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Should I open or buy an i9 Sports franchise in 2027?

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Direct Answer

Yes — for the right operator, i9 Sports is one of the few genuinely semi-passive, home-based, real-equity youth-sports franchises you can buy under $80,000, but only if you treat it as a registration-marketing business, not a coaching hobby. The 2026 i9 Sports FDD lists a $24,900 initial franchise fee, total Item 7 investment of $59,900 to $79,900, a 9% royalty on gross revenue, and a 3% brand-development (marketing) fee.

There is no real estate and no buildout — leagues run on permitted public fields, school gyms, and park-district facilities, which is why the model carries owner-discretionary margins of 25%-40% at maturity. A single mature territory grosses $200,000-$450,000, and multi-territory operators clear $120,000-$300,000 in owner earnings.

Breakeven is typically 2-4 seasons (9-18 months). The catch: this is a marketing-and-recruiting business — your revenue is the number of kids you register, not the games you coach.

The Real Numbers

I9 Sports is a home-based youth-sports league franchise founded in 2003 in Tampa, Florida, now part of the Youth Athletes United portfolio (alongside TGA Premier Sports and Soccer Stars). The franchisee runs seasonal recreational leagues — flag football is the flagship, plus soccer, basketball, baseball, and volleyball — for kids ages 3-14, emphasizing sportsmanship over competition.

There is no store, no kitchen, no lease: the operator permits public facilities by the season and carries inventory in a garage or small storage unit.

There are roughly 150 franchise owners operating ~900 territories across the US, meaning the multi-territory model is the norm, not the exception.

Line ItemLowHighNotes
Initial franchise fee$24,900$24,900Single territory, ~75K-150K population
Equipment & uniforms$8,000$14,000Jerseys, flags, balls, cones, banners
Technology & software$1,500$3,500Registration platform, CRM, scheduling
Insurance (GL + participant)$2,000$4,500Per-season participant coverage
Initial marketing launch$6,000$12,000Digital + school-flyer first-season push
Field & gym permits$3,000$8,000Park-district / school seasonal rental
Training & travel$2,500$5,500Tampa HQ onboarding
Working capital (3-6 mo.)$4,000$14,000Payroll float for refs/site staff
Total Item 7$59,900$79,900Per 2026 FDD — no real estate
Ongoing royalty9% of gross revenue
Brand-development fee3% of gross revenueNational + local marketing

Revenue reality (FDD Item 19 framing, 2026 filing): a single mature territory registers 800-2,000 player-seasons per year at roughly $120-$180 per registration, producing $200,000-$450,000 gross. Because there is no rent or food cost, the dominant expenses are referee/site-staff labor (15%-20%), equipment and uniforms (12%-15%), field permits (5%-8%), the 9% royalty, and the 3% brand fee.

That leaves owner-discretionary earnings of 25%-40% — far higher than the 5%-7% net of a QSR franchise. Payback on the $60K-$80K cash-at-risk is 9-18 months for an operator who hits 1,000+ registrations by the third season.

flowchart TD A[Gross Registration Revenue $300K] --> B[Less Referees & Site Staff 18% = $54K] B --> C[Less Equipment & Uniforms 14% = $42K] C --> D[Less Field & Gym Permits 7% = $21K] D --> E[Less 9% Royalty = $27K] E --> F[Less 3% Brand Fee = $9K] F --> G[Less Local Marketing & Admin 12% = $36K] G --> H[Owner-Discretionary Earnings ~$111K] H --> I{Above $90K target?} I -->|Yes| J[Add a 2nd territory] I -->|No| K[Fix registration funnel first]

Who Wins With This Business

The winning i9 operator is a marketer and recruiter who happens to love youth sports — not a coach. Revenue is a direct function of how many families you enroll each season.

The typical successful operator is 32-55 years old, often a corporate-marketing or sales background, frequently a parent already embedded in the local youth-sports community, and willing to run 2-4 territories to reach a six-figure income.

