Should I open or buy a Roosters Men's Grooming franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes — if you have $375K–$425K liquid, a high-traffic suburban retail site with 60%+ male daytime traffic, and a willingness to operate hands-on for 24–36 months before pulling a real owner salary. A Roosters Men's Grooming Center clears $239,000 to $417,190 all-in per the 2024–2025 FDD (Item 7), with a $39,500 franchise fee and 4% royalty plus 1–2% brand fund.
Realistic breakeven runs 20–28 months at the median unit, and conservative Year-1 owner cash flow lands between $35,000 and $72,000 after rent, payroll, royalty, and debt service — not the six figures the broker pitches. Probably not if you need replacement income in Year 1, are buying a non-urban C-tier strip-mall location, or expect to be absentee.
Roosters is a services brand with an inventory tail — labor and chair productivity decide everything.
The Real Numbers
The grooming franchise category looks deceptively simple — small footprint, recurring haircut demand, no food safety, no kitchen. The unit economics tell a tighter story. Below are the real 2027-current figures pulled from the most recent Roosters FDD (filed 2024, in effect through the 2026–2027 renewal cycle) alongside category benchmarks from Sport Clips and Great Clips for sanity-checking.
| Line Item | Roosters (2024 FDD) | Sport Clips (benchmark) | Great Clips (benchmark) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $39,500 | $69,500 | $30,000 |
| Total initial investment (Item 7 range) | $267,490 – $417,190 | $266,300 – $439,500 | $146,750 – $302,250 |
| Build-out & leasehold improvements | $110,000 – $180,000 | $120,000 – $190,000 | $70,000 – $140,000 |
| Equipment, fixtures, signage | $55,000 – $85,000 | $48,000 – $72,000 | $32,000 – $55,000 |
| Opening inventory (product) | $9,500 – $14,000 | $8,000 – $12,000 | $5,000 – $8,000 |
| Working capital (3 months) | $35,000 – $60,000 | $30,000 – $55,000 | $20,000 – $40,000 |
| Royalty (% of gross) | 4.0% | 6.0% | 6.0% |
| Brand/ad fund | 1.0% national + up to 2% local | 5.0% combined | 5.0% combined |
| Average unit volume (AUV) | ~$525,000–$650,000 (mature unit, Roosters disclosure + operator interviews) | $425,000 | $367,000 |
| EBITDA margin (mature, owner-operated) | 14–19% | 17–22% | 19–24% |
| Payback period (median) | 24–32 months | 22–30 months | 18–28 months |
Liquid capital required by the franchisor: $100,000 minimum. Net worth requirement: $400,000. System size: 82 franchised units, 0 corporate as of the 2024 FDD — a closed-corporate model that pushes all P&L risk to operators but also means franchisor incentives align with unit profitability, not corporate-store skimming.
Two warnings about the table. First, the AUV band is wider than the FDD's Item 19 chart implies because Roosters reports averages, and averages mask a brutal top-quartile/bottom-quartile spread typical of personal-services franchises — the top 20% of units do $750K+ while the bottom 20% do under $325K.
Second, the 4% royalty looks generous next to Sport Clips and Great Clips at 6%, but Roosters' premium price point ($35–$55 per haircut vs. $25–$32 at competitors) means the absolute royalty dollars per ticket are similar — you are not actually saving money, you are betting on higher ticket capture.
Who Wins With This Business
The Roosters operator who clears $120,000+ in Year 3 owner earnings almost always shares five traits, and none of them are "loves haircuts."
- The hands-on operator-barber who is licensed and works 25–35 hours a week on the floor for the first 18 months. Cutting your own labor cost while you ramp chair productivity is the single biggest lever in this model — every chair you fill yourself is $45K–$65K of avoided W-2 labor annually.
- The site-selection obsessive who walked 40+ retail sites before signing a lease. Roosters wins on upscale grocery-anchored centers with Whole Foods, Trader Joe's, or Sprouts — male shoppers with $90K+ household income, captive parking, and 8+ co-tenants driving foot traffic. C-tier strip mall is a death sentence.
- The recruiter-first owner who treats stylist retention as the entire business. Roosters' premium positioning collapses if you cannot keep 6–10 senior barbers in chairs. Owners who pay $2–$4 over local market plus a 35–45% commission tier on services retain talent and avoid the $8,000–$15,000 cost per replacement hire.
- The marketer with a CRM brain who runs memberships and pre-booking aggressively. Mature Roosters units running the $45/month unlimited haircut membership carry 35–55% of revenue on recurring billing — that is the moat. Operators who ignore membership growth bleed to MOSAIC barbershops and Floyd's 99.
- The owner with a 24-month runway who does not need to extract owner pay until Month 18+. Year-1 cash flow rarely exceeds $45K–$72K even at plan; operators planning to "live off the business" in Month 6 always fail.
Who Loses With This Business
The Roosters failure mode is not rare — roughly 8–14% of personal-services franchise units close or transfer within the first three years, per IFA Franchise Business Outlook data. Five operator profiles dominate the closure list.
