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Should I buy a single-unit or multi-unit franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 5 min read
Should I buy a single-unit or multi-unit franchise in 2027

Direct Answer

Whether you should buy a single-unit or multi-unit franchise in 2027 depends on your capital, your experience, and your goal. Buy a single unit if this is your first franchise, your capital is limited, or you intend to be an owner-operator who learns the business hands-on. Commit to multi-unit (an area development agreement) if you have substantial capital, prior operating experience, and a goal of building a portfolio with shared overhead and management leverage.

Most successful multi-unit operators started with one unit, proved they could run it, then expanded. Below is how each path works, the real cost and risk differences, and how to verify the right fit in the Franchise Disclosure Document.

What single-unit and multi-unit actually mean

A single-unit franchise is one location under one agreement. You pay one initial franchise fee, build one unit, and operate it. It is the standard entry point and the lowest-capital way to test whether you like the business and the brand.

A multi-unit franchise usually takes the form of an area development agreement: you commit upfront to opening a set number of units within a defined territory on a schedule (for example, three units in 36 months). You typically pay development fees and commit capital for all units, even though you open them over time.

Some systems also use master franchising, where you sub-franchise to others, which is a different and more complex business.

flowchart TD A[Choose franchise scale] --> B{First franchise?} B -->|Yes| C[Start single-unit] B -->|No, experienced| D{Capital for multiple units?} D -->|Limited| C D -->|Substantial| E[Area development / multi-unit] C --> F[Learn the model, prove the unit] F --> G{Unit profitable & repeatable?} G -->|Yes| E G -->|No| H[Fix unit before expanding]

The case for starting single-unit

The trade-off is a lower ceiling. One unit caps your income, and you carry full overhead with no economies of scale.

The case for multi-unit and area development

The trade-offs are real: a development schedule you are contractually obligated to hit, far more capital at risk, and the operational complexity of running several units at once. Falling behind the schedule can put you in default.

flowchart LR A[Open unit 1] --> B[Stabilize & document playbook] B --> C[Hire & train managers] C --> D[Open unit 2 & 3] D --> E{Portfolio profitable?} E -->|Yes| F[Continue development schedule] E -->|No| G[Pause, fix operations] F --> H[Build sellable multi-unit asset]

The capital and risk math

Multi-unit is not simply single-unit times the number of units. You commit development fees upfront, you may carry overlapping build-outs, and your working-capital needs are higher because early units must support the ramp of later ones. Model the worst case: what happens to your cash if unit one underperforms while you are contractually obligated to open unit two.

If that scenario would sink you, start with one unit.

Who each path fits

How to verify before you sign

For single-unit, focus on Item 7 (investment) and Item 19 (any earnings claim) and call current single-unit franchisees. For multi-unit, additionally scrutinize the development schedule, the development fees, and the default provisions if you miss the schedule, all of which appear in the franchise and area development agreements (summarized in Items 5, 6, and 17 of the FDD).

Then talk to current multi-unit operators about how realistic the schedule was and what scaling actually cost. The right answer is usually to earn the right to scale by mastering one unit first.

FAQ

Is it better to start with one franchise unit or several? For most first-time owners, one unit is the safer start. It limits capital at risk and lets you learn the business before committing to a multi-unit development schedule.

What is an area development agreement? A contract to open a set number of units in a defined territory on a schedule, often with development fees paid upfront. Missing the schedule can put you in default.

Do multi-unit owners make more money? They can, through economies of scale and management leverage, but they also carry more capital risk and operational complexity. Profitability depends on executing each unit well.

Can I convert a single unit into a multi-unit deal later? Often yes. Many franchisors let proven single-unit owners take on development rights, which is the common path to building a portfolio.

What is the biggest risk of multi-unit franchising? Being contractually obligated to keep opening units on a schedule even if your first units underperform, which can strain cash and trigger default provisions.

How much more capital does multi-unit require? More than a simple multiple, because of development fees, overlapping build-outs, and larger working-capital reserves. Model the worst case before committing.

Sources

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