Should I open or buy an Eye Level Learning franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you have K-12 teaching, special-education, or after-school program management experience, $130,000 net worth with $60,000 liquid, and a willingness to grind through 18-30 months of subject-by-subject student acquisition in a shrinking U.S. Supplemental tutoring brick-and-mortar segment where Mathnasium and Kumon already own ~62% of the franchised market share.
Real all-in 2027 launch range is $59,000 to $129,150 (Item 7), with an average reporting-center revenue of $150,000 and a range from $36,000 to $300,000 per Vetted Biz and Franchimp 2026 disclosures. Royalties are per-subject-student-month ($32-$36/sub-student), not gross revenue, which rewards low-volume centers but caps upside.
Conservative Year-1 cash flow is negative $15,000 to $25,000; breakeven sits at month 22-30.
The Real Numbers
Eye Level Learning Centers (operated by Daekyo America, Inc., a subsidiary of South Korean parent Daekyo Co., Ltd., founded 1976) reports an Item 7 total initial investment of $59,320 to $129,150, materially lower than Kumon ($74,428-$157,278), Mathnasium ($112,936-$157,996), or Sylvan ($85,150-$185,700).
The catch: Eye Level does not publish a financial performance representation (Item 19) beyond historical subject-student counts, which Franchise Chatter and Vetted Biz both flag as a transparency red flag versus the rest of the tutoring franchise category.
Below are the real 2026/2027 line items synthesized from Eye Level's own FDD summary, Franchise Direct, FranchisePayback, Sharpsheets, and Franchimp:
| Line Item | Low | High | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $10,000 | $10,000 | Item 5, FDD |
| Furniture, fixtures, equipment | $5,500 | $14,000 | Item 7, FDD |
| Leasehold improvements | $5,000 | $25,000 | Item 7, FDD |
| Signage | $2,500 | $8,500 | Item 7, FDD |
| Initial inventory + materials | $3,000 | $7,500 | Item 7, FDD |
| Computer/POS/IT | $2,500 | $5,500 | Item 7, FDD |
| Pre-opening training travel | $1,500 | $4,500 | Item 7, FDD |
| Insurance + deposits | $2,000 | $4,500 | Item 7, FDD |
| Marketing (90 days pre-open) | $3,500 | $9,500 | Item 7, FDD |
| Working capital (3-6 months) | $24,000 | $40,000 | Item 7, FDD |
| Total Item 7 | $59,320 | $129,150 | FDD Item 7 |
| Royalty (per subject-student/month) | $32 | $36 | Item 6, FDD |
| Marketing fee | 2% of gross | 2% of gross | Item 6, FDD |
| Avg annual revenue per center | $150,000 | reported avg | Vetted Biz 2026 |
| Reported revenue range per center | $36,000 | $300,000 | Franchimp 2026 |
| Top-quartile center revenue | $200,000 | $350,000 | Sharpsheets 2025 |
| EBITDA margin (industry comp) | 8% | 14% | IBISWorld 61169 |
| Year-1 owner cash flow | -$25,000 | $8,000 | modeled |
| Year-3 owner cash flow | $22,000 | $58,000 | modeled |
| Payback period | 22 months | 36 months | modeled |
| Net worth requirement | $130,000 | — | Item 5 |
| Liquidity requirement | $60,000 | — | Item 5 |
| Term length | 5 years | renewable | Item 17 |
Who Wins With This Business
Eye Level franchisees who clear $200,000+ per Sharpsheets share four traits:
- K-12 classroom or special-ed credentials — licensed teachers, Title I tutors, and former Sylvan/Kumon instructors convert prospect tours at roughly 2x the rate of pure operators. Eye Level's diagnostic-then-individualized-worksheet model sells through a parent-teacher conversation, not a marketing funnel.
- South Korean, Indian, or Chinese-American immigrant enclaves within 4-6 miles. Daekyo's brand recognition is near-zero among non-Asian U.S. Parents but extremely strong inside Korean-American communities, which is why the densest U.S. Cluster sits in Bergen County NJ, Fort Lee NJ, Palisades Park NJ, Flushing NY, Annandale VA, and Northern California's I-680 corridor.
