Should I open a process serving business in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes — if you have a vehicle, $3K-$8K of startup capital, the stomach to knock on hostile doors, and a state where licensing barriers create a moat. Process serving is one of the lowest-capital legal-services businesses you can start in 2027: no storefront, no inventory, no franchise fee.
A solo operator in a license-required state (Texas, Arizona, Florida, California) can hit $60K-$95K of Year-1 take-home at roughly $60-$100 per routine serve. Breakeven typically lands in month 2-3. The catch: in 40+ unregulated states, any adult who is not a party to the action can serve papers, and rates compress toward $45-$70.
Probably not — unless you are in a regulated state OR willing to build a multi-server agency that subcontracts nationally via ServeManager. Solo plates plateau near $110K without leverage.
The Real Numbers
Process serving is NOT a franchise system — there are no FDDs for the trade. The numbers below come from NAPPS (National Association of Professional Process Servers), ZipRecruiter, Indeed, and state surety-bond filings, normalized to 2027 dollars.
| Line Item | Solo Operator (Regulated State) | 3-Server Agency |
|---|---|---|
| License + exam fee | $50-$300 (TX $300, FL $40) | Same per server |
| Surety bond ($2K-$10K coverage) | $50-$150/yr | $150-$450/yr |
| E&O insurance ($500K-$1M) | $400-$900/yr | $1.2K-$2.4K/yr |
| Vehicle (used, reliable) | $0 if owned, $8K used | $0 (1099 contractors) |
| ServeManager software | $39-$79/mo | $149-$299/mo |
| Body cam + GPS phone mount | $180-$350 | $540-$1,050 |
| LLC + bank + website | $400-$900 | $400-$900 |
| Total startup | $3,200-$8,400 | $6,800-$14,200 |
| Year-1 revenue range | $72K-$130K | $210K-$380K |
| EBITDA margin | 45-65% | 22-32% |
| Owner take-home Yr-1 | $45K-$78K | $58K-$112K |
| Payback | 2-4 months | 5-9 months |
Per-serve pricing in 2027 splits cleanly into three tiers per NAPPS and LawServePro rate cards: routine ($60-$135), rush 24-48hr ($135-$235), same-day/skip-trace ($235-$310+). The national NAPPS-survey average sits at $60, but real 2026 retail invoices show the band has moved to $85-$175 for routine in metros.
A solo server who completes 3-5 serves/day at $90 average clears roughly $270-$450/day gross, $70K-$110K/year before tax.
Who Wins With This Business
You win if you are in a regulated state (Arizona, Texas, Florida, California, Nevada, Georgia, Illinois, Oklahoma, Montana) — the licensing exam and bond requirement filter out the gig-economy competition that crushes margins in unregulated states. You win if you have a flexible schedule — evictions, divorce papers, and subpoenas often require evening and weekend serves at 1.5x rates.
You win if you can build relationships with 5-10 anchor law firms or collection agencies — a single mid-size firm can feed you 40-80 serves/month at a guaranteed price floor. You win if you are comfortable with hostile reactions — being yelled at, lied to, threatened, and occasionally chased is the actual job description, and the people who quit in month 3 are the ones who romanticized it.
You win if you treat it as a sales-and-routing business, not a courier business — ServeManager users save 25+ minutes per job, which is the difference between 3 and 5 serves a day.
Who Loses With This Business
You lose if you are in California, Massachusetts, or New York City and try to compete on price — incumbent agencies have 15-25 years of attorney relationships, ServeCircuit and ABC Legal own the high-volume bank/insurance contracts, and you cannot undercut a national network's $35 wholesale rate.
You lose if you avoid conflict — process serving requires looking strangers in the face and handing them documents they do not want, sometimes through a screen door, sometimes with a dog barking. You lose if you skip the affidavit discipline — a single sloppy proof of service can void a court date and cost a law firm $5K-$25K, which ends the relationship forever.
