Should I open or buy a Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
A Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop franchise is a real, recurring-revenue grooming concept, but it is a buildout-heavy retail commitment, not a low-cost service play. Across recent Franchise Disclosure Documents and third-party cost trackers, the estimated initial investment has been reported in the $250,000–$350,000 range for earlier disclosures and as high as $450,000–$550,000 in more recent cost estimates, with an initial franchise fee around $30,000 (Tommy Gun's FDD; Vetted Biz, 2025; Franchise Direct, 2025).
You should open or buy one only if three things are true: you can comfortably fund a six-figure buildout plus six months of working capital, you want a membership and walk-in barbershop model rather than a chair-rental salon, and you can recruit and retain licensed barbers in a tight labor market.
Treat every figure here as a range and verify the current Item 7 and Item 19 in the brand's latest FDD with a franchise attorney before you sign.
Tommy Gun's is a Canadian-born men's grooming brand expanding in the United States. The pitch is a branded, masculine barbershop experience — haircuts, beard trims, hot-towel shaves, and a membership program — that competes with Sport Clips, Great Clips, Roosters Men's Grooming Center, and Floyd's 99 Barbershop.
The economics rise or fall on chair utilization and how many recurring members you can convert from one-time walk-ins.
What It Actually Costs
The estimated initial investment is the number that matters, and it is disclosed as a range in Item 7 of the FDD. Reported figures cluster in two bands depending on the document year and the data source: an earlier-cited $250,000–$350,000 and a more recent $450,000–$550,000 all-in average to open a unit (Vetted Biz, 2025; The Franchise Mall).
The initial franchise fee is approximately $30,000 (Franchise Direct, 2025).
The investment breaks into predictable buckets:
- Leasehold improvements / buildout: roughly $50,000–$150,000 depending on the size and condition of the space (FinModelsLab estimate). A raw-shell retail bay costs far more than a second-generation salon space.
- Barber chairs and stations: roughly $1,000–$3,000 per chair, and a shop typically runs 4–8 chairs (FinModelsLab estimate).
- Signage, fixtures, point-of-sale, and the masculine "barbershop" interior that defines the brand.
- Working capital to cover payroll, rent, and marketing until the shop ramps — budget six months at minimum.
Ongoing costs include royalties and a brand/marketing fund contribution, both expressed as a percentage of gross sales in the FDD. Always read the current Item 5 and Item 6 for the exact percentages, because franchisors update them.
How the Money Is Made
A barbershop is a labor-and-utilization business. Revenue equals the number of chairs, times the hours each chair is productive, times the average ticket, plus retail product sales and membership dues. The single biggest profit lever is chair utilization — empty chairs still cost you rent and, often, a guaranteed wage.
The membership angle is what separates a modern barbershop from a commodity haircut shop. Recurring monthly dues smooth out seasonality and raise the lifetime value of each client. The risk is the mirror image: in markets where consumers will not pay a premium for a branded experience, you are competing on price against Great Clips and independents, and the math gets thin.
Who Should Buy One
This concept fits an owner-operator or a hands-on multi-unit operator who understands retail real estate and people management. It is a poor fit for a fully absentee buyer — barbershops live and die on recruiting, scheduling, and culture, and Item 15 of most grooming FDDs expects meaningful owner involvement.
Strong candidates usually have: access to $120,000–$200,000 in liquid capital to cover the down payment, buildout overages, and working capital after an SBA 7(a) loan; a market with a male demographic that values branded grooming; and the patience to recruit licensed barbers, who are scarce in many metros.
Tommy Gun's vs. The Alternatives
- Sport Clips: larger system, sports-themed haircuts for men and boys, comparable six-figure investment, deep brand recognition.
- Roosters Men's Grooming Center: upscale men's grooming, similar membership-and-experience positioning.
- Floyd's 99 Barbershop: rock-and-roll branded shops, full-service for all genders.
- Great Clips: value haircuts, the volume leader; different economics and lower ticket.
Tommy Gun's differentiates on a distinct, masculine brand identity and a membership program. Whether that premium holds in your specific trade area is exactly what your Discovery Day and franchisee validation calls must answer.
Red Flags to Pressure-Test
Before you commit, confirm: the current Item 7 range (the cited bands span $250K to $550K — that spread is large, so get the latest document); whether the FDD includes an Item 19 Financial Performance Representation and what unit-level revenue and margin it discloses; **U.S.
Unit count and the open/close trend over the last three years; franchisee turnover and litigation in Items 3 and 20; and the territory** protections in your agreement. A wide investment range and a thin U.S. Footprint are not automatic disqualifiers, but they raise the bar on your due diligence.
FAQ
How much does a Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop franchise cost in 2027? Reported estimated initial investment ranges from about $250,000–$350,000 in earlier disclosures to $450,000–$550,000 in more recent cost estimates, plus an initial franchise fee around $30,000 (Tommy Gun's FDD; Vetted Biz, 2025).
Confirm the current Item 7 before relying on any single figure.
Is Tommy Gun's a good first franchise? It can be, if you are an owner-operator comfortable with a six-figure retail buildout and barber recruiting. First-time buyers who want a lighter, home-based model should compare it against lower-cost service franchises.
Can I own a Tommy Gun's as an absentee investor? It is not designed for full absentee ownership. Like most barbershop and grooming concepts, success depends on hands-on recruiting, scheduling, and culture; read Item 15 of the FDD for the owner-involvement requirement.
What is the biggest financial risk? Empty chairs. Rent and guaranteed wages accrue whether or not seats are filled, so chair utilization and your membership conversion rate determine whether the unit is profitable.
How does Tommy Gun's compare to Sport Clips or Great Clips? Tommy Gun's is a premium, branded men's barbershop with a membership focus; Sport Clips is a larger sports-themed system; Great Clips competes on value and volume. The right choice depends on your market's willingness to pay for a branded experience.
Does Tommy Gun's offer financing? Like most franchisors, it typically does not lend directly but may have third-party or SBA 7(a) lender relationships. Verify financing arrangements in Item 10 of the FDD.
Sources
- Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop — Franchise Disclosure Document and official franchise pages (us.tommyguns.com/pages/franchise-faq).
- Vetted Biz — "Tommy Gun's Franchise Cost & Profit Exposed (2025 Update)" (vettedbiz.com/franchises/tommy-guns/).
- Franchise Direct — "Start a Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop Franchise" (franchisedirect.com).
- The Franchise Mall — "Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop Franchise Costs & Fees" (thefranchisemall.com).
- FinModelsLab — "Tommy Guns Franchise: Startup Costs and Financial Insights" (finmodelslab.com).
- Franchise Clique — "Tommy Gun's Original Barbershop Franchise Costs, Fees and Franchise Info" (franchiseclique.com).
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