Should I open or buy a Take 5 Oil Change franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes — open or buy a Take 5 Oil Change franchise in 2027 if you have $1.2M-$2.1M in liquid plus financeable capital, a 3-pack development commitment in your pocket, a real estate partner who can deliver a 0.5-acre signalized corner near a 25,000+ VPD traffic count, and the stomach for 24-30 months to cash-flow breakeven on a new ground-up build.
Conservative Year-1 cash flow on a ramping new store is negative $40K-$120K; a stabilized Year-3 unit at the 2025 system AUV of $1,270,602 with 27% store-level EBITDA throws off roughly $340K before debt service. Probably not — unless you can stack three units to spread G&A, because single-unit operators routinely under-earn the system median by 30-40% in this concept.
The Real Numbers
Take 5 Oil Change is the fastest-growing oil-change brand in the U.S., owned by Driven Brands (NASDAQ: DRVN). The system added 161 net units in fiscal 2026 (94 corporate, 67 franchised) and guided 160-190 net new units for fiscal 2026. System-wide same-store sales grew 6.2% in 2025 and 9.2% in Q4 2025, the 22nd consecutive quarter of positive comps.
The model is a stay-in-your-car, 10-minute oil change with no appointments, no upsell pressure scripts, and a drive-thru bay layout that hits 45-65 cars per day at a mature store.
Below is the 2026 FDD Item 7 investment range for a new ground-up Take 5 Oil Change Center in the United States, cross-referenced against the 2025 Item 19 financial performance representation. All figures are operator dollars, not franchisor projections.
| Line item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $45,000 | $45,000 | Per Item 5; 3-pack development fee is $90,000 total ($45K + $22.5K + $22.5K) |
| Land & site work (if owned) | $350,000 | $850,000 | Excluded from Item 7 when leased; 70% of operators lease |
| Building shell & build-out | $480,000 | $1,150,000 | ~70% of total invested capital per Take 5's own FAQ |
| Equipment package (lifts, tanks, POS) | $145,000 | $215,000 | Includes Take 5-spec drive-thru pit, exhaust, and Hunter alignment optional add-on |
| Signage, branding, exterior | $35,000 | $75,000 | Pylon sign + monument required |
| Inventory (oil, filters, ancillary) | $18,000 | $32,000 | Valvoline and Castrol bulk contracts through Driven |
| Training (2 ops + 1 GM) | $9,000 | $15,000 | 3 weeks Charlotte HQ |
| Insurance, licenses, pre-opening labor | $42,000 | $78,000 | EPA UST permit drives variance |
| Working capital (3 months) | $135,000 | $215,000 | Item 7 mandates 90-day reserve |
| TOTAL INITIAL INVESTMENT | $912,248 | $2,053,642 | Per 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| Royalty (ongoing) | 7% of gross | 7% of gross | Paid weekly via ACH |
| National advertising fee | 5% of gross | 5% of gross | Highest in quick-lube category (Valvoline = 4.5%) |
| Tech & data fee | $450/mo | $650/mo | POS, mobile app, KPI dashboard |
2025 Item 19 financial performance representation (most recent verified figure prior to the 2027 cycle):
| Metric | System median | Top quartile | Bottom quartile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross sales per store (AUV) | $1,270,602 | $1,685,000 | $815,000 |
| Cars serviced per day | 48 | 62 | 31 |
| Average ticket | $74.50 | $82.10 | $66.20 |
| Store-level EBITDA margin | 27.1% | 32.4% | 18.0% |
| Store-level EBITDA $ | $344,333 | $546,000 | $147,000 |
| Royalty + ad fee (12% of gross) | $152,472 | $202,200 | $97,800 |
| Operator cash flow before debt | $191,861 | $343,800 | $49,200 |
Payback period on a typical $1.4M all-in build with 70% SBA 7(a) financing at 10.5% is 5.8 years on a median unit, 3.9 years on a top-quartile unit, and never on a bottom-quartile unit. Breakeven cash flow typically hits month 14-18; Year-1 stores average $640K in gross sales (50% of mature AUV) and lose $40K-$120K at the unit level before debt.
