Best handyman and home-repair franchises to buy in 2027
Direct Answer
The best handyman and home-repair franchises to buy in 2027 are low-overhead service models that turn a fleet of skilled craftsmen into recurring repeat-customer revenue, because aging housing stock and busy homeowners drive steady demand for small repairs. Strong concepts include **Mr.
Handyman (a Neighborly brand), Ace Handyman Services, Handyman Connection, House Doctors, and TruBlue Home Service Ally (handyman plus senior-focused home maintenance). Total initial investment commonly runs $100,000 to $230,000, with franchise fees of roughly $30,000 to $70,000 and royalties of 5% to 7%** of gross sales.
Below are real Franchise Disclosure Document ranges and how to verify them yourself.
How handyman franchise economics actually work
A handyman franchise trades a storefront for a van, tools, and a roster of skilled technicians dispatched to homes. Capital goes into branded vehicles, tools, scheduling software, and working capital rather than a build-out, which keeps Item 7 modest compared with food or retail.
The margin engine is billable craftsman-hours at a spread over the wage you pay, multiplied by repeat customers who call back for the next project once they trust your crew.
The trade-offs are technician recruiting and retention (skilled, reliable, customer-facing craftsmen are scarce), scheduling efficiency (drive time between jobs eats margin), and managing job quality across a team you cannot personally supervise on every site. The best operators measure billable hours per technician, repeat-customer rate, and revenue per job.
General home-repair franchises
- Mr. Handyman — a Neighborly brand offering small home repairs, maintenance, and improvements with national call-center and brand support. Total initial investment commonly runs $120,000 to $160,000 per published FDD ranges, franchise fee around $50,000 to $65,000, royalties on a structured scale. Best fit for owners who want a managed multi-technician model.
- Ace Handyman Services — backed by the Ace Hardware brand, offering craftsmen for repairs and small projects. Investment commonly $110,000 to $230,000, with the hardware affiliation aiding brand trust.
- Handyman Connection — handyman and small-remodel services using experienced craftsmen, often as independent contractors. Investment commonly $100,000 to $160,000.
Niche and senior-focused repair franchises
- House Doctors — handyman and home-improvement services with an owner-operator or manager model. Investment commonly $90,000 to $150,000, with marketing systems for repeat residential work.
- TruBlue Home Service Ally — handyman plus ongoing home maintenance aimed partly at seniors aging in place, blending repair work with recurring maintenance memberships. Investment commonly $65,000 to $120,000, which makes it a lower-capital entry with a recurring-revenue angle.
What the FDD actually tells you
Read Item 7 for the full initial-investment range, Item 6 for royalty and ad-fund percentages, and Item 19 for any Financial Performance Representation. Item 19 may disclose average territory revenue or billable hours, but read the cohort — a mature territory with a repeat-customer base overstates what a new franchise earns while it recruits technicians and builds a name.
Item 20 lists outlet counts plus transfers and terminations, which reveal how often owners exit.
Cross-check the FDD against franchisee interviews. Ask current owners about realized billable hours per technician, technician turnover, the repeat-customer rate, and how long it took to fill the schedule after launch.
Red flags to watch before you commit
- Thin or absent Item 19. If a handyman franchisor will not put any revenue or billable-hour range on paper, treat verbal claims as unverifiable.
- Technician recruiting harder than promised. Skilled, reliable craftsmen are scarce. Heavy turnover means missed jobs and lost repeat customers.
- Lead-cost dependence. If the model relies on constant paid lead generation rather than repeat customers, marketing spend can erode margin.
- Job-quality control across a team. You cannot supervise every site. Ask owners how the system maintains consistent quality and handles callbacks.
- Lawsuits or terminations clustered in recent years. Item 3 litigation and a spike in Item 20 terminations are warnings that the system is under stress.
- Working capital glossed over. You pay technicians before some invoices clear. Confirm the cash cushion you need beyond the build-out.
Frequently asked questions
How much does a handyman franchise cost to start in 2027? Most handyman and home-repair franchises run roughly $100,000 to $230,000 in total initial investment, with branded vans, tools, software, and working capital as the largest line items. Always confirm the exact range in Item 7 of the current FDD.
Are handyman franchises recurring revenue? The strongest ones build repeat-customer relationships. Once a homeowner trusts your crew, they call back for the next project, which lowers lead cost over time. Senior-focused maintenance models add membership-style recurring revenue.
Do I need to be a handyman myself to own one? No. Most owners run the business as a recruiting, scheduling, and marketing operation while skilled technicians do the work. Understanding the trades helps you hire and evaluate quality, though.
What is the hardest part of the business? Recruiting and retaining reliable, customer-facing craftsmen. Demand is steady, but staffing the schedule with quality technicians is the constant challenge.
Is home repair recession-resistant? Largely yes. Homeowners still need repairs and maintenance in a downturn, and some defer larger remodels in favor of smaller fixes, which can actually favor handyman work.
Sources
- U.S. Federal Trade Commission, "A Consumer's Guide to Buying a Franchise" — https://consumer.ftc.gov/articles/buying-franchise-consumer-guide
- Mr. Handyman franchise (Neighborly) — https://www.mrhandymanfranchise.com/
- Ace Handyman Services franchise — https://acehandymanservicesfranchise.com/
- Handyman Connection franchise — https://handymanconnectionfranchise.com/
- TruBlue Home Service Ally franchise — https://www.trubluefranchise.com/
- International Franchise Association — https://www.franchise.org/
