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Should I open or buy a TruGreen franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · Updated · 3 min read
Should I open or buy a TruGreen franchise in 2027?

Look, everyone loves a winner. And TruGreen is the undisputed heavyweight champion of American lawn care—founded in 1973, the largest in the U.S. , with a brand so big your neighbor’s HOA probably has them on speed dial. So the conventional wisdom says: “Buy a TruGreen franchise. It’s a license to print money on lawns.”

I’m going to disagree. Loudly.

Because the dirty secret nobody in the franchising cheerleading squad will tell you is this: TruGreen is predominantly company-owned. That’s not a footnote; it’s the headline. They operate most markets directly. Franchising is limited to select (often smaller/rural) markets—the leftovers the corporate giant doesn’t want to run itself.

So before you even dream about that $30,000–$35,000 franchise fee or the 8%–10% royalty, your first move isn’t a business plan. It’s a geography check. Can you even buy one in your town?

If you’re in a market where they do offer a franchise, the numbers are solid: total investment runs $60,000 to $220,000, with $40,000–$90,000 liquid. Mature units gross $400,000 to $2,000,000+ on those sweet recurring service agreements. Labor eats 30% ($300K on a $1M gross), vehicles and materials 18% ($180K), royalty plus marketing 12% ($120K), and other opex 16% ($160K).

That leaves owner earnings around $240K—not bad for cutting grass. But you need to be a sales-and-service-minded operator who can recruit and license technicians, manage routes, and sell like your mortgage depends on it (because it does).

But here’s where the conventional wisdom really falls apart: if you’re in a market TruGreen operates corporately—which is most of them—you’re out of luck. No franchise. No brand.

No entry. And the people who lose? The ones who don’t confirm availability first.

The ones weak at customer acquisition. The ones who can’t staff up. The ones who ignore the obvious alternatives.

So what do you do?

You pivot. Hard. To an actively-franchising lawn-care brand: Lawn Doctor, Weed Man, or Lawn Squad.

These guys have territories open, support systems in place, and the same recession-resilient, recurring business model. Or look at Senske Services for a dual lawn-plus-pest play. Or go independent and keep all the control (and all the risk).

The 90-day decision tree is brutally simple: confirm TruGreen availability → if company-owned, switch to an active franchise → read the FDD and Item 19 → interview operators → validate your market → get licensed → launch → build routes → scale.

The bottom line? TruGreen is a fantastic brand—if you can get it. But don’t fall in love with a logo that might not love you back. Be a pragmatist.

Confirm your market first. If the door’s closed, walk through the one that’s open. The grass is just as green on the other side—and it’s a lot easier to mow when you’ve actually got a franchise agreement signed.

*For deeper dives into recurring revenue models and franchise math that actually works, check out PULSE or CRO Syndicate.*


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

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