Who Wins With This Business
Multi-unit RBOCs (recovering big-corporation operators) with three to ten stores win every time. The model rewards scale, not solo operators. Specifically, the winning profile looks like this:
- Capital stack of $1.5M-$3M liquid plus access to SBA 7(a) at 10.5% for the balance. Driven Brands keeps a preferred SBA lender list including Live Oak, Celtic, and Byline.
- Three-store minimum development commitment. Multi-unit operators share a regional GM, a single bookkeeper, and a roving lead tech, which collapses G&A from 9% of revenue down to 4.5%.
- Real estate partner already in hand. The winners I track at Driven's annual franchise conference all have either a captive developer or an existing pad portfolio. Site selection drives 60% of unit economics in this category.
- W-2 background in QSR, retail auto, or convenience. Take 5's bench-stocked, drive-thru-only format is a process business, not a relationship business. Former Sonic, Chick-fil-A, and 7-Eleven multi-unit operators convert at the highest rates.
- Comfort with low-skill, high-turnover labor. Average tech wage is $17-$22/hour, turnover runs 70-110% annually, and the system depends on a 90-day onboarding flywheel more than on retaining tenured talent.
The 2027 winner is buying a 2-3 store pack in a Sun Belt secondary market (Huntsville, Boise, Greenville, Fort Wayne, McAllen) where construction costs run 25-35% below coastal metros, labor pools are deep, and vehicle miles traveled per capita rank in the top quartile.
Who Loses With This Business
Single-unit, first-time franchisees lose 60% of the time in this concept. The math is unforgiving. A solo store carrying a 9% G&A load on $1.27M AUV gives back $114K, almost half of unit EBITDA, before the owner takes a salary. The losing profile:
- First-time business owners who underestimate 24-30 months of construction-plus-ramp before cash flow turns positive. Take 5's Driven Brands ownership means you cannot negotiate down royalty or ad fees — they are the highest combined load (12%) in the quick-lube category.
- Operators in saturated metros. Phoenix, Atlanta, Dallas, and Houston are all approaching one Take 5 per 35,000 residents. Cannibalization between sister stores is real and Item 19 medians do not adjust for it.
- Buyers chasing resale listings on BizBuySell. A 3-year-old Take 5 listed at $1.6M with $260K in seller-discretionary earnings (SDE) is a 6.2x multiple, well above the 4.5x quick-lube median. The premium is rarely justified unless the unit is top-quartile and the lease has 12+ years remaining.
- Owners who plan to absentee-manage from day one. Take 5's Item 7 working-capital line assumes an owner-operator presence for the first 90 days minimum. Absentee Year-1 stores under-perform owner-operated Year-1 stores by 22% per franchisee benchmarking from the 2025 Franchise Business Review survey.
- Anyone with a 2027 horizon for EV impact. EVs hit 12.4% of U.S. New-vehicle sales in 2026 per Cox Automotive. However, 85% of the 2030 U.S. Vehicle fleet will still require oil changes per S&P Global Mobility, so the EV risk is a 2035+ problem, not a 2027 problem — but it is why exit multiples have compressed from 7.5x to 5.5x EBITDA since 2024.
2027 Market Conditions
The 2027 quick-lube environment is the strongest it has been since 2019 and also the most competitive. Five forces are shaping the year:
1) Vehicle parc tailwind. The average U.S. Vehicle is 12.6 years old per S&P Global Mobility, a record high. Older cars need more frequent service, and owners are deferring trade-ins because new-vehicle ATPs sit above $48,000. This is structural demand growth of 3-4% per year through 2030.
2) Take 5 system momentum. Driven Brands guided 160-190 net new Take 5 stores for fiscal 2026, on top of 161 in fiscal 2026. The system will cross 1,250 units by year-end 2027.
Driven Brands' Q4 2025 earnings call confirmed Take 5 segment EBITDA margin of 27.1%, above Valvoline Instant Oil Change (24%) and Jiffy Lube (19%).
3) Capital cost compression. SBA 7(a) rates are projected to drop from 10.5% in early 2026 to 8.75-9.25% by late 2027 per the SBA's June 2026 lender outlook. A 100-bps cut on a $1M loan saves $10,000/year — meaningful when median operator cash flow is $192K.
