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Should I open or buy a Jan-Pro franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 7 min read
Jan-Pro commercial cleaning franchise

Direct Answer

Buy a Jan-Pro franchise if you want a low-cost, owner-operated commercial-cleaning route with a strong brand and a structured account-acquisition system — but understand there are two very different things sold under the Jan-Pro name. The unit franchise (Jan-Pro Cleaning & Disinfecting) has a total initial investment of roughly $4,000 to $58,000 depending on the size of the offered account package, with a franchise fee that scales accordingly.

The far more expensive master/regional development franchise runs into the hundreds of thousands to over $1 million and is a regional management business, not a cleaning job. For the typical buyer, this means a unit franchise that grosses $1,500 to $10,000 a month based on the package you purchase, where you clean the accounts or hire crews, and pay royalty plus a management fee on billings.

If you want passive income, this is not it.

The Real Numbers

Jan-Pro is a commercial cleaning and disinfecting franchise operated under the IFG (International Franchise Group / Premium Franchise Brands) umbrella. It consistently ranks near the top of commercial-cleaning franchise lists and is one of the largest janitorial franchisors in North America.

The critical thing to understand before any number makes sense is the two-tier structure:

Unit franchise (Jan-Pro Cleaning & Disinfecting): The affordable, owner-operator path. You buy a package of janitorial accounts sourced by the regional master, plus training, branding, and back-office support. This is what most people mean by "a Jan-Pro franchise."

Master / regional developer franchise: A regional business where you recruit, train, and support unit franchisees, sell accounts, and earn a slice of system revenue across a territory. This costs six to seven figures and is a completely different business.

Line Item (Unit Franchise)LowHighNotes
Initial franchise fee$1,000$50,000+Scales with size of account package
Equipment & supplies kit$1,000$5,000Vacuums, chemicals, cart
Insurance & bonding (initial)$1,000$3,000Required
Working capital (3 months)$1,000$5,000Fuel, labor float, supplies
Total initial investment (Item 7)~$4,000~$58,000Per Jan-Pro unit-franchise FDD range
Ongoing royalty~10% of billingsBrand + system (varies by region)
Management / finder / billing feevariesRegional master bills clients, remits net

Revenue reality: A unit owner's gross is directly tied to the dollar value of the account package purchased. Buy a small package and you might gross $1,500 to $3,000 a month; buy a larger package (and pay a larger fee) and you might gross $8,000 to $10,000+ a month.

After the royalty and the regional master's management fee, plus supplies, fuel, and labor, a single-route owner-operator commonly nets $25,000 to $60,000 a year, while owners who scale into multiple routes with hired crews reach six figures. The model rewards reinvestment: buy more accounts, build crews, manage rather than clean.

flowchart TD A[Monthly Billings from Account Package] --> B[Less ~10% Royalty] B --> C[Less Regional Master Management/Billing Fee] C --> D[Less Supplies, Chemicals ~8%] D --> E[Less Fuel & Vehicle ~6%] E --> F{Owner cleans or hires crew?} F -->|Cleans personally| G[Net ~$25K-$60K single route] F -->|Hires & scales| H[Six-figure potential, more management]

Who Wins With This Business

The winning Jan-Pro unit owner is a disciplined owner-operator who buys an account package sized to their capital and reinvests profits into more routes.

The typical successful owner starts by cleaning a starter package personally, earns a reputation for consistency, then buys additional accounts and hires crews to multiply revenue.

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Who Loses With This Business

Buyers who confuse the unit and master models, or who expect passive income, lose. Common failure modes:

2027 Market Conditions

flowchart LR D1[Week 1-2: Read BOTH unit and master FDDs - know which you are buying] --> D2[Week 3: Talk to 8+ unit owners in your region] D2 --> D3[Week 4: Size the account package to your capital and time] D3 --> D4[Week 5: Confirm royalty + master fee + replacement terms in writing] D4 --> D5[Week 6: Decide single-route vs scale plan] D5 --> D6[Sign only if net beats a wage job]

FAQ

How much does a Jan-Pro franchise cost in 2027?

For a unit franchise (Jan-Pro Cleaning & Disinfecting), the total initial investment runs roughly $4,000 to $58,000, with the fee scaling to the size of the account package you buy. A master/regional developer franchise costs six to seven figures and is a regional management business, not a cleaning route.

Make sure you know which one you are evaluating — the marketing often blurs them.

What is the difference between a Jan-Pro unit and master franchise?

A unit franchise is an owner-operator cleaning business: you buy accounts and clean them or hire crews. A master (regional developer) franchise is a territory business where you recruit and support unit franchisees, sell accounts, and earn from system revenue across a region.

The unit franchise costs thousands; the master costs hundreds of thousands or more. They are entirely different commitments.

How much do Jan-Pro unit owners make?

Income is tied to the account package you purchase. A single-route owner-operator commonly nets $25,000 to $60,000 a year after royalty, the regional master's management fee, supplies, and fuel. Owners who scale into multiple routes with crews can reach six figures, but that requires hiring and managing rather than cleaning.

Treat the single unit as a job with upside.

Is Jan-Pro a pyramid scheme?

No. Jan-Pro is a legitimate franchise that sells real cleaning services to real commercial clients; income comes from cleaning revenue, not from recruiting others. That said, the layered fee structure and offered-account model draw the same scrutiny as other janitorial franchises, so read the FDD's fee and account-replacement terms carefully and validate income claims with current owners.

Can I start Jan-Pro part-time?

Yes. Many owners start with a small account package and clean on nights and weekends while keeping another job, because commercial cleaning happens after clients close. It is a reasonable way to test the model before scaling to full-time or hiring crews.

Bottom Line

Buy a Jan-Pro unit franchise if you want a low-cost, brand-backed entry into commercial cleaning and you are willing to do or manage the work — not if you want passive income. The brand strength and structured account system are real advantages over unbranded independents, demand is stable, and disciplined owners who scale into multiple routes build genuine six-figure businesses.

Just be clear about which franchise you are buying (unit vs master), size your account package to your capital and time, and model net income after the full royalty-plus-management fee stack. Talk to unit owners in your specific region before signing.

Sources

Best franchises to buy under $100,000 in 2027 — every franchise on PULSE, ranked.

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