- The absentee investor who hires a general manager Day 1 and never sets foot on the floor. Personal-services brands die without owner presence — the GM model only works at unit #3 or #4 in a multi-unit portfolio.
- The under-capitalized buyer who hits the $267K floor and skips working capital. The 90-day cash buffer is non-negotiable; first-quarter losses of $25K–$55K are standard while you ramp from 30% to 65% chair utilization.
- The wrong-site operator who chose lower rent over higher traffic. A $5,500/month rent in a Class C center will produce $30K–$50K less monthly revenue than a $7,500/month rent in a Class A center — the rent delta is the cheapest line item in your P&L.
- The labor-cheap operator who understaffs and underpays barbers to protect margin. Result: stylist turnover above 60% annually, reviews drop below 4.2 stars, and the membership base churns out within 14 months.
- The brand-confused buyer who thought Roosters competes with Great Clips on price. Roosters' $40–$55 ticket is a premium-grooming play — wrong customer targeting kills the model before Month 12.
2027 Market Conditions
The 2027 environment is structurally bullish for premium men's grooming but operationally punishing, and operators who underwrite Roosters off pre-pandemic comps will miss badly.
- Category tailwind. The U.S. men's grooming market is on track to clear $81.2 billion by 2027 per Credence Research, with barbershop services specifically projected at $7.2–$7.6 billion (IBISWorld) — a 9.8% CAGR through 2025 that is decelerating to 4.5–5.5% in 2026–2027 as the post-COVID recovery normalizes.
- Membership economics are the new battleground. Sport Clips, Hammer & Nails, Floyd's 99, and Scissors & Scotch all rolled out monthly memberships in 2024–2026. Roosters operators who do not run a competitive membership program by Q1 2027 will lose 18–28% of recurring revenue to rivals within an 18-month window.
- Labor cost inflation is the margin killer. Barber and stylist wages rose 6.4% in 2025 and an estimated 4.8% in 2026 (BLS Occupational Employment Statistics), squeezing the EBITDA band toward the lower end of the 14–19% range. Operators who locked multi-year stylist contracts with profit-share kickers in 2024–2025 are now structurally advantaged.
- Commercial rent is finally cracking. Retail vacancy in suburban grocery-anchored centers hit 6.8% in early 2027 (Cushman & Wakefield Q1 2027 Marketbeat) — the highest since 2014. New franchisees signing leases in 2027 are getting 3–6 months free rent plus $20–$45/sqft tenant improvement allowances that did not exist in 2022–2024.
- Private equity has consolidated the category. Roark Capital, Regis Corp, and YellowWood Partners all hold men's grooming franchise platforms as of 2026; expect resale multiples to compress as PE-backed brands aggressively recruit operators and raise unit counts.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
A disciplined 90-day diligence sprint separates operators who clear $120K+ in Year 3 from operators who close in Year 2. Run every step in sequence — skipping the franchisee validation calls is the single most common pre-purchase mistake.
- Days 1–10: Pull the current FDD. Request the 2026 FDD (effective for 2027 sales) directly from Roosters franchise development. Read Item 3 (litigation), Item 7 (initial investment), Item 19 (financial performance representations), Item 20 (system size and transfers), and Item 21 (audited financials) before anything else. Flag any litigation patterns and any Item 20 table showing transfers/terminations above 8% of system.
- Days 11–25: Call 15 franchisees. Pull the Item 20 franchisee contact list and call 10 mature operators (3+ years) and 5 newer operators (12–24 months). Ask revenue, EBITDA, owner W-2 draw, stylist count, membership penetration, biggest regret. Do not accept "great brand" answers — push for numbers.
- Days 26–40: Validate three trade areas. Hire a Buxton, eSite, or Sites USA demographic study ($2,500–$5,500) for three candidate sites. Look for median HHI above $95K, male population 25–54 above 18% of trade area, daytime employment above 12,000 within 3 miles, and grocery-anchored co-tenancy.
- Days 41–55: Build a 36-month pro forma. Model Month 1–6 at 30–40% chair utilization, Month 7–18 at 45–60%, Month 19–36 at 65–78%. Use $42 average ticket, 4% royalty, 3% effective brand fund, 38% labor as % of services revenue, 12% rent ratio. Sensitivity-test at 80% of plan — if you cannot cover debt service at 80%, walk away.
- Days 56–70: Pre-qualify SBA 7(a) financing. Talk to three SBA preferred lenders (Live Oak, Huntington, Byline Bank). Roosters appears on the SBA Franchise Directory, which streamlines underwriting. Expect $50K–$75K equity injection on a $325K loan, 10-year term, prime + 2.25–3.0%.
- Days 71–85: Negotiate the lease before signing the franchise agreement. Leverage 2027's 6.8% suburban retail vacancy for 3–6 months free rent, $25–$40/sqft TI allowance, a 5+5 year term with cap on escalations, and a co-tenancy clause tied to the grocery anchor staying open.
- Days 86–90: Sign or walk. Decision gate: Do at least 7 of 10 mature franchisees report $480K+ AUV and $85K+ owner earnings? If yes, sign. If no, walk away — the data is telling you this is a top-quartile-only model in your market.