You lose if you treat mileage as free — at $0.70/mile IRS rate (2027), an 18-mile round trip to a $60 serve nets $47 before time, which is sub-minimum-wage when serves stall. You lose if you cannot pass a background check — most states bar felony convictions in the prior 5-10 years.
2027 Market Conditions
Eviction filings remain elevated post-2024 rent-spike normalization, with RealPage and Eviction Lab data showing 2026 eviction volumes still 14-22% above 2019 in Sun Belt metros (Phoenix, Atlanta, Tampa, Houston). This is the single biggest tailwind for process serving in 2027 — landlords and property-management roll-ups (Greystar, Cushman & Wakefield) need licensed servers in volume.
Debt-collection litigation is climbing as Q4-2026 credit-card delinquency rates passed 4.1% per the NY Fed Household Debt report, pushing collection-agency serve volume up roughly 18% year-over-year. E-service and digital alternatives are NOT killing the industry — courts still require personal service for most original-process documents (summons, eviction notices, subpoenas), and Texas Rule 106 and California CCP 415.20 still mandate physical attempts before substituted service is allowed.
The competitive threat is consolidation: ABC Legal Services, ProVest, Firefly Legal, and Nationwide Legal are buying regional agencies and using AI-routing + W-2 server networks to wholesale routine serves at $35-$45. Solo operators win by going upmarket (skip-trace, rush, surveillance) — not by chasing wholesale volume.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-7: Confirm your state's licensing posture. Check getlicensemap.com or NAPPS state directory. If unregulated (e.g., Ohio, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin), expect $45-$70 routine rates and gig-economy competition — re-evaluate whether the next-state-over is regulated and worth a commute.
- Days 8-21: Pass the exam + post bond. Texas requires the JBCC certification exam ($90 + 12 CE hours); Arizona requires a county-level exam + $5K bond + $1M E&O. Budget $400-$1,200 for license + first-year bond + first-year E&O.
- Days 22-35: Form LLC, open business bank, register on ServeManager. Use Northwest Registered Agent ($39 + state fee) or LegalZoom ($249). Open a Relay or Mercury business checking. Subscribe to ServeManager 75-Jobs plan at $39/month.
- Days 36-50: Build your anchor-client list. Email 30 family-law firms, 20 collection-agency operations managers, and 10 small-claims-heavy attorneys in your county. Offer $10 below market routine + 24-hr turnaround guarantee to land first 3 anchors.
- Days 51-70: Run 50 paid serves. Track service-rate-on-first-attempt (industry benchmark 65-75%), average miles per serve, and affidavit rejection rate (must be <1%). If first-attempt rate is below 60%, your skip-trace and address-verification process is broken.
- Days 71-90: Decide solo vs. Agency. If you cleared 80+ serves and $7K+ in collected revenue by day 90, the model works — start recruiting 1099 contractors at 60/40 splits (you keep 40 for intake, billing, and affidavit QC). If you cleared under 40 serves, the demand is not there at your price — lower your rate by 15% OR pivot to a regulated neighboring state.
Alternative Plays
Skip-trace and asset investigation — once you are licensed, the same vehicle and software can run $150-$400 skip-trace jobs for collection agencies and family-law attorneys hunting hidden assets. Margin is 70-80% vs. 50-60% on routine serves. Court courier and document-retrieval — many counties still require physical pickup and filing, and law firms pay $45-$85 per courier run.
Mobile notary stacking — get a $25 notary commission in your state and bundle notarizations at $15-$25 each onto serve trips. A few signers per week adds $4K-$8K/year. Eviction-specialty agency — partner with 2-4 property-management companies and become their exclusive eviction-service vendor, billing $75-$150 per 3-day notice + service with volume guarantees.
Phoenix, Atlanta, and Las Vegas have operators clearing $500K+ annually on eviction-only books. License the route, not the labor — at scale, the real exit is selling the client book + ServeManager database to a regional consolidator like ABC Legal or ProVest at 0.8-1.2x trailing revenue.
