Best health and wellness franchises to buy in 2027
Direct Answer
The best health and wellness franchises to buy in 2027 go beyond traditional gyms into recovery and therapy (cryotherapy, IV hydration, stretch studios like StretchLab), med-spa and aesthetics brands, massage and bodywork like Massage Envy and Hand & Stone, and wellness retail such as supplement and smoothie concepts.
These models ride a durable consumer shift toward preventive health, recovery, and self-care, and many run on a membership model that produces predictable recurring revenue. Below are real Item 7 investment ranges and royalty structures from recent Franchise Disclosure Documents.
Why wellness is more than gyms
Fitness clubs are only one slice of wellness. The faster-growing sub-categories serve people who already exercise and now want recovery, mobility, and aesthetic services. These concepts often share three traits that make them attractive: a membership model with monthly recurring revenue, a boutique footprint smaller than a full gym, and higher per-visit tickets than budget fitness.
The trade-off is that several of these services touch medical or licensing rules — IV therapy, injectables, and some skincare require licensed clinicians and medical-director oversight. That raises both barriers and margins.
Massage and bodywork
Membership-driven massage is one of the most established wellness categories.
- Massage Envy — large membership massage and skincare brand. Item 7 total initial investment commonly $500,000 to $1,000,000+ (FDD, 2024), royalty in the 6% range plus brand fund. Recurring membership revenue is central to the model.
- Hand & Stone — massage and facial spa with memberships. Item 7 frequently $500,000 to $800,000+ (FDD, 2024). Confirm current figures and state licensing for therapists.
Recovery, stretch, and IV therapy
The newest and fastest-growing wellness lane.
- StretchLab — assisted-stretching studio. Item 7 commonly $200,000 to $450,000+ (FDD, 2024), boutique footprint with membership recurring revenue.
- IV hydration brands (for example Restore Hyper Wellness type concepts) — Item 7 frequently in the $600,000 to $1,500,000+ range (FDD, 2024) because of clinical staffing and equipment. These require a medical director and licensed clinicians in most states.
- Cryotherapy and recovery studios offer smaller footprints; confirm each brand's current Item 7 and any medical-oversight requirements.
Med-spa and aesthetics
Aesthetic services carry the highest margins and the highest compliance burden.
- Med-spa franchises offering injectables, laser, and skincare commonly post Item 7 figures of $500,000 to $1,200,000+ (FDD, 2024) and almost always require a medical director and licensed providers. Regulations on who may own and operate a med-spa vary significantly by state, so legal review is essential before signing.
Royalties, fees, and the membership engine
Across wellness expect a franchise fee (often $40,000 to $60,000), an ongoing royalty (commonly 5% to 7% of gross sales), and a brand-fund contribution (often 1% to 3%). The economic engine for most of these brands is membership retention: a high share of revenue comes from recurring monthly memberships, so the operational priorities are member acquisition, retention, and clinician staffing.
Concepts with clinical components add licensing and compliance as a core responsibility.
FAQ
Which wellness franchise has the lowest entry cost? Boutique recovery and stretch studios and some wellness-retail concepts are typically lower-cost than full med-spas or IV-therapy clinics, which carry clinical staffing and equipment expense.
Do I need a medical license to own a wellness franchise? For non-clinical services like stretch and massage, generally no, though therapists must be licensed. For IV therapy, injectables, and med-spa services, most states require a medical director and licensed clinicians, and ownership rules vary.
Are wellness franchises recession-resistant? Membership and recovery services have shown resilience, but they include discretionary spending that can soften in downturns. Need-based clinical care is steadier than premium aesthetics.
What drives profit in a wellness franchise? Recurring membership revenue and retention. Acquiring members is only half the job; keeping them is what makes the model work.
What is the hardest part of running a wellness franchise? Staffing qualified therapists or clinicians and meeting state licensing and compliance requirements, especially for clinical concepts.
Sources
- U.S. Federal Trade Commission, Franchise Rule and FDD requirements (Items 6, 7, 19)
- Massage Envy Franchise Disclosure Document, 2024
- Hand & Stone Franchise Disclosure Document, 2024
- StretchLab Franchise Disclosure Document, 2024
- U.S. Small Business Administration, franchise financing guidance
- International Franchise Association, franchising industry overview
