If you only have $1,000 to put into a portfolio right now, the decision becomes interesting because it forces you to prioritize quality over quantity. The temptation is to spread across a dozen small names, but the better approach is usually 3-to-5 high-conviction picks where the growth math actually works.
Three consumer growth stocks stand out right now for very different reasons, and one of them is going through a temporary stumble that arguably makes it more attractive, not less.
Image source: Getty Images.
1. Chipotle Mexican Grill
Chipotle Mexican Grill (CMG +0.11%) is in the part of its life cycle that most growth investors hope to find in a restaurant chain. The company is large enough to be predictable, small enough to keep opening high-return units, and disciplined enough to do both at once. In the first quarter of 2026, the company opened 49 new restaurants, 42 of which included Chipotlanes (the drive-through digital pickup format). Management has reiterated a long-term target of 7,000 locations in the United States and Canada and is on pace for roughly 350 new openings in 2026.

Today’s Change
(0.11%) $0.04
Current Price
$32.84
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$42B
Day’s Range
$32.41 – $32.94
52wk Range
$29.75 – $58.42
Volume
786.4K
Avg Vol
15.9M
Gross Margin
21.59%
The growth case is unit economics. New Chipotle restaurants are achieving average unit volumes that compare favorably with the system average, keeping returns on invested capital strong even as the base expands.
The risks for Chipotle include consumer pressure and competition (more on this in No. 2). Same-store sales growth has softened from peak levels as lower-income consumers have cut back. International expansion is still nascent, so most of the growth will have to come from North America over the next several years.
2. Cava Group
Cava Group (CAVA 1.05%) is the closest thing in 2026 to an early-stage Chipotle. In 2025, the company opened 72 net new restaurants, ending the year with about 432 locations — roughly 20% year-over-year unit growth — and average unit volumes near $3 million. Management is guiding to around 17% unit growth in 2026.

Today’s Change
(-1.05%) $-0.85
Current Price
$80.42
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$9.4B
Day’s Range
$80.16 – $84.25
52wk Range
$43.41 – $98.79
Volume
2.1M
Avg Vol
3.4M
Gross Margin
18.60%
I’ve always been a big advocate for Cava, and I believe the restaurant chain is starting to steal some of Chipotle’s customers. The vibe is the same, the food is good, and the quality is there. The company also just reported a strong first quarter for 2026, with revenue rising 32.2% year over year to $434.4 million, driven by 9.7% same-restaurant sales growth and 20 new restaurant openings.
The company also posted improving profitability, including a 25.1% restaurant-level profit margin, while management said traffic trends and expansion into new Midwest markets reinforce confidence in continued momentum. Cava is a great place to put $1,000.
3. Celsius Holdings
Celsius Holdings (CELH +1.41%) made the largest move of any beverage growth story in 2025 by completing its acquisition of Alani Nu, expanding from a single-brand energy company into a dual-brand portfolio that covers both performance and lifestyle consumers. The integration is still underway, but the combined platform now competes more directly with retail competitors.
Despite a nearly 50% decline from its highs, Celsius still looks attractive due to rapid growth from the acquisition, improving brand momentum, and strong international expansion.

Today’s Change
(1.41%) $0.42
Current Price
$30.12
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$7.7B
Day’s Range
$29.24 – $30.34
52wk Range
$27.66 – $66.74
Volume
7.6M
Avg Vol
8M
Gross Margin
48.39%
A reasonable framework for a $1,000 starter portfolio is to weight toward the names with the most visible unit economics growth (Chipotle and Cava) and use Celsius as a smaller position with higher optionality and real volatility.
The most important discipline in this kind of portfolio is patience. Consumer growth stocks tend to spend long stretches in choppy ranges before the next leg of growth is recognized. Selling in the first soft quarter is usually the wrong move.
The takeaway
A thousand-dollar consumer growth portfolio works best when it focuses on companies still in the unit-growth phase of their life cycles. Chipotle Mexican Grill and Cava Group sit at different points on the same growth curve; Celsius Holdings offers a beverage platform play. None of these stocks is without risk, and none is cheap, but for investors building a long-duration consumer growth book, the combination is more durable than any one name alone.

