Should I open or buy an ASP America’s Swimming Pool franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes — ASP (America's Swimming Pool Company) is a strong, low-capital, home-based pool-service franchise with recurring maintenance revenue plus higher-ticket repairs and renovations. ASP, founded in 2001, franchises swimming-pool cleaning, maintenance, repair, and renovation for residential and commercial pools, built on recurring weekly/monthly service routes plus repair and equipment revenue.
The 2026 FDD lists a franchise fee around $40,000, total Item 7 investment of roughly $120,000 to $200,000, a sliding royalty (often ~6%-8% decreasing with volume), and a marketing fee. Mature territories gross $500,000-$1,500,000, with owners clearing $90,000-$260,000.
Its edge is recurring service routes (predictable revenue), higher-ticket repairs/renovations, low capital, home-based operations, and strong demand in pool-dense markets; the challenges are recruiting/retaining technicians and route density.
The Real Numbers
ASP is home/office-based with no retail buildout — the operator builds recurring pool-service routes (weekly cleaning/chemical service), manages technicians, and adds higher-ticket repairs, equipment, and renovations. The recurring routes provide predictable revenue; repairs add upside.
| Line Item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Franchise fee | $40,000 | $40,000 | Per 2026 FDD |
| Office setup (home-based) | $3,000 | $15,000 | Home/small office |
| Equipment & vehicles | $15,000 | $60,000 | Service trucks, equipment |
| Technology & software | $5,000 | $15,000 | Route/scheduling, CRM |
| Initial marketing | $15,000 | $40,000 | Route/client acquisition |
| Insurance & licensing | $5,000 | $16,000 | GL + pool/contractor |
| Training & travel | $6,000 | $18,000 | Owner + tech training |
| Working capital | $20,000 | $50,000 | Payroll float |
| Total Item 7 | ~$120,000 | ~$200,000 | Per 2026 FDD — home-based |
| Royalty | Sliding ~6%-8% | Decreases with volume | |
| Marketing fee | ~2% of gross |
Revenue reality: mature territories gross $500K-$1.5M across recurring service routes (the base) plus repairs, equipment, and renovations (higher-ticket upside). With technician labor and chemicals/parts as costs but low overhead, owner margins run 14%-25%, or $90K-$260K.
The recurring routes provide predictable, stable revenue, and repairs/renovations add margin. The challenges are technician recruiting/retention and building route density in pool-dense markets.
Who Wins With This Business
- Capital required: $120K-$200K, with $60,000-$100,000 liquid — low entry.
- Time commitment: business-hours, seasonal-peak (summer) in many markets.
- Skills: technician recruiting/management, route building, and repair sales.
- Geographic fit: pool-dense markets (Sun Belt year-round; seasonal elsewhere).
- Lifestyle fit: home-based, route-and-project-driven, scalable.
The winners are operators in pool-dense markets who build recurring routes and add repair/renovation revenue.
Who Loses With This Business
- Owners who can't recruit/retain technicians.
- Operators in low-pool-density markets.
- Those who rely only on cleaning and miss repair/renovation upside.
- Owners who can't build route density.
- Those who mismanage seasonality (in seasonal markets).
2027 Market Conditions
- Demand: pool service is durable and recurring — pools need year-round (or seasonal) maintenance.
- Recurring revenue: weekly/monthly routes provide predictable, stable income.
- Higher-ticket upside: repairs, equipment, and renovations add margin.
- Low capital/home-based: capital-efficient model.
- Competition: Pinch A Penny, Pool Scouts, Premier Pools service, and local pool companies (in the Pulse library).
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Day 1-15: Read the 2026 FDD and confirm the recurring-route + repair model.
- Day 16-30: Interview 8+ owners; ask about route density, repair revenue, tech retention, and take-home.
- Day 31-45: Validate a pool-dense market (Sun Belt year-round; seasonal elsewhere).
- Day 46-60: Recruit technicians.
- Day 61-80: Build recurring service routes (density is key).
- Day 81-90: Launch operations.
- Ongoing: add higher-ticket repairs/renovations and grow route density.
Alternative Plays
- Pinch A Penny — pool retail + service (in the Pulse library).
- Pool Scouts — pool-service franchise.
- Premier Pools & Spas — pool construction/renovation.
- Other recurring home-services franchises — adjacent route-based models.
- Independent pool-service business — full control, but no brand.
- Lawn/yard recurring-service franchises — adjacent recurring models (in the Pulse library).
FAQ
What makes ASP attractive?
It combines recurring pool-service routes (predictable weekly/monthly revenue) with higher-ticket repairs, equipment, and renovations — a stable base plus margin upside — in a low-capital, home-based, business-hours model. Pool service is durable and recurring (pools need ongoing maintenance), making ASP one of the more stable home-services franchises in pool-dense markets.
How much does an ASP owner make?
Owners clear $90,000-$260,000, with margins of 14%-25% on $500K-$1.5M gross, helped by low overhead and the sliding royalty (decreasing with volume). Route density, technician retention, and repair/renovation revenue drive the range. Recurring routes provide a stable base.
Why are recurring routes valuable?
Weekly/monthly pool-service routes provide predictable, recurring revenue — customers on regular service contracts — which stabilizes income and supports valuation. Building route density (many pools in a tight area) improves efficiency and margins. The recurring base, plus repair upside, is the model's strength.
What is the biggest challenge?
Technician recruiting/retention and route density. Like all service businesses, finding/keeping reliable technicians is key, and building dense routes drives efficiency. In seasonal (non-Sun-Belt) markets, seasonality is also a factor. Pool-dense markets and strong tech management mitigate these.
Is pool service durable?
Yes — pool maintenance is a durable, recurring need (pools require ongoing service), and repairs/renovations add demand. In Sun Belt markets it's year-round; elsewhere seasonal. The recurring model is recession-resilient (pool owners maintain their investment). Success depends on route density, tech retention, and repair revenue.
Bottom Line
Open an ASP (America's Swimming Pool) franchise if you want a low-capital ($120K-$200K), home-based pool-service business with recurring route revenue, higher-ticket repair/renovation upside, and a sliding royalty, in a pool-dense market, and you can recruit/retain technicians and build route density. Its recurring revenue, repair upside, and low overhead are genuine strengths.
Skip it if you can't manage technicians, are in a low-pool-density market, or rely only on cleaning. For route-and-service-minded operators in pool-dense markets, ASP offers a stable, capital-efficient recurring-revenue franchise.
Sources
- ASP (America's Swimming Pool Company) Franchise Disclosure Document (2026 filing) — Items 5, 6, 7, 19, 20
- ASP official franchise site — investment range and recurring-service model
- Entrepreneur Franchise 500 — ASP listing
- Franchise Business Review — home-services franchise satisfaction data
- IBISWorld — Pool Cleaning & Maintenance Services in the US, 2026 industry report
- Statista — US pool-service and maintenance market, 2025-2026
- International Franchise Association (IFA) — 2027 Franchise Economic Outlook
- Association of Pool & Spa Professionals (PHTA) — industry data 2026
- Bureau of Labor Statistics — service-labor data 2026
- US Census — pool-ownership and Sun Belt demographic data, 2025-2026