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Should I open or buy a Merry Maids franchise in 2027?

FranchisesShould I open or buy a Merry Maids franchise in 2027?
📖 2,185 words🗓️ Published Jun 19, 2026 · Updated Jun 4, 2026
Direct Answer

Probably not — unless you can write a check for $250K liquid, already live in a metro with 200K+ households earning $100K+, and treat this as a 5-year operator job, not a passive investment. Real 2027 Merry Maids economics: all-in startup $98,480–$170,110 (FDD Item 7), 7% royalty + 1–1.3% national ad fee + $499/month tech fee, and Item 19 splits brutally — 306 "Qualified Franchises" average $487,441 gross, while 500+ "Legacy" units limp at $256K. Conservative Year-1 cash flow for a new operator hitting $300K gross is $12K–$35K after debt service. Breakeven on cash invested: 28–42 months. Buying an existing $500K-gross book at 2.8–3.4x SDE ($175K–$220K) usually beats a greenfield start.

The Real Numbers

Merry Maids' 2026 FDD (effective for franchises sold into 2027) prices the brand as a mid-cost, high-royalty residential cleaning play. The franchise fee scales with territory size — defined by qualified households earning $100K+. Full-sized territories (12,000+ qualified households) cost more upfront but carry the only revenue numbers that justify the math.

Table 1 — Merry Maids 2027 Unit Economics (FDD Item 7 + Item 19, ServiceMaster Brands disclosures)

Line ItemSmall TerritoryMid TerritoryFull Territory
Franchise fee$37,500$41,500$41,500–$51,500
Equipment + supplies$4,800–$7,200$5,400–$8,100$6,000–$9,000
Vehicle (lease/down)$3,500–$6,000$4,500–$8,000$5,500–$10,000
Build-out / office$2,000–$5,000$2,500–$6,500$3,000–$8,000
Insurance + bonding$2,400–$4,800$2,800–$5,400$3,200–$6,000
Training + travel$2,500–$4,500$2,500–$4,500$2,500–$4,500
3-mo working capital$42,000–$62,000$48,000–$68,000$55,000–$80,000
TOTAL Item 7 range$94,480–$130,410$98,480–$134,410$98,480–$144,425
Royalty7% gross7% gross7% gross
National ad fund1.0–1.3% gross1.0–1.3% gross1.0–1.3% gross
Tech fee$499/mo$499/mo$499/mo
Item 19 median AUV$256K (Legacy)$487K (Qualified)
Year-3 EBITDA margin8–12%10–14%12–18%
Payback (years)3.5–5.02.8–4.02.2–3.2

Reality check the Item 19 split. ServiceMaster Brands' 2026 FDD discloses 306 "Qualified" franchises (operators meeting minimum hours + protocol compliance) averaging $487,441 gross with $427,425 median. The other ~500 US units are "Legacy" — older, smaller territories averaging $256K. Item 19 does NOT disclose net profit. Operator interviews and franchise-broker resale data peg true seller's discretionary earnings (SDE) at 14–22% of gross for Qualified units, 6–11% for Legacy units. A $487K Qualified shop nets the owner $68K–$107K SDE before debt service.

Who Wins With This Business

You win at Merry Maids if: (1) you live in a dense metro with 15,000+ households earning $125K+ within a 25-minute drive; (2) you have $70K–$100K liquid plus access to an SBA 7(a) loan for the rest; (3) you've previously managed 10+ hourly employees in a high-churn industry (restaurants, retail, home services); (4) you're willing to be in the office 6 AM–4 PM, six days a week, for 36 months; (5) you can personally close the first 100 in-home estimates; (6) you understand that labor is 50–58% of revenue and that annual turnover runs 75–110% at the cleaner level.

The profile that actually clears $150K SDE by Year 3 is a former operations manager age 38–55, bilingual or with bilingual leadership, with a spouse on W-2 benefits so the household doesn't depend on the franchise for healthcare. They run two 2-person teams by Month 4, four teams by Month 10, and eight teams by Month 30 — that's the $700K–$900K revenue tier where Merry Maids' royalty math finally produces real owner take-home.

Who Loses With This Business

You lose at Merry Maids if any of these are true: you want a semi-absentee investment (this brand is owner-operator only for the first 3 years — period); you live in a secondary market under 150K households (you'll cap at $300K gross and the 7% royalty + 1.3% ad fee will eat your margin); you've never personally hired, trained, and fired an hourly W-2 employee (the #1 reason franchisees fail at year 18–30 is they can't build a cleaner bench); you're under-capitalized below $80K liquid (working capital is the #2 killer — payroll is weekly, AR from commercial accounts is 30–45 days, and the first 9 months are cash-negative).

