claimed): 20-30% annual returns are routinely promised in pitches for this structure.

Return profile (actual, in my experience working with investors who took this route before they came to us): meaningfully negative for most. The investors I've spoken with who lost money in Spanish hospitality lost it here — typically not through fraud, but through structural mismatch. The controlling operator wasn't disciplined enough. The investor had no leverage to fix it. The business slowly bled cash. By the time the investor understood what was happening, the recoverable value was a fraction of the capital deployed.

Why this model is structurally fragile: the controlling operator has all the information and all the operational levers. The passive investor has neither. Even with well-intentioned operators, this asymmetry produces poor outcomes — small operational missteps compound over months, and the passive investor learns about them only after they've already damaged the P&L.

The cases where this model can work: when the controlling operator has a long verified track record of profitable operations (5+ years, multiple sites, audited financials), when there's a formal governance structure with board-level visibility, and when the passive investment is small enough that you treat it as venture capital rather than core capital deployment. These cases exist but are rarer than the pitch deck implies.

The honest comparison

If you're allocating capital for the first time to Spanish hospitality, and you're not planning to move to Spain, the structure that matches the risk-adjusted return investors actually realise is Model 2 — operator-led, with a properly structured agreement, with EBITDA-linked operator compensation.

It's slower than the passive pitch promises. It's less profitable than the owner-operator path. But it's the structure that consistently returns capital, and the only one of the three where the operator's incentives are aligned with yours in writing.

How to structure the operator agreement

Whatever operator you choose, the agreement matters more than the operator's reputation. The essential provisions:

  • Compensation: base retainer plus EBITDA-linked variable. Avoid flat advisory fees.
  • Termination: 90-day notice exercisable by either side, no penalty fees for switching.
  • Reporting: monthly P&L by day 10, standardised format, with variance commentary in writing.
  • Hiring authority: hires above an agreed seniority level require your sign-off in writing.
  • Vendor contracts: all signed in your entity's name, copies to you, no operator commissions from suppliers.
  • Conflict of interest: operator discloses all other operating engagements; no concentration limits, but full transparency.
  • Annual review: structured review of operator performance against P&L hurdles every 12 months, written.

An operator who pushes back on any of these is signalling something about how they intend to behave when problems arise. The pushback might be reasonable in any single case. Pushing back on three or more should be a red flag.

What to ask before signing

Three questions, in this order, will tell you most of what you need to know about an operator:

One: "Can you send me a sample monthly P&L from an existing client, names redacted?" A real operator has this. They have it because they produce it every month, for every site, in the same format. If they hesitate or send marketing material instead, they're not running operations — they're selling them.

Two: "What's the worst outcome you've had with a client, and what did you learn?" Honest operators have a story and tell it. Polished operators have an answer that minimises the loss and praises the recovery. The first signals competence; the second signals salesmanship.

Three: "How is your variable compensation calculated, in writing?" The answer should be specific (a formula, a hurdle, a calculation example), not narrative. If it's narrative, they don't have a real variable structure — they have a wish for one that they'll renegotiate in your favour.

Evaluating an operator for a Spanish deal? See how we structure delegated management engagements or book a 30-minute discovery call to walk through your specific situation.

Written by Kamil, Operations & Strategy partner at Gastro Partners. 20+ years across UK hospitality (Nando's, PizzaExpress, Five Guys, The Real Greek). Currently based in Valencia.

Spanish restaurant due diligence checklist for foreign investors — Gastro Partners

Due DiligenceDue Diligence

Due diligence de restaurantes en España: checklist de 12 puntos para compradores extranjerosRestaurant Due Diligence in Spain: A 12-Point Checklist for Foreign Buyers

Las 12 áreas que tienes que auditar antes de firmar la compra de un restaurante en España. Lo que los vendedores no te dicen, lo que los abogados locales pasan por alto, y las trampas específicamente españolas que no existen en tu mercado de origen.The 12 areas you need to audit before signing the purchase of a Spanish restaurant. What sellers don't volunteer, what local lawyers sometimes miss, and the specifically Spanish traps that don't exist in your home market.

9 min LeerRead
Valencia vs Madrid vs Barcelona for hospitality investment — Gastro Partners

Análisis de MercadoMarket Analysis

Valencia vs Madrid vs Barcelona para inversión hostelera: dónde funcionan realmente las unit economicsValencia vs Madrid vs Barcelona for Restaurant Investment: Where Unit Economics Actually Work

Comparativa directa entre las tres ciudades para inversión en hostelería: rentas, costes laborales, regulación, saturación y turismo. Dónde están las oportunidades reales y dónde el mercado está estructuralmente sobrevalorado.A side-by-side comparison of the three cities for hospitality investment: rents, labour costs, regulation, saturation, and tourism. Where real opportunities sit and where the market is structurally overpriced.

8 min LeerRead
Why foreign restaurant investments in Spain fail — Gastro Partners

RiesgoRisk

6 formas en que las inversiones hosteleras extranjeras en España fallan (y cómo evitarlas)6 Ways Foreign Restaurant Investments in Spain Fail (and How to Avoid Them)

Los seis patrones de fallo que vemos repetirse cuando capital internacional entra en hostelería española sin un operador disciplinado en el terreno. Cada uno con cómo identificarlo antes de firmar.The six failure patterns we see repeated when international capital enters Spanish hospitality without a disciplined operator on the ground. Each with how to spot it before signing.

8 min LeerRead

¿Contenido práctico en tu bandeja de entrada?Practical content in your inbox?

Sin spam. Solo artículos útiles sobre gestión de restaurantes, una vez al mes.No spam. Just useful articles on restaurant management, once a month.

Primera llamada de 30 min, gratis. Sin compromiso. First 30-min call, free. No commitment.