Should I open or buy an Amazing Lash Studio franchise in 2027?
The Lash Game: What 25 Years of Revenue Models Taught Me About $50,000 Franchise Fees
I've spent two and a half decades watching business models rise, fall, and occasionally stick. The ones that survive? They're not the sexiest—they're the ones where the customer *has* to come back. That's the dirty little secret of recurring revenue, and it's why I'm surprisingly bullish on a franchise that sells... Eyelash glue.
Here's the thing about lash extensions: they fall out. Every two to three weeks, your carefully cultivated lashes need a refresh. That's not a bug—it's a membership opportunity dressed up as beauty maintenance.
Amazing Lash Studio, founded in 2010, figured this out before most of us were thinking about recurring revenue outside of software. They built an eyelash-extension and brow studio empire on a monthly membership model where members get regular fills. It's the gym membership of beauty, except people actually show up because their lashes literally fall off otherwise.
*"The best recurring revenue is the one your customers can't avoid."*
Let me walk you through what the 2026 FDD actually tells us—not the brochure version, but the real numbers that determine whether you'll be sipping margaritas or managing technician drama at 9 PM.
The Real Numbers (That Your Franchise Consultant Won't Lead With)
You're looking at a franchise fee around $50,000—that's the price of admission. Then comes the total Item 7 investment: roughly $200,000 to $550,000. Here's where that money actually goes:
| Line Item | Low | High |
|---|---|---|
| Franchise fee | $50,000 | $50,000 |
| Buildout / leasehold | $120,000 | $320,000 |
| Equipment & fixtures | $30,000 | $80,000 |
| Signage & decor | $15,000 | $45,000 |
| Initial inventory | $8,000 | $22,000 |
| Initial marketing | $25,000 | $60,000 |
| Training & travel | $8,000 | $22,000 |
| Working capital | $40,000 | $100,000 |
| Total Item 7 | ~$200,000 | ~$550,000 |
And then, of course, the ongoing bite: royalty around 6% of gross and a marketing fee near 2%.
Now, here's the math that matters. Mature studios gross $500,000 to $1,200,000. After technician labor (35%-45%), rent, supplies, and those franchise fees, owners clear $80,000 to $220,000. That's a decent living, but it's not passive—it's an active management job with a membership machine attached.
Let me show you what that looks like in a real-world flow:
Who Actually Wins Here
This isn't a business for everyone. The winners share specific DNA:
- Capital required: $200K-$550K, with $100,000-$200,000 liquid.
- Time commitment: business-hours; semi-absentee possible with a strong manager.
- Skills: membership sales, technician recruiting/management, and marketing.
- Geographic fit: affluent, beauty-conscious, female-skewing suburban markets.
- Lifestyle fit: semi-absentee-friendly with a strong manager.
The winners are membership-and-staff-management-minded operators in affluent beauty markets. If you can't recruit, don't apply.
Who Gets Eaten Alive
I've seen too many smart people lose money on businesses they didn't understand. Here's who loses:
- Owners who can't recruit/retain skilled lash technicians — this is the central constraint, not capital.
- Those who can't build the membership base.
- Operators in non-affluent or non-beauty markets.
- Weak-location studios.
- Those expecting fully passive income.
The biggest challenge isn't the franchise fee or the buildout—it's recruiting and retaining skilled lash technicians. Lash extension is a skilled, in-demand specialty, and capacity depends entirely on finding and keeping good technicians in a competitive labor market.
Operators who excel at technician recruiting, training, and retention scale; those who can't are capacity-limited. People management is essential.
2027 Market Reality Check
Let me give you the landscape as I see it:
- Demand: eyelash extensions and beauty self-care are growing — durable, recurring beauty spending.
- Recurring revenue: monthly memberships (regular fills) build predictable income.
- Technician scarcity: skilled lash technicians are in demand — recruiting/retention is key.
- Semi-absentee: membership model supports semi-absentee ownership.
- Competition: The Lash Lounge, Deka Lash, independent lash studios, and salons.
Your 90-Day Decision Tree (No Excuses)
- Day 1-15: Read the 2026 FDD and confirm the membership model.
- Day 16-30: Interview 8+ owners; ask about technician recruiting/retention, membership, and take-home.
- Day 31-45: Validate an affluent, beauty-conscious market.
- Day 46-65: Build the studio and recruit lash technicians (the key constraint).
- Day 66-85: Pre-sell founding memberships.
- Day 86-90: Open with a membership focus.
- Ongoing: grow memberships and retain skilled technicians.
What Else Could You Do?
If this doesn't fit, here are alternatives worth exploring:
- The Lash Lounge / Deka Lash — lash-studio competitors.
- Amazing Lash multi-unit — scale the membership model.
- Other beauty-membership franchises — adjacent recurring-beauty models.
- European Wax Center / Waxing the City — waxing-membership beauty.
- Independent lash studio — full control, but no brand.
- Other beauty/self-care franchises — adjacent models.
The Bottom Line
Open an Amazing Lash Studio if you want a membership-based beauty franchise in the growing eyelash-extension market with recurring revenue, an established brand, semi-absentee potential, and you can recruit/retain skilled lash technicians in an affluent beauty market. Its recurring model and scale are genuine strengths.
Skip it if you can't recruit/retain technicians, can't build memberships, or are in a non-affluent/non-beauty market.
For membership-and-staff-management-minded operators, Amazing Lash offers a recurring-revenue beauty franchise—technician retention is the key to scaling.
*This kind of analysis is what we do daily at PULSE / CRO Syndicate—breaking down revenue models so you don't have to learn the hard way.*
*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*