4) Real estate cooling. Net-lease cap rates on quick-lube pads expanded from 5.8% in 2022 to 7.1% in 2026 per The Boulder Group's 1Q26 Net Lease Quick Lube Report. Build-to-suit deals are easier to underwrite and developer partners are accepting longer free-rent periods.
5) EV headwind, but slow. EV adoption is real but slow: internal-combustion vehicles will remain 73% of the U.S. Parc through 2030. Take 5 is hedging via its EV-tire-and-brake pilot in three Charlotte stores, but brand-level diversification is still a 2028-2030 story.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
A disciplined 90-day decision process filters out 80% of bad fits before you wire a deposit. Use this sequence verbatim.
- Days 1-7 — Capital validation. Get a written SBA 7(a) pre-qualification letter from Live Oak, Celtic, or Byline. Confirm liquid capital of $400K minimum and net worth of $1.5M minimum, which are Driven Brands' published thresholds.
- Days 8-14 — Pull the 2027 FDD. Request the current FDD directly from Take 5 Franchise Development at take5franchise.com. Read Item 19 line-by-line. Compare bottom-quartile cash flow to your debt service — if Q4 cash flow does not cover Q4 debt service plus a $60K owner draw, walk away.
- Days 15-30 — Validation calls with 8-12 existing franchisees. Item 20 of the FDD lists every current operator with contact info. Call multi-unit operators in your target geography. Ask three questions: actual ramp time, actual Year-2 AUV, and single biggest cost variance from the pro forma.
- Days 31-45 — Real estate diligence. Engage a quick-lube-specialized broker (Northmarq, Sands Investment Group, or Encore Real Estate Investment Services). Identify 3-5 candidate sites at 25,000+ VPD, 0.5+ acre, signalized corner, 150-foot stacking depth.
- Days 46-60 — Discovery Day in Charlotte. Two-day on-site at Driven Brands HQ with operations, real estate, training, and finance. Tour 3 corporate Charlotte stores. Validate the Item 19 numbers against live POS data — Driven will show you actual store P&Ls under NDA.
- Days 61-75 — Legal and accounting review. Hire a franchise attorney (Spadea Lignana, Internicola, or Goldstein) at $7,500-$12,000. Hire a quick-lube-fluent CPA to rebuild the pro forma in your numbers, not the franchisor's.
- Days 76-85 — 3-pack negotiation. Push for a 3-pack development agreement with fees of $45K + $22.5K + $22.5K (Take 5's standard discount). Negotiate construction timeline: first store open within 18 months, second within 36, third within 54.
- Days 86-90 — Sign or walk. The 14-day FDD cooling-off period is statutory. Use the full 14 days. If your CPA's rebuilt pro forma shows IRR under 18%, walk away — the opportunity cost vs. A Valvoline or Jiffy Lube re-franchising deal is too high.
Alternative Plays
If Take 5 is a near-miss for your capital stack or risk profile, four alternatives merit a same-day comparison:
- Valvoline Instant Oil Change (VIOC) franchise. AUV is $1,580,000 (higher than Take 5), royalty is 6% + 4.5% ad fee (lower combined load), but Item 7 runs $1.2M-$2.4M (similar) and franchisee pipeline is currently closed to most U.S. Markets as VIOC re-franchises corporate stores.
- Jiffy Lube (Atlantic Premium Brands) franchise. AUV $890K, royalty 5%, ad 2.5%. Lower margins (19% EBITDA) but lower investment ($650K-$1.2M) and broad territory availability. Better fit for a first-time franchisee with $300K-$500K liquid.
- Buy a 3-year-old Take 5 resale on BizBuySell or BizQuest. Current listings range $1.4M-$2.2M at 4.5-6.0x SDE. You skip 24 months of ramp but pay a 30-40% premium to ground-up build cost. Only worth it for top-quartile units with 10+ year lease tails.
- Independent 1-2 bay oil change with Valvoline or Castrol bulk supply. Build cost $400K-$700K, no royalty, no ad fee, but no national brand pull. Operator-savvy independents in non-metro markets hit 22-26% EBITDA, competitive with Take 5 at lower capital risk. Costa Oil Change and Express Oil Change are mid-tier alternatives at lower capital outlay.
FAQ
How much cash do I actually need to liquid to open a Take 5 Oil Change in 2027?