- Two-subject parent willingness. Royalty is per-subject-student, so a 120-student center where each enrolls in both math AND English generates 240 sub-students for $7,680/month royalty — and gross revenue closer to $24,000/month. Single-subject centers struggle to clear $150K/year.
- Dual-operator household. Owner-operator + spouse-instructor households crush absentee-owner centers because Eye Level's labor cost is the single largest operating line and instructor pay at $18-$24/hour consumes 35-45% of gross.
Sweet-spot demographics: median household income $85,000+, foreign-born population >18%, K-8 enrollment within 2-mile radius >2,500, and existing Kumon density less than 1 per 30,000 residents. The North Jersey, Long Island, Northern Virginia, and Seattle Eastside markets fit this profile.
Who Loses With This Business
Eye Level closures track three predictable failure patterns documented across Unhappy Franchisee, FranchiseChatter, and Franchimp unit-count disclosures:
- Strip-mall absentee owners in non-Asian suburban markets. Without immigrant-parent word-of-mouth, paid customer acquisition through Google Local Service Ads, Meta lead forms, and school flyer drops runs $220-$380 per enrolled sub-student against a $32-$36 monthly royalty — math that never closes. Daekyo's national brand spend is roughly $0; you are the brand.
- Owners expecting Item 19 transparency. Eye Level does not publish per-center revenue in Item 19. Franchisees who don't conduct 15+ validation calls with current operators before signing routinely learn months later that the "$150K average" hides a $36K-$300K range with the bottom quartile losing money.
- Markets dominated by Mathnasium or Kumon within 3 miles. Mathnasium had 1,170+ U.S. Units as of 2026; Kumon had 1,500+. Eye Level's roughly 220 U.S. Units make it the No. 4 player. Co-location cannibalization is brutal when a Mathnasium opens within 1.5 miles of an existing Eye Level — pediatric tutoring is hyperlocal and parent-network-driven.
If you are over-leveraged, lack education-sector relationships, plan to hire a manager to run it, or sit in a non-immigrant-dense suburb, Eye Level is the wrong vehicle. Sylvan's multi-subject licensed-teacher model or Tutor Doctor's in-home model typically pencils better in those markets.
2027 Market Conditions
The U.S. Supplemental tutoring brick-and-mortar segment is structurally shrinking while the total tutoring market grows to roughly $16 billion by 2027 per IBISWorld and ResearchAndMarkets. The growth is migrating to online-1:1 platforms (Outschool, Wyzant, Varsity Tutors), AI-tutor apps (Khanmigo, Synthesis, MagicSchool), and school-district-contracted high-dosage tutoring.
Eye Level operates squarely in the declining brick-and-mortar paper-worksheet category that the federal pandemic-tutoring wave (2022-2024) propped up and that is now reverting.
Three 2027-specific headwinds:
- ESSER funding cliff. Federal ESSER III tutoring dollars expired September 2024, removing roughly $2.6 billion in annual district-funded supplemental tutoring spend that temporarily boosted center foot traffic. The 2025-2026 academic-year unit-level revenue drop across the category is estimated at 8-14% per Children's Educational Services industry tracking.
- AI substitution at the K-6 level. Khan Academy's Khanmigo ($4/month family plan) and OpenAI's Study Mode are absorbing the basic-math-fact-fluency use case that powers Eye Level's elementary enrollment. Parents who would have paid $200/month for Eye Level math are increasingly paying $4 for AI tutors plus $40/hour for periodic human checks.
- Korean-American demographic plateau. U.S. Korean-American population growth has flattened at ~0.4% annually (Pew 2024), eroding Eye Level's natural demand base. Centers chasing second-generation and non-Asian parents face the same paid-acquisition math as Mathnasium and Kumon — without the brand recognition.
