Should I open or buy a Marriott franchise in 2027?

Published June 25, 2026 · Updated June 25, 2026
Direct Answer
Open or buy a Marriott franchise only if you are a well-capitalized, experienced lodging investor capable of funding a multi-million-dollar (often $15M–$60M+) full- or select-service hotel — Marriott is a premium franchisor, and its flags command higher development costs and stricter standards than the economy chains. Marriott International is the largest hotel company in the world by rooms, and its portfolio spans select-service brands like Courtyard, Fairfield, SpringHill Suites, Residence Inn, and TownePlace Suites up to full-service and luxury flags like Marriott Hotels, Westin, Sheraton, and Renaissance.
Typical select-service economics: an initial franchise fee around $75,000–$100,000 (commonly $100,000 or $500–$600 per room for full-service), a royalty of roughly 5%–6% of gross rooms revenue, and a marketing/program fee of about 2%–3% of gross rooms revenue. The Marriott Bonvoy loyalty engine is the single strongest direct-booking asset in the industry.
If you have lodging experience, access to institutional or CMBS financing, and a market with proven upper-mid-scale or full-service demand, Marriott is the gold-standard flag. If you are a first-time or thinly capitalized operator, the capital intensity, brand standards, and Property Improvement Plan obligations make this the wrong starting point.
What You Are Actually Buying
A Marriott franchise is a license to operate under one of its premium brands and to connect to its industry-leading distribution and loyalty engine. The value is concrete:
- Marriott Bonvoy — the largest hotel loyalty program in the world, with well over 200 million members, driving the highest direct-booking share in lodging.
- Marriott's reservation and revenue-management platform, feeding bookings from Marriott.com, the Bonvoy app, OTAs, and global corporate travel agreements.
- A premium brand portfolio that commands rate premiums and corporate/group demand independents cannot reach.
- Global and regional sales teams chasing corporate negotiated rates and group business.
You are not buying a building or guaranteed occupancy. You bring the land, the debt, and the operation; Marriott brings the premium flag and the reservations.
The Real Numbers (FDD-Style)
Marriott economics vary by tier. A typical select-service flag (Courtyard, Fairfield, Residence Inn) on a 120-to-150-room build looks approximately like this:
- Initial franchise fee: $75,000–$100,000 for select-service; $100,000 plus per-room amounts for full-service.
- Total project investment: $15 million to $35 million for select-service new builds; $40 million to $60 million+ for full-service.
- Royalty fee: ~5%–6% of gross rooms revenue (full-service tiers can add a food-and-beverage royalty, often ~2%–3% of F&B revenue).
- Marketing / program fee: ~2%–3% of gross rooms revenue (funds brand marketing, loyalty, and reservations).
- Marriott Bonvoy charges: loyalty reimbursement and per-stay costs on points-based stays.
- Technology and other fees: several per-room or per-reservation charges for reservations, training, and required IT.
- Term: typically a 15–20 year license, with a mid-term Property Improvement Plan.
- System size: Marriott operates roughly 9,000+ properties and over 1.6 million rooms across 30+ brands in 140+ countries.
Net effective fees across royalty, marketing, and loyalty commonly run 11%–14% of rooms revenue. Underwrite to that, plus any F&B royalty for full-service.

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Select-Service or Full-Service?
Select-service Marriott brands offer the best risk-adjusted entry: high-margin, rooms-focused, and the bulk of franchised growth. Full-service flags command higher rate and group demand but add food-and-beverage operations, banquet labor, and an F&B royalty that materially complicate the operation.
First-time Marriott owners should start with select-service.
The Application and Development Process
Expect a select-service new build to take 24–36 months and a full-service build to take 36–48 months+. Marriott runs an impact study to evaluate cannibalization of nearby franchisees and holds applicants to rigorous brand and design standards throughout.
Who Should Open a Marriott
This franchisor fits a premium operator profile:
- Experienced hoteliers scaling a portfolio with institutional lender and management relationships.
- Real-estate developers and private-equity-backed groups treating the hotel as a premium income-producing asset.
- Established ownership groups building generational wealth with multiple Marriott flags.
It does not fit a first-time operator, a thinly capitalized buyer, or anyone expecting passive income — Marriott's standards and capital requirements are among the highest in franchised lodging.
Risks You Must Underwrite
Capital intensity is the headline risk — Marriott deals are among the most expensive in lodging. Demand cyclicality swings RevPAR with the economy and corporate-travel cycles. PIP exposure at renewal can demand multi-million-dollar renovations to maintain a premium flag.
Full-service F&B adds labor-intensive, lower-margin operations. Labor cost and availability pressure margins. And brand-standard enforcement is among the strictest in lodging — failure can mean fees, remediation, or loss of the flag.
Treat the franchise agreement, F&B terms, and PIP schedule as the documents that decide your returns, and have a hospitality attorney review all three.
FAQ
How much does it cost to open a Marriott franchise in 2027? Plan for a total project of $15 million to $35 million for select-service and $40 million to $60 million+ for full-service, plus a $75,000–$100,000+ franchise fee. Marriott is a premium, high-capital flag.
What is the royalty fee for a Marriott brand? Most Marriott brands charge a royalty of about 5%–6% of gross rooms revenue, plus a ~2%–3% marketing/program fee; full-service tiers add an F&B royalty (~2%–3% of F&B revenue), putting effective rooms fees around 11%–14%.
Is Marriott a good franchise to own in 2027? For well-capitalized, experienced operators, yes — Marriott Bonvoy delivers the strongest direct-booking power in lodging, and the premium brands command rate and group demand. For under-capitalized first-timers, the capital intensity makes it high-risk.
Do I need hotel experience to buy a Marriott? Effectively yes. Marriott weighs operator experience heavily, and lenders require experienced sponsors. Without it, you must partner with or hire a proven hotel management company.
How long does it take to open a Marriott hotel? A select-service new build takes 24–36 months; a full-service build runs 36–48 months or more, depending on brand and approvals.
Is the territory exclusive? No. Marriott runs an impact study before approving new construction to limit cannibalization but does not grant exclusive territories.
Bottom Line
Marriott is the gold-standard premium flag for serious lodging investors. The brand delivers unmatched, measurable value through Marriott Bonvoy and a premium portfolio that commands rate and corporate demand. But Marriott deals are among the most capital-intensive and standards-heavy in lodging — this is a flag for experienced, well-funded operators, ideally entering through select-service before tackling full-service complexity.
With the capital, the experience, and a proven market, Marriott belongs at the top of your shortlist. Without them, build toward it through a lower-cost flag first.
Sources
- Marriott International — Development & Franchising
- Marriott Bonvoy — Loyalty Program
- U.S. Small Business Administration — 504 Loan Program
- American Hotel & Lodging Association — Industry Data
- STR / CoStar — Hotel Performance Benchmarks
- FTC — Franchise Rule & FDD Guidance
Related on PULSE
→ Best franchises to buy under $100,000 in 2027 — every franchise on PULSE, ranked.