FAQ
Do I need a law degree or paralegal cert to be a process server?
No. Process serving is a trade, not a legal profession. You do not interpret law, give advice, or appear in court. You physically deliver documents and file a sworn affidavit stating who, when, and where.
Texas, Arizona, Florida, and a handful of other states require a certification exam covering service rules, ethics, and affidavit drafting — typically a 2-4 hour open-book test with a 70% pass rate on first attempt. No undergraduate degree is required in any state.
How much can a solo process server realistically clear in Year 1?
A regulated-state solo operator doing 3-5 serves/day at $80-$110 average grosses $70K-$110K in Year 1. After mileage (12-15K), software (500), bond/insurance (1.2K), and self-employment tax, owner take-home lands at $45K-$78K. Year 2 jumps to $80K-$95K take-home once anchor clients are stable and skip-trace add-ons kick in.
The $110K solo ceiling is real — beyond that, you need contractors.
What are the biggest mistakes new process servers make?
Three killers. (1) Sloppy affidavits — one rejected proof of service voids a court date and ends the law-firm relationship. (2) Underpricing routine serves to win business — $45 serves bleed money once mileage is included. (3) Not using software — manual logging via spreadsheet caps you at 2-3 serves/day; ServeManager users average 5-7/day.
The fourth, less obvious, is failing to skip-trace before the first attempt — first-attempt rate below 60% means doubled miles and halved hourly rate.
Is process serving recession-proof?
Counter-cyclical, not recession-proof. Recessions increase eviction filings, debt-collection lawsuits, small-claims, and divorce filings — all process-server demand drivers. 2008-2010 saw industry volume rise 28% per NAPPS archives. The risk is client-payment delays, not volume — collection agencies and small law firms stretch A/R to 45-60 days during downturns.
Demand a 50% deposit on jobs over $200 and require net-15 terms on monthly invoiced clients.
Should I buy an existing process-serving agency or start from scratch?
Start from scratch if your budget is under $25K. Existing agencies sell at 0.6-1.0x trailing revenue + book value — a $200K-revenue book typically lists at $130K-$210K. The book is only worth that if client concentration is below 25% per client and the prior owner stays 90 days for handoff.
Most solo books do not survive ownership transition because relationships sit with the named owner. Build your own book unless you find a retiring owner with 5+ years of recurring law-firm contracts and documented SOPs.
Bottom Line
Process serving in 2027 is a legitimate $45K-$78K Year-1 income for a solo operator in a regulated state with $3K-$8K of startup capital and a working vehicle. It is NOT a franchise — there is no system to buy, no royalty to pay, and no territory to protect. The moat is your license + your law-firm relationships + your affidavit discipline. You will plateau near $110K solo; scaling past that requires 1099 contractors, ServeManager workflow, and intake-and-billing back office.
Avoid this business in unregulated states unless you can build a multi-server agency from day one — solo competition with gig workers at $45/serve is a losing math problem. Best fits: late-career career-changers with vehicles, ex-law-enforcement, ex-collections agents, and operators willing to work Tuesday-Saturday evenings to catch evasive defendants at home.
Sources
- National Association of Professional Process Servers (NAPPS) — Rate Survey + Pros/Cons of Becoming a Process Server
- NAPPS — How Much Does a Process Server Cost
- ServeCircuit — How Much Does a Process Server Cost? (2026 Pricing Guide)
- ZipRecruiter — Average Process Server Salary by State 2026
- Indeed — Process Server Salary in United States 2026
- LawServePro — How Much Do Process Servers Really Make
- GetLicenseMap — Process Server License Requirements By State 2026
- Undisputed Legal — Process Server Licensing Requirements According to the State
- SuretyBonds.com — Florida Process Server 7-Step Guide
- DGR Legal — Process Server Insurance and Bond Requirements
- ServeManager — Process Server Software Pricing and Workflow
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Quarterly Household Debt and Credit Report Q4 2026
- Eviction Lab at Princeton University — National Eviction Tracking Data