One tailwind: state-funded private-school-choice ESA programs (Arizona, Florida, Iowa, Indiana, Utah, Arkansas) now route $1,000-$8,000 per student annually toward approved supplemental providers. Eye Level has approval in Florida (FES-EO) and Arizona (ESA), opening a direct-state-reimbursed revenue line that bypasses parent willingness-to-pay.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-7 — Pull the 2026/2027 FDD directly from Daekyo America. Request the most current FDD through the NA-Franchise portal at nafranchise.myeyelevel.com, not third-party summaries. Verify the Item 7 range, Item 6 royalty schedule, Item 20 unit counts (openings + closures), Item 19 (likely absent), and Item 21 audited financial statements. A franchisor with no Item 19 and declining unit count is a walk-away signal.
- Days 8-21 — Validation calls with 15-20 active U.S. Franchisees. Item 20 lists every franchisee with contact info. Ask each: gross revenue last 12 months, sub-student count, months to breakeven, owner draw, current monthly royalty bill, would-you-do-it-again on a 1-10 scale. Discard the bottom quartile and top decile; build your model from the middle 60%.
- Days 22-35 — Drive-time site selection with Eye Level's real-estate team. Pull K-8 school enrollment from NCES, foreign-born population from ACS 5-year, and competitor density from Yelp + Google Maps. Score each candidate trade area on the four wins-traits above. Reject any site within 1.5 miles of an existing Mathnasium, Kumon, Sylvan, or Huntington.
- Days 36-55 — Financial model in three scenarios. Pessimistic: 80 sub-students by month 12, breakeven month 30, IRR 6%. Base: 180 sub-students by month 12, breakeven month 22, IRR 14%. Optimistic: 280 sub-students by month 12, breakeven month 16, IRR 24%. Stress-test against 20% labor inflation, 2pp royalty hike, and a Mathnasium opening within 1.5 miles in year 2.
- Days 56-70 — Franchise-attorney FDD review and personal-liability scrub. Hire a franchise-specialist attorney ($2,500-$4,500). Focus on: personal guarantee scope, territory exclusivity (Eye Level grants limited 1-mile protected radius), renewal terms, transfer restrictions, and post-termination non-compete (3 years, 25-mile). Push back on the non-compete.
- Days 71-90 — Final go/no-go with bank, accountant, and spouse. Lock SBA 7(a) financing (Eye Level is SBA-registered), confirm $60,000 liquid is post-financing not pre, and sign only if base-case IRR clears 14%, you can absorb 24 months of negative cash flow, and your spouse is prepared to instruct or co-manage. If any of those three are no, walk.
Alternative Plays
If Eye Level fails your 90-day gates, four better-pencilled alternatives in the same K-12 supplemental category:
- Mathnasium — $112K-$158K all-in, 10% royalty + 2% marketing fee on gross, average annual revenue ~$425,000 per Item 19, 1,170+ U.S. Units, strongest non-Asian-suburb brand recognition. Better fit for affluent non-immigrant markets.
- Tutor Doctor — $86K-$130K all-in, 8% royalty + 2% marketing fee, home-based model with zero brick-and-mortar, average gross sales $250K-$400K. Better fit for rural and exurban markets where storefront economics fail.
- Code Wiz / theCoderSchool / Snapology — STEM franchises at $85K-$170K all-in, riding the K-12 computer-science-graduation-requirement wave now mandated in 27 states by 2027. Lower competition density, higher per-student pricing ($240-$340/month vs Eye Level's $140-$180).
- Independent Outschool / Wyzant marketplace coaching — zero franchise fee, 20-30% platform take rate, operate from home, no real estate. Average top-quartile educator pulls $90K-$140K against $4K-$8K total startup. The right play if you have subject-matter credentials and don't want a 5-year FDD contract.
FAQ
How does the per-subject-student royalty actually work compared to a percentage of gross?
Eye Level charges $32-$36 per enrolled subject-student per month, not a percentage of gross. A center with 150 students each enrolled in math AND English has 300 sub-students generating roughly $10,200 in royalty against ~$45,000 in gross, an effective rate of 22-23%.
That's materially higher than Mathnasium's 10% or Tutor Doctor's 8%. The structure punishes high-revenue centers and protects low-volume centers from royalty starvation — economically opposite of every other franchise model.
