
Drivers cruising along Texas 199 through Springtown are in for a new caffeine checkpoint. A compact, neon-accented 7 Brew Coffee kiosk is planned for 390 Texas 199, tucked directly across the highway from the McDonald's. State paperwork pegs the stand at about 510 square feet, with a construction budget of roughly $1.5 million and a buildout scheduled to start in December and wrap up in April 2027.
Permit filing lays out timeline and cost
According to last Friday's filing with the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation, the project is designed as a 510-square-foot drive-thru coffee stand with an estimated construction cost of $1.5 million. The filing places the kiosk at 390 Texas 199, across from the existing McDonald's at the intersection. If it goes up as proposed, it would be the first 7 Brew location in Springtown.
7 Brew's footprint and Texas presence
According to 7 Brew, the Arkansas-based drive-thru chain launched in 2017 and has grown to more than 600 stands across 38 states. The company's official locations list shows Texas as its biggest market, with roughly 104 outlets statewide. With that kind of saturation, a growing Parker County town like Springtown landing on the brand's expansion map is not exactly a shock.
Local context and what to expect
The nearest existing 7 Brew to the planned Springtown site is in Weatherford, according to the Fort Worth Star-Telegram. The brand has a habit of popping up first in permit databases and utilities filings before any flashy grand-opening announcements, a rollout pattern local reporters have been tracking as the chain moves into new markets.
For instance, a recent water-permit filing tied to a proposed 7 Brew in Polk County, Florida, highlighted the same behind-the-scenes permitting steps that now appear to be underway in Springtown.
Next steps for the project
A state-level filing is an early green light, not the final one. The City of Springtown requires building permits and planning-commission review for commercial construction, so additional local approvals and site work would typically follow before any ground is broken, according to the City of Springtown code of ordinances. That process means the December construction start listed in the filing could shift, depending on how quickly permits move and how the site is prepared.
Public records and future reporting should offer more clarity on the timeline, including formal permit postings and any official announcements from 7 Brew or the project’s developers as the Springtown stand moves from paperwork to reality.









