DB
Driven Brands Holdings Inc. (DRVN)·Q3 2025 Earnings Summary
Executive Summary
- Q3 2025 revenue was $535.7M (+6.6% YoY), Adjusted EBITDA $136.3M, and Adjusted diluted EPS $0.34; same-store sales increased 2.8%, marking the 19th consecutive quarter of positive comps .
- Versus Street: EPS beat (Adj. EPS $0.34 vs $0.30 consensus), revenue was essentially in line (~$535.7M vs
$535.7M); SPGI’s EBITDA consensus ($136.3M) tracks GAAP EBITDA, and actual GAAP EBITDA was ~$98.99M while company emphasizes Adjusted EBITDA of $136.3M (see reconciliation) .* - FY25 guidance narrowed: revenue to $2.10–$2.12B, Adjusted EBITDA to $525–$535M, and Adjusted EPS to $1.23–$1.28; same-store sales guided to the low end of 1–3% and net store growth maintained at 175–200 .
- Balance sheet progress and catalysts: net leverage improved to 3.8x Adjusted EBITDA, liquidity was $755.7M; post-quarter, the company completed a $500M securitized notes offering, simplifying maturities and lowering annualized interest expense .
What Went Well and What Went Wrong
What Went Well
- Take 5 momentum: same-store sales +6.8%, revenue $306.4M (+13.5% YoY), Adjusted EBITDA $107.3M with 35% margin; management highlighted continued non-oil growth and service expansion .
Quote: “Take 5… delivered its 21st consecutive quarter of same-store sales growth… Adjusted EBITDA margins expanded to 35%” . - Non-oil services acceleration: non-oil change revenue reached >25% of Take 5 sales, attachment rates increased from mid-40s to low-50s; differential fluid service fully rolled out with favorable margins and no cannibalization .
- Deleveraging and cash generation: net leverage improved to 3.8x; free cash flow in Q3 was $51.9M; seller note monetization and refinancing simplified the capital structure and reduced interest expense .
What Went Wrong
- Margin compression: Adjusted EBITDA margin fell ~85 bps YoY to 25.4% on higher store expenses and growth investments .
- Franchise Brands and collision headwinds: segment revenue down 2.3% and ongoing Maaco pressure; management flagged Q4 macro “choppiness” and noted consolidated comps could be negative at the low end of the annual range .
- Car Wash moderation: same-store sales +3.9% but Adjusted EBITDA down $1M to $15.0M on higher commissions and utilities; weather normalization vs strong prior-year periods weighed .
Financial Results
Consolidated Results vs Prior Quarters
Same-Store Sales by Segment (Trajectory)
Q3 2025 Segment Breakdown
Key KPIs (Q3 2025)
Q3 2025 Actuals vs Street Consensus (SPGI)
*Values retrieved from S&P Global. Note: SPGI “EBITDA” aligns with GAAP EBITDA; company’s Adjusted EBITDA was $136.3M per 8‑K/press release .
Guidance Changes
Earnings Call Themes & Trends
Management Commentary
- “Same store sales increased for the 19th consecutive quarter, with high single-digit growth in Take 5 driving solid gains in revenue, adjusted EBITDA and adjusted earnings per share” — Danny Rivera, CEO .
- “We’re testing AI-driven camera technology that detects queuing issues in real time… move more cars more efficiently” — Danny Rivera .
- “Our net leverage stood at 3.8x… we remain on track to reach 3x by the end of 2026” — Mike Diamond, CFO .
- “Adjusted diluted EPS… excludes the positive tax valuation adjustment in the quarter” — Mike Diamond .
Q&A Highlights
- Macro/comp outlook: Management cited a “choppy” start to Q4 across brands and noted consolidated comps could be negative at the low end of the annual range; Take 5 expected to grow despite tough prior-year lap .
- Free cash flow conversion and CapEx: Focus on converting EBITDA to FCF while staying opportunistic on high-return corporate Take 5 builds; long-term deleveraging priority remains intact .
- Unit growth cadence: 150+ Take 5 openings annually for “next several years”; ~170 in 2025 with ~900 pipeline, >1/3 site-secured; mix shifts toward franchise over time .
- Collision dynamics: Industry headwinds driven by claim avoidance and high total-loss rates; sequential Q3 improvement; Q4 may resemble Q2; DRVN continues to take share .
- Marketing optimization: New media mix model to fine-tune spend by geography/channel and assess incremental returns as scale increases .
Estimates Context
- Q3 2025 results vs S&P Global consensus: Adj. EPS beat ($0.34 vs $0.30), revenue in line (
$535.7M vs$99.0M actual), while management focuses on Adjusted EBITDA ($136.3M) for performance and guidance .*$535.7M). SPGI “EBITDA” consensus ($136.3M) compares to GAAP EBITDA ( - Implications: Estimate revisions likely to drift higher on EPS given beat and lower interest run-rate; revenue trajectory steady with narrower FY guide; caution on Q4 comps may cap near-term upward revisions.
*Values retrieved from S&P Global.
Key Takeaways for Investors
- Take 5 continues to be the growth engine with durable SSS, margin, and mix tailwinds (premium oils, non-oil services), supporting multi-year unit expansion and franchise appetite .
- The EPS/revenue print was solid and in line-to-better than consensus; Street may recalibrate toward the tighter FY ranges and lower interest expense .
- Margin headwinds from store operating costs and growth investments persist; watch Adjusted EBITDA margin stabilization around mid-20s as scale and mix improve .
- Franchise/collision headwinds are moderating but remain sensitive to consumer/inflation dynamics; DRVN appears to be taking share, which should aid through-cycle recovery .
- Balance sheet actions (seller note monetization, securitization refinancing) de-risk maturities and lower interest, supporting deleveraging to 3x by 2026 — a potential catalyst for capital allocation optionality .
- Near-term trading setup: Positive on Take 5 momentum and EPS beat, tempered by management’s cautious Q4 tone and potential consolidated comp pressure; focus on Q4 run-rate and holiday-season consumer trends .
- Medium-term thesis: Resilient, need-based services with a scalable Take 5 model, improving mix and cash generation, and disciplined leverage reduction underpin multi-year value creation .