Why doesn't Eye Level publish a real Item 19?
Franchise Chatter and Vetted Biz both flag this as the largest red flag in the Eye Level FDD. The 2017 FDD published only average subject-students per month, not revenue or profit. Tutoring competitors Kumon, Mathnasium, Sylvan, and Huntington all publish full Item 19 revenue tables.
Absence of Item 19 means franchisor validation calls are mandatory — you cannot underwrite this investment from the FDD alone. Demand 15-20 calls before signing.
Can I run this as a passive investment with a hired manager?
No, with rare exception. Every franchisee profiled at $250K+ revenue is owner-operated or owner-and-spouse operated. The instructor-pay line (35-45% of gross) eliminates the manager-margin in absentee models.
Daekyo's training program assumes owner-instructor. If you need passive income, Tutor Doctor's home-based model or a non-education franchise like a 7-Eleven or Smoothie King is structurally better.
What does the Korean-American demographic concentration mean for resale value?
Resale value is demographically dependent and below the franchise-category average. A Bergen County NJ center with 280 sub-students and $280K revenue sells for 2.5-3.5x SDE (~$175K-$280K). The same revenue profile in a non-Asian suburb sells for 1.8-2.5x SDE because the buyer pool is smaller.
Daekyo's transfer-fee is $3,500 + 30-day right of first refusal — model it into your exit assumption.
How does state ESA / school-choice money change the economics?
Materially positive in approved states. Florida's FES-EO and Arizona's ESA both route $700-$1,200 per child annually to approved supplemental providers including Eye Level. A center with 60 ESA-funded students adds $42,000-$72,000 in direct-state-reimbursed revenue that is collection-risk-free and parent-acquisition-cost-zero.
If you're opening in Florida, Arizona, Iowa, Indiana, Utah, or Arkansas, build the ESA channel into your base case from day one.
Bottom Line
Eye Level is a niche, lower-cost tutoring franchise that wins decisively in Korean-American and other Asian-immigrant-dense markets with owner-instructor operators, and loses predictably everywhere else. The no-Item-19 FDD, structurally shrinking brick-and-mortar tutoring segment, AI substitution at the elementary level, and Mathnasium/Kumon density make this a walk-away for most U.S.
Trade areas. Open one if you are a credentialed educator in Bergen County, Flushing, Northern Virginia, or Seattle Eastside with $130K net worth, $60K liquid, an instructor-spouse, and access to an approved-state ESA channel. Otherwise, Mathnasium, Tutor Doctor, or independent Outschool tutoring will produce better risk-adjusted returns for the same capital outlay.
Sources
- Eye Level Learning Centers FDD summary (2025) — Franchise Direct, franchisedirect.com/childrensfranchises/eye-level-learning-center-franchise-11758
- Eye Level Learning Centers Franchise Cost & Profit Exposed (2025) — Vetted Biz, vettedbiz.com/franchises/eye-level-learning-centers
- Eye Level Learning Franchise FDD, Costs & Fees (2025) — Franchise Payback, franchisepayback.com/franchise/eye-level-learning-centers
- Eye Level Learning Franchise FDD, Profits & Costs (2025) — Sharpsheets, sharpsheets.io/blog/eye-level-learning-centers-franchise-costs-fees-profits
- Eye Level Learning Center Analysis Updated 2026 — Franchimp, franchimp.com/?page=franchisor&id=104955
- Eye Level Learning — Average Number of Subject-Students Per Month for Franchised Centers (2017 FDD) — Franchise Chatter
- Daekyo America, Inc. Franchise Disclosure Document — FDD Exchange archive (fddexchange.com)
- 1851 Franchise Deep Dive: Eye Level Learning Centers' Costs, Fees, Profit — 1851franchise.com
- IBISWorld Industry Report 61169 — Tutoring & Driving Schools in the US (2026)
- Pew Research Center — Korean Americans Population Trends (2024)
- Mathnasium vs Sylvan vs Kumon comparison (2026) — Ruvimo industry analysis
- ESSER III Funding Cliff Analysis — Children's Educational Services 2026 industry tracking
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