Who Loses With This Business

Anyone who buys i9 to "coach kids" or expects passive income from one territory loses. The most common failure modes:

2027 Market Conditions

Youth sports is a structurally growing, recession-resilient category, and the recreational (non-travel) segment that i9 owns is the healthiest part of it.

flowchart LR D1[Day 1-15: Read 2026 FDD Items 7, 19, 20] --> D2[Day 16-30: Call 8+ Multi-Territory Operators] D2 --> D3[Day 31-45: Validate Youth Density + Field Access] D3 --> D4[Day 46-60: Secure Permits & Facility Letters] D4 --> D5[Day 61-75: Finance $60K-$80K + Reserve] D5 --> D6[Day 76-90: Sign + Tampa Training] D6 --> D7[Season 1: Drive Registrations]

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Day 1-15: Read the full 2026 FDD, especially Item 7 (investment), Item 19 (financial performance representations), and Item 20 (franchisee turnover). Confirm the 9% royalty + 3% brand fee stack against your registration projections.
  2. Day 16-30: Interview at least 8 current operators, weighted toward multi-territory owners. Ask: "How many registrations did you hit in Season 1, Year 2, and Year 3, and what was your owner take-home per territory?"
  3. Day 31-45: Validate your market — pull youth population (ages 3-14), household income, and the density of competing parks-and-rec and travel leagues. Confirm field and gym availability with the local park district and 2-3 school districts.
  4. Day 46-60: Lock facility access in writing. Get letters of intent or seasonal permit confirmations before you sign. Facility access is the single biggest operational risk.
  5. Day 61-75: Finance the $60K-$80K plus a $15,000-$25,000 reserve for the seasonal payroll float. Most operators self-fund or use an SBA microloan / ROBS 401(k) structure.
  6. Day 76-85: Sign and complete Tampa HQ training. Build your Season-1 registration marketing plan (school flyers + Meta/Google ads + early-bird pricing) before opening enrollment.
  7. Day 86-90: Open registration for Season 1 and set a hard target of 600-900 player-seasons to validate the unit before adding territory #2.

Alternative Plays

If i9 doesn't fit — or you want a different youth-sports angle — these match the operator profile:

FAQ

How much does an i9 Sports franchise owner actually make in 2026?

A single mature territory produces $200,000-$450,000 in gross revenue and $60,000-$130,000 in owner-discretionary earnings, depending on registration volume and local labor cost. Because most successful owners run 2-4 territories, six-figure operator income ($120,000-$300,000) is realistic for a multi-territory operator who treats registration marketing as the core job.

Single-territory, marketing-averse owners typically land below $90,000.

Do I have to coach the games myself?

No. i9 owners are business operators, not coaches. You hire and manage part-time referees and site coordinators, and parent-volunteers handle team coaching. Your job is filling leagues (marketing and registration), scheduling, and game-day operations management — not blowing the whistle.

Why is i9 so much cheaper than a restaurant franchise?

Because there is no real estate, no buildout, and no equipment-heavy kitchen. Leagues run on permitted public fields and school gyms, so the $59,900-$79,900 investment is mostly franchise fee, uniforms, insurance, and launch marketing. That same asset-light structure is why owner-discretionary margins (25%-40%) are far higher than a QSR's 5%-7% net.

What is the biggest risk in the i9 model?

Facility access and registration volume. You don't own the fields you play on, so a park-district policy change or facility loss can cap a market. And since revenue equals registrations, weak local marketing is the number-one cause of underperformance. Both risks are manageable with written facility agreements and disciplined paid-acquisition marketing.

Can I run i9 Sports part-time or alongside a job?

Partially. The model is seasonal and semi-passive between sessions, but in-season it demands 30-50 hours per week, including non-negotiable Saturdays. Many owners start while employed and transition full-time once they reach 2+ territories. It is not truly passive — registration marketing and staff management require consistent weekday attention in-season.

Bottom Line

Buy an i9 Sports franchise if you want a low-capital ($60K-$80K), home-based, real-equity business and you are willing to operate it as a registration-marketing engine across 2-4 territories. It is one of the highest-margin, lowest-overhead franchises available, with genuine recession resilience and a growing youth-sports tailwind into 2027.

Skip it if you expect passive income from a single territory, dislike local marketing, or want to spend your time coaching rather than recruiting families. For operators who embrace the marketing reality, i9 is among the best risk-adjusted entries in the entire franchise market.

Sources

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