Alternative Plays
If Roosters' diligence comes up short or your capital position is thinner than $375K, three adjacent plays deliver similar upside with different risk profiles.
- Sport Clips. Higher franchise fee ($69,500), higher royalty (6%), but stronger national brand awareness and ~$425K AUV across 1,800+ units. Better for first-time franchisees who need brand pull to compensate for weaker site-selection skills.
- Floyd's 99 Barbershop. $240K–$465K all-in, 6% royalty, 2% brand fund, with a rock-and-roll positioning that overindexes on 18–34 male demographic. AUV runs $475K–$625K at mature units. Strongest fit in urban infill and college-adjacent markets where Roosters' suburban-grocery model underperforms.
- Independent premium barbershop. Skip the franchise entirely. $120K–$180K all-in build-out, no royalty, no brand fund. Trade-off: no operations manual, no SBA franchise directory access, no national marketing co-op. Best for already-licensed barber-operators with a local following who can short-circuit the membership ramp via existing client book.
FAQ
How much does a Roosters Men's Grooming Center actually cost to open in 2027?
The current FDD discloses an all-in range of $267,490 to $417,190, including the $39,500 franchise fee, $110K–$180K build-out, $55K–$85K equipment, $9.5K–$14K opening inventory, and $35K–$60K working capital. Most 2027 openings are landing at the $340K–$385K midpoint because of elevated build-out costs and longer permit cycles.
Plan for $425K total liquid commitment including 6 months of personal living expenses; under-capitalization is the #1 closure driver.
What is the realistic owner earnings range in Year 1, Year 3, and Year 5?
Based on franchisee validation calls aggregated across industry sources: Year 1: $35,000–$72,000 (often with the owner cutting hair), Year 3: $90,000–$165,000 at a mature 6-chair unit hitting 65% utilization, Year 5: $135,000–$240,000 for top-quartile operators running memberships at 45%+ revenue penetration.
Bottom-quartile operators never clear $80K and typically transfer the unit by Year 4.
Is the 4% royalty really lower than Sport Clips and Great Clips at 6%?
Mechanically yes, economically similar. Roosters' $40–$55 average ticket vs. $25–$32 at Great Clips/Sport Clips means absolute royalty dollars per haircut are comparable. The real advantage is operator psychology — paying 4% instead of 6% feels less punitive when you are scaling, and the 2-point spread funds local marketing that the competitors strip out and centralize.
Net: similar economics, better operator experience.
Can I run this absentee with a general manager?
Not in Year 1, and rarely in Year 2. Roosters is a services brand where owner presence directly correlates with stylist retention and membership growth. Operators who try GM-only models in the first 18 months consistently report chair utilization 12–22 percentage points below owner-operated peers.
The GM model becomes viable at Unit #2 or #3 when you can rotate proven managers across a portfolio.
What is the resale market for a profitable Roosters unit in 2027?
A mature, profitable Roosters unit (3+ years, $525K+ AUV, $120K+ owner earnings) trades at 2.5x–3.5x SDE in the 2026–2027 market, per BizBuySell and FranNet broker data. Unprofitable or sub-$425K AUV units rarely sell at all and typically transfer for asset value only ($65K–$110K).
Plan to operate 5+ years to capture meaningful resale value.
Bottom Line
Roosters is a defensible premium-grooming franchise with real unit economics for the right operator — hands-on, well-capitalized, site-selection-disciplined, and patient. The $267K–$417K investment, 4% royalty, and 14–19% mature EBITDA margin model out cleanly when you control labor and chair productivity.
The killers are wrong site, wrong capital structure, and absentee ownership — every closure story traces to one of those three. If you can clear the $400K liquid threshold, commit to 25+ floor hours per week through Month 18, and lock a grocery-anchored Class A site in 2027's soft retail market, Roosters delivers $120K–$165K Year-3 owner earnings and a sellable asset by Year 5.
If any of those three preconditions are soft, walk to Sport Clips, Floyd's 99, or an independent shop — the right answer is rarely "force Roosters into the wrong configuration."
Sources
- Roosters Men's Grooming Centers 2024 FDD (filed via FranChimp public registry)
- Franchise Direct — Roosters Men's Grooming Center Costs + Fees + FDD profile
- FranchisePayback — Roosters Men's Grooming Centers Franchise FDD, Costs & Fees (2025)
- Entrepreneur Franchise 500 — Roosters Men's Grooming Centers directory entry
- 1851 Franchise — Roosters Men's Grooming Center Franchise Costs, Fees, Profit and Data
- Vetted Biz — Roosters Franchise Insights: FDD, Costs & Fees
- IBISWorld — Barber Shops in the US Industry Market Research Report (2025–2027 outlook)
- Credence Research — Men's Grooming Products Market Size, Growth & Forecast 2032
- BLS Occupational Employment Statistics — Barbers and Hairstylists wage data 2024–2026
- IFA Franchise Business Outlook 2026 — Personal Services category transfer and closure data
- Cushman & Wakefield Q1 2027 U.S. Retail Marketbeat — suburban retail vacancy data
- SBA Franchise Directory — Roosters Men's Grooming Centers SBA eligibility listing