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Should I open or buy a TGA Premier Sports franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 6 min read
TGA Premier Sports logo

Direct Answer

Yes for a low-capital, home-based operator who is comfortable selling programs into schools — this is one of the cheapest real franchises in youth sports. TGA Premier Sports runs golf, tennis, and multi-sport enrichment programs delivered at schools, rec centers, and facilities, founded in 2003 and now part of the Youth Athletes United portfolio (alongside i9 Sports and Soccer Stars).

The 2026 FDD lists a franchise fee around $25,000, total Item 7 investment of roughly $25,000 to $70,000, an 8% royalty, and a small brand-marketing fee. There is no real estate — programs run on partner facilities — so owner-discretionary margins reach 25%-40%.

A single mature territory grosses $120,000-$350,000, and multi-territory operators clear $70,000-$180,000. The core job is school-partnership sales and instructor management, not coaching.

The Real Numbers

TGA (originally "Teach Grow Achieve") is a mobile, school-partnership youth-enrichment franchise. The operator signs after-school and in-school program agreements with schools and facilities, hires and trains part-time instructors, and delivers golf, tennis, and now multi-sport curricula using portable equipment.

Like its sibling i9 Sports, it is asset-light and home-based.

Line ItemLowHighNotes
Franchise fee$25,000$25,000Single territory
Equipment (portable)$3,000$8,000Golf/tennis/multi-sport kits
Technology & software$1,500$3,500Registration + scheduling
Insurance$1,500$4,000GL + participant
Initial marketing$4,000$10,000School-outreach launch
Training & travel$2,500$6,000HQ onboarding
Working capital$5,000$15,000Instructor payroll float
Total Item 7~$25,000~$70,000Per 2026 FDD — no real estate
Royalty8% of gross
Brand-marketing fee~2% of gross

Revenue reality: a mature territory enrolls 600-1,800 program registrations per year at $120-$220 per session-package, producing $120,000-$350,000 gross. With no rent, the dominant costs are instructor labor (20%-30%), equipment and supplies (8%-12%), the 8% royalty, and the brand fee, leaving owner-discretionary earnings of 25%-40%.

Multi-territory operators reach six figures.

flowchart TD A[Gross Revenue $220K] --> B[Less Instructor Labor 26% = $57K] B --> C[Less Equipment & Supplies 10% = $22K] C --> D[Less 8% Royalty = $18K] D --> E[Less 2% Brand Fee = $4K] E --> F[Less Marketing & Admin 14% = $31K] F --> G[Owner-Discretionary Earnings ~$88K] G --> H{Single territory?} H -->|Yes| I[Add territory #2] H -->|No| J[Optimize school contracts]

Who Wins With This Business

The best operators are relationship-driven salespeople who can land and renew school partnerships.

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Who Loses With This Business

2027 Market Conditions

flowchart LR D1[Day 1-15: Read FDD] --> D2[Day 16-30: Call 8 Operators] D2 --> D3[Day 31-45: Map Schools + Rec Depts] D3 --> D4[Day 46-60: Pre-Sell Pilot Contracts] D4 --> D5[Day 61-75: Finance + Train] D5 --> D6[Day 76-90: Launch Programs] D6 --> D7[Scale to 2-3 Territories]

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Day 1-15: Read the 2026 FDD and validate the 8% royalty against realistic enrollment projections.
  2. Day 16-30: Interview 8+ operators, weighted to multi-territory owners. Ask about registrations, school-contract renewal rates, and per-territory take-home.
  3. Day 31-45: Map your market — count schools, rec departments, and median income. Confirm golf/tennis/enrichment interest.
  4. Day 46-60: Pre-sell pilot contracts with 2-3 schools before opening to validate demand.
  5. Day 61-75: Finance the low $25K-$70K and complete HQ training; recruit your first instructors.
  6. Day 76-85: Launch the first season of programs and gather quality feedback for renewals.
  7. Day 86-90: Plan territory expansion — the path to six figures is 2-4 territories.

Alternative Plays

FAQ

How much does a TGA Premier Sports owner make in 2026?

Owner-discretionary earnings run $70,000-$180,000 for multi-territory operators; a single territory typically lands $40,000-$90,000. Because the model is asset-light with 25%-40% margins, earnings scale with the number of school contracts and territories you operate.

Do I coach the golf and tennis myself?

No. You hire and manage part-time instructors trained on TGA's curriculum. Your job is landing and renewing school/rec contracts and managing program quality — a B2B sales and operations role, not a coaching one.

Why is TGA so cheap to open?

Because there is no real estate or buildout — programs run on partner school and facility space with portable equipment. The $25,000-$70,000 investment is mostly franchise fee, equipment kits, insurance, and launch marketing.

What is the biggest risk?

School-contract dependence and sales execution. Revenue requires continuously landing and renewing school partnerships; operators who avoid B2B sales or rely on one district are exposed. Diversifying across many schools and rec departments mitigates this.

Can I run TGA part-time?

Initially, yes. Program delivery is after-school and weekends, so many owners start while employed. But reaching six figures requires full-time focus on sales and multi-territory expansion.

Bottom Line

Buy a TGA Premier Sports franchise if you want one of the lowest-capital ($25K-$70K), home-based youth-sports businesses and you are comfortable selling programs into schools. It rewards B2B relationship-builders who scale to multiple territories. Skip it if you dislike sales, expect passive income from a single territory, or want to coach rather than manage instructors. For relationship-driven operators, TGA is a capital-efficient, recession-resilient entry into youth enrichment.

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