$400K liquid is the published Driven Brands minimum, but $600K liquid is the practical floor for a single store and $1.2M liquid is the practical floor for a 3-pack. SBA 7(a) covers up to 75% of project cost to a $5M loan cap, but lenders require 25-30% equity injection plus 6-12 months of personal living reserves outside the project.
Plan on $400K-$800K of unrecoverable equity per store before the bank funds.
What is the realistic timeline from signed franchise agreement to first dollar of revenue?
14-18 months for ground-up, 6-9 months for a resale or relocation, never less than 9 months even with a fast-tracked permit. The gating items are EPA underground storage tank permitting (4-6 months), construction (6-8 months), and Driven Brands' final operations sign-off (2-4 weeks).
Anchor your pro forma on month 15, not month 9 — every Take 5 multi-unit operator I track will tell you the same.
Is Take 5 better than Valvoline or Jiffy Lube as a franchise investment in 2027?
Take 5 wins on growth and unit economics; Valvoline wins on AUV stability and brand strength; Jiffy Lube wins on lower investment and broader availability. For a $1.5M-budget multi-unit operator, Take 5 is the highest-IRR choice (projected 18-22% IRR vs. 15-18% for Valvoline and 12-15% for Jiffy Lube).
For a $500K-budget first-timer, Jiffy Lube is the better fit. Take 5 is not a beginner's franchise.
How does the 2027 EV transition affect Take 5's long-term value?
Marginally through 2030, materially after 2032. Only 27% of U.S. Light-vehicles will be EVs by 2030 per S&P Global Mobility's 2026 forecast, and EVs still require tire rotations, brake service, cabin filters, and coolant.
Take 5 is piloting a tires-and-brakes-add format in Charlotte. The realistic risk is exit-multiple compression from 7.5x EBITDA (2022) to 5.5x EBITDA (2026) — plan to hold 6-8 years, not 10-15, and underwrite to a 5.0x exit.
Can I run a Take 5 store as an absentee owner with a paid GM?
Not in Year 1, and only with a top-quartile GM after Year 2. Driven Brands' franchise agreement does not prohibit absentee ownership, but its operating manual strongly recommends owner presence through the first 12 months. Absentee Year-1 stores under-perform owner-operated Year-1 stores by 22% per 2025 Franchise Business Review benchmarking.
The honest answer: if you cannot commit 30 hours/week on-site for 12 months, buy a stabilized resale or choose a different concept.
Bottom Line
Take 5 Oil Change is the highest-growth, highest-EBITDA-margin oil-change franchise on the market in 2027, but it is a multi-unit operator's franchise, not a first-timer's franchise. The math works at 3+ stores in a Sun Belt secondary market with $1.5M+ liquid capital and a real estate partner already engaged.
The math does not work for a single-unit first-time franchisee under most realistic scenarios. If you can clear the 3-pack threshold, IRR projects to 18-22% over a 7-year hold; if you cannot, Jiffy Lube or an independent are the rational alternatives. Use the 90-day decision tree above verbatim, walk away if Item 19 bottom-quartile cash flow does not cover your debt service, and never accept the franchisor's pro forma without rebuilding it with your CPA.
Sources
- Take 5 Franchise Insights: FDD, Costs & Fees — Vetted Biz
- Take 5 Oil Change Franchise FDD, Profits, & Costs — Sharpsheets
- Take 5 Oil Change Franchise FDD, Costs & Fees (2026) — FranchisePayback
- Frequently Asked Questions — Take 5 Franchise Official
- Take 5 Oil Change Reports 9.2% Same-Store Sales Growth In Q4 — Autocare Week
- Driven Brands Holdings Q4 2025 Earnings Release — SEC Form 8-K
- Driven Brands (DRVN) Q3 2025 Earnings Transcript — The Motley Fool
- Top Oil Change Franchises of 2026: Ranked by Profits — FranchisePayback
- Why Investors Are Looking at the Quick Lube Sector in 2026 — Costa Oil Change
- Quick Lube Industry: Data Reports 2026 — WifiTalents
- S&P Global Mobility — U.S. Average Vehicle Age 2026 Report
- The Boulder Group 1Q26 Net Lease Quick Lube Report