The legacy-unit trap is real. Buying a $200K-gross Merry Maids "Legacy" resale at 2.5x SDE looks cheap at $45K — until you discover the customer base is 80% sub-$75K-household, route density is terrible, the prior owner ran zero retention program, and lifting it to $400K requires firing 60% of the book while still paying 7% royalty on the shrinking remainder. Most Legacy resales never convert to Qualified status.

2027 Market Conditions

The US residential cleaning services market sits at $18.8B in 2024, growing 1.2% in 2024 per IBISWorld report 6542. The franchised segment grows faster — 8.2% CAGR through 2027 — driven by dual-income household formation (now 63% of married couples), Boomer aging-in-place (peak 65+ population in 2027), and post-pandemic permanence of outsourcing weekly cleans.

Three 2027-specific dynamics matter for your underwriting:

  1. Labor cost compression has stabilized but not reversed. Cleaner wages averaged $16.80/hour in Q1 2027 per BLS OEWS 37-2012 (Maids and Housekeeping Cleaners), up from $13.40 in 2022. Merry Maids' historic margin structure assumed $11–$13 labor — operators acquired pre-2022 are still re-pricing routes upward to restore the gap. New operators price correctly from Day 1.
  1. Roark Capital's 2020 acquisition of ServiceMaster Brands (Merry Maids' parent) has accelerated tech investment (new CRM, dynamic routing, customer-facing app) but also raised the technology fee to $499/month as of 2026 — a $5,988/year line item that didn't exist for Legacy operators.
  1. AI-driven price competition from independents. Tools like Jobber, Housecall Pro, and Booqable let solo operators run $200K–$400K books with no franchise overhead. Merry Maids' value proposition vs. independents in 2027 is brand trust for $150K+ household buyers + commercial bid sheets — NOT pricing.

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Day 1–7: Pull the 2026 FDD directly from ServiceMaster Brands' franchise dev team. Read Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20, 21 in full. Item 20 lists every closure, transfer, and termination from the last 3 years — count terminations vs. transfers; >8% termination rate is a red flag.
  2. Day 8–14: Define your territory using Census ACS 5-year data for households earning $100K+ within 25-minute drive time. Minimum threshold: 12,000 qualified households.
  3. Day 15–28: Talk to 12 existing franchisees — split 4 Qualified, 4 Legacy, 4 within their first 3 years. Ask each: gross revenue, owner W-2 + distributions, labor as % of revenue, technician turnover, customer churn.
  4. Day 29–42: Build your own pro forma in Excel. Use $28–$36 per labor-hour billing rate, $22–$26 fully-loaded labor cost, 7% royalty, 1.3% ad fund, $499/month tech, $2,400/month insurance, $3,800/month rent, $1,800/month vehicles.
  5. Day 43–56: SBA 7(a) pre-qualification with at least 3 lenders experienced in service franchises (Live Oak, Byline, Celtic). Target loan: $120K–$180K at prime + 2.75% for 10 years.
  6. Day 57–70: Validate resale market in your territory. Contact FranNet, FranchiseGrade, and BizBuySell for any existing Merry Maids units listed within 60 miles. Compare acquire-and-grow vs. greenfield on a 5-year NPV basis.
  7. Day 71–84: Site visit to corporate in Memphis, TN. Spend a day shadowing a Qualified operator (corporate will arrange). Confirm cultural fit with the operations system.
  8. Day 85–90: Sign or walk. If you sign, the discovery day → FDD acknowledgment → wire → training clock is 60–90 days before you can open.

Alternative Plays

If Merry Maids' royalty math doesn't pencil for your market, consider these alternatives: (1) The Maids — slightly higher startup ($120K–$190K) but 4-person team model and 22-step protocol that commands 15–20% pricing premium; (2) MaidProlower royalty (6.5%) with stronger franchisee community but smaller national brand; (3) Two Maidsperformance-based pricing model with stronger technician retention; (4) Molly Maid (Neighborly portfolio) — largest network at 1,638 locations, similar economics, stronger national lead-gen; (5) Independent build with Jobber + Google LSA + neighborhood mailers — keeps your 7–8.3% royalty + ad fund, but you carry all brand-trust burden yourself; (6) Commercial cleaning via JAN-PRO, Stratus, or Vanguard — lower revenue ceiling per unit but B2B AR is far more stable than residential.

