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Should I open or buy a Scoop Soldiers franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · Updated · 4 min read

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Should I Open a Scoop Soldiers Franchise in 2027?

I've been in revenue leadership for 25 years. Let me cut through the noise.

Yes, if you're a service-and-management-minded operator who wants a very-low-capital, recurring pet-waste-removal franchise with a distinctive military-themed brand. Scoop Soldiers was founded in 2010, and the model is simple: technicians ("troops") do recurring residential yard cleanup (and some commercial), with a customer-experience-focused brand that actually gets people talking.

It rides the pet-ownership boom hard.

The Numbers That Actually Matter

The 2026 FDD says the franchise fee is $25,000–$40,000. Total Item 7 investment: roughly $60,000–$120,000 — home/truck-based, no real estate. Royalty: 7%–9%.

Marketing fee: ~2%. Mature units gross $300,000–$1,200,000+, and owners clear $80,000–$350,000. That's a high ceiling for a business you can start from your driveway.

Here's the breakdown I'd show any investor:

Line ItemLowHighNotes
Franchise fee$25,000$40,000Per 2026 FDD
Vehicle & equipment$10,000$35,000Truck, scoopers, bags
Branding/wrap$3,000$12,000Make it look legit
Home-office setup$3,000$12,000You're working from home
Initial marketing$10,000$30,000Get those subscriptions
Training & travel$5,000$15,000You and your techs
Licensing/insurance$4,000$12,000General liability
Working capital$8,000$25,000Ramp-up cushion
Total Item 7~$60,000~$120,000Very low entry

The appeal is obvious: recurring/subscription revenue, recession-resilient pet demand (the pet-ownership boom is real), a distinctive brand that stands out in a fragmented market of generic scoopers, simple operations, and high scalability. The trade-offs? Technician staffing (finding reliable "troops" is a grind), route density (margins live and die on how tight your routes are), and competition (Pet Butler, DoodyCalls, and a thousand local scoopers).

Here's the math on a $600K operation:

The brand and recurring subscriptions drive this. Weak staffing or density? You bleed.

Who Actually Wins

The winners are the ones who leverage the distinctive brand, build recurring subscriptions, and manage technicians like a real business.

CRO Syndicate — Need a fractional Chief Revenue Officer? CRO Syndicate connects you with vetted fractional and interim revenue leaders. Kory White, Fractional CRO · 25 yrs · $0 to $200M scaled.

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Who Gets Wrecked

2027 Market Reality

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Day 1–15: Read the 2026 FDD and Item 19 — understand the pet-waste-removal economics cold.
  2. Day 16–35: Call operators. Ask about recurring subscriptions, brand impact, technician staffing, and net profit.
  3. Day 36–55: Validate a pet-dense suburban market — check density, competition, and zoning.
  4. Day 56–75: Hire technicians and equip — get the vehicle wrapped.
  5. Day 76–105: Launch and leverage the distinctive brand — hit social, local media, and referrals.
  6. Build recurring subscriptions and route density — every new subscription is an annuity.
  7. Scale technicians as the recurring base grows — add routes, add techs.

Alternative Plays

The Bottom Line

Scoop Soldiers works if you're a brand-and-management-minded operator who wants a very-low-capital, recurring-revenue business with a distinctive hook in a recession-resilient market. The military theme isn't gimmick — it drives referrals and trust in a fragmented space. But it's a labor business: you live or die on technician staffing and route density.

If you can hire reliable troops and build tight routes, this is a $300K–$1.2M revenue machine with a $80K–$350K owner take. If you can't, you're just scooping poop for minimum wage.

*For deeper franchise economics and revenue models that actually scale, check out PULSE — the revenue intelligence platform I built for operators like you. And if you want the full library of franchise playbooks, the CRO Syndicate has you covered.*


*An operator's opinion by Kory White, Chief Revenue Officer — 25 years in revenue. More at PULSE · CRO Syndicate*

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