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How much does it really cost to open a franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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Franchise build-out under construction with contractor reviewing plans

The advertised "franchise fee" is the smallest part of what it costs to open a franchise. Between build-out, equipment, working capital, and the fees you pay forever, the real number is usually five to ten times the headline franchise fee. This guide breaks down every cost bucket in 2027, using the Item 7 ranges that appear in actual Franchise Disclosure Documents.

Direct Answer

Total initial investment for a U.S. Franchise in 2027 typically runs from about $50,000 for a home-based or mobile concept to $300,000–$1,200,000 for a fast-casual restaurant, with large-format and full-service concepts exceeding $2,000,000 (source: FDD Item 7, 2025–2026 filings).

The franchise fee itself is usually only $25,000–$60,000 of that. The biggest variable costs are real estate build-out and equipment; the most underestimated cost is the working capital you need to survive the first three to six months. Ongoing, expect to pay a royalty of 4%–8% plus an ad fund of 1%–4% of gross sales for the life of the agreement.

The Six Cost Buckets

Every franchise cost falls into six buckets. The franchisor discloses all of them in Item 7 of the FDD as a low-to-high range.

flowchart TD A[Total Initial Investment] --> B[1. Initial franchise fee] A --> C[2. Real estate and build-out] A --> D[3. Equipment, fixtures, signage] A --> E[4. Opening inventory and supplies] A --> F[5. Licenses, permits, training, insurance] A --> G[6. Working capital / additional funds]

1. Initial Franchise Fee

This is the one-time fee for the right to use the brand and system. Item 5 of the FDD lists it. Across most U.S.

Systems it lands in the $25,000 to $60,000 range per unit, though some emerging or low-cost concepts charge less and a few premium brands charge more (source: FDD Item 5, 2025–2026; IFA). Multi-unit and area-development deals often discount the per-unit fee.

2. Real Estate and Build-Out

This is usually the largest bucket for brick-and-mortar concepts. It includes leasehold improvements, construction, plumbing, HVAC, and design conformance to brand standards. A small service or retail footprint may need $75,000 to $250,000 in build-out, while a full restaurant kitchen and dining room can run $400,000 to $1,000,000+ (source: representative restaurant FDD Item 7, 2025–2026).

Note whether Item 7 assumes you lease the space; if you buy the real estate, that is a separate, much larger financing decision.

3. Equipment, Fixtures, and Signage

Ovens, refrigeration, POS systems, furniture, and exterior signage. For a food concept this commonly adds $100,000 to $400,000. Service and mobile concepts may need only a vehicle, tools, and a laptop, sometimes under $50,000.

4. Opening Inventory and Supplies

The first stock of product, packaging, uniforms, and consumables. This is modest for service businesses and meaningful for retail or food, often $10,000 to $50,000.

5. Licenses, Permits, Training, Insurance, and Professional Fees

Business licenses, health permits, liquor licenses where applicable, the cost of attending mandatory training (travel and lodging are usually on you), opening insurance, and your attorney and accountant fees. Budget $10,000 to $40,000, more if a liquor license is required in your market.

6. Working Capital (The Bucket People Skip)

Item 7 includes an additional funds line covering the first three months of operation. This is the cash that keeps the lights on while the unit ramps up. Underfunding this bucket is the most common cause of new-franchisee failure. Conservative buyers carry six months of working capital, not three.

Modeling a Realistic Budget

flowchart LR A[Item 7 high-end range] --> B[Add 10-15% contingency] B --> C[Add 3 extra months working capital] C --> D[Your true budget] D --> E{Cash + financing covers it?} E -->|Yes| F[Proceed] E -->|No| G[Lower-cost concept or wait]

Always budget toward the high end of the Item 7 range, then add a 10% to 15% contingency for construction overruns and permit delays. Lenders and the SBA generally want to see that you have liquid reserves beyond the minimum, and the brands with the lowest failure rates are often the ones whose franchisees were the best capitalized at opening.

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Don't Forget the Forever Costs

The investment above gets you open. After that, you pay ongoing fees on every dollar of sales for the term of the agreement (commonly 10 years):

A combined 9%–12% of gross sales in ongoing fees is normal. Model these into your profit projection from day one, because they come off the top regardless of whether you are profitable.

FAQ

What is the cheapest type of franchise to open? Home-based, mobile, and service concepts with no storefront are the lowest-cost, often with total Item 7 investment under $100,000 and sometimes under $50,000.

How much of the total cost is the franchise fee? Usually a small slice, often 5% to 20% of the total initial investment. Build-out, equipment, and working capital dominate the budget for brick-and-mortar concepts.

How much working capital should I really have? At least the Item 7 additional-funds figure, but conservative buyers carry six months of operating expenses to survive a slow ramp.

Can financing cover the whole investment? Rarely all of it. SBA and conventional lenders typically expect the borrower to inject 10% to 30% equity, so plan to fund part of the project in cash.

Best franchises to buy under $100,000 in 2027 — every franchise on PULSE, ranked.

Sources

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