For most $100K–$200K capital buyers in a strong metro, the highest-NPV play in 2027 is buying a Qualified Merry Maids resale at 3.0x SDE rather than a greenfield start — the 24-month ramp risk evaporates and you inherit cleaner bench, routes, and customer LTV from Day 1.

FAQ

How much money do I need to start a Merry Maids franchise? The all-in startup cost ranges from $98,480 to $170,110, as detailed in the Franchise Disclosure Document Item 7. You’ll also need at least $250,000 in liquid capital to qualify. Ongoing fees include a 7% royalty, 1–1.3% national ad fee, and a $499/month tech fee.

What are the realistic earnings for a new Merry Maids franchise? Item 19 data shows 306 “Qualified Franchises” average $487,441 in gross revenue, while over 500 “Legacy” units average $256,000. A new operator hitting $300,000 gross in Year 1 can expect cash flow of $12,000–$35,000 after debt service. Breakeven on cash invested typically takes 28–42 months.

Is it better to buy an existing Merry Maids franchise than start from scratch? Yes, in many cases. Buying a $500,000-gross book at 2.8–3.4x SDE ($175,000–$220,000) usually beats a greenfield start. You avoid the first-year ramp-up and get immediate cash flow, though you still need the same liquid capital and market criteria.

What market conditions are required for success? You should already live in a metro area with at least 200,000 households earning $100,000 or more annually. The franchise model relies on dense, affluent suburbs where recurring residential cleaning demand is high. Without that demographic, profitability is much harder.

How long until I see a return on my investment? Breakeven on your total cash invested typically falls between 28 and 42 months for a new franchise. This assumes you hit $300,000 gross revenue in Year 1 and manage expenses tightly. Buying an existing unit can shorten that timeline significantly.

Is this a passive investment or a hands-on job? It’s a 5-year operator job, not a passive investment. You’ll be managing crews, handling customer service, and overseeing daily operations. The cash flow in the early years is modest, so treat it as active work with a path to eventual semi-absence if you build a strong manager team.

Bottom Line

Merry Maids in 2027 is a credible operator-led service franchise — but it is NOT a great business for the typical first-time franchisee. The brand has real Item 19 revenue disclosure, 40+ years of system maturity, national lead-gen via the Neighborly-style ServiceMaster Brands portfolio, and a clear path to $487K AUV in a Qualified territory. It also carries a 7% royalty + 1.3% ad fund + $499/mo tech fee that compresses owner margin to 12–18% EBITDA at scale, labor cost pressure that won't reverse, and a Legacy-unit drag that telegraphs how brutal the underperformer reality is.

Buy this brand if you're an experienced operator with $150K+ liquid in a metro with 15K+ qualified households, and you can find a Qualified resale at 3.0–3.4x SDE. Start greenfield only if you have the capital, market, and 36-month operator runway. Walk away if you're capital-light, market-light, or operator-light on any of those three legs. The math punishes shortcuts.

Sources

flowchart TD A[Prospective Merry Maids Buyer] --> B{Liquid Capital Check} B -->|Under $70K| C[STOP: Underfunded] B -->|$70K-$150K| D{Territory Check} B -->|$150K+| D D -->|Under 12K qualified HH| E[STOP: Sub-scale market] D -->|12K+ qualified HH| F{Operator Profile} F -->|No hourly mgmt exp| G[STOP: Operations risk] F -->|Strong ops background| H{Greenfield vs Resale} H -->|Greenfield| I[Item 7: $98K-$144K all-in] H -->|Qualified resale| J[2.8-3.4x SDE = $175K-$220K] H -->|Legacy resale| K[Caution: 2.0-2.5x SDE, often a trap] I --> L[Year-3 target: $487K AUV] J --> M[Month-1 cash flow: $4K-$8K/mo SDE] K --> N[Re-build cost often exceeds savings] L --> O[Exit at Year 5-7: 3.0-3.5x SDE] M --> O
flowchart LR A[Capital: $100K-$200K] --> B[Greenfield Merry Maids] A --> C[Qualified Resale] A --> D[Legacy Resale] A --> E[Independent + Jobber] A --> F[Competitor: The Maids / MaidPro] B --> G[Year-3 SDE: $60K-$110K] C --> H[Year-1 SDE: $70K-$120K] D --> I[Year-3 SDE: $30K-$60K] E --> J[Year-3 SDE: $50K-$140K] F --> K[Year-3 SDE: $55K-$115K] G --> L[Exit 3.0-3.5x SDE] H --> L I --> M[Exit 2.0-2.5x SDE] J --> N[Exit 2.5-3.0x SDE] K --> L

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