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Should I open or buy a House Doctors franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · Updated · 5 min read
Should I open or buy a House Doctors franchise in 2027?

Everyone’s Telling You to Buy a Handyman Franchise—I’m Telling You to Think Twice

Look, I’ve spent 25 years in revenue leadership, and the conventional wisdom on handyman franchises is seductive: “Low capital, home-based, recession-proof, business hours—what’s not to love?” But here’s the contrarian truth I’ve seen play out across dozens of franchisee P&Ls: a House Doctors franchise in 2027 is a bet on your ability to become a glorified HR manager for skilled tradespeople. And most people aren’t built for that.

I’m not saying don’t do it. I’m saying the real product you’re selling isn’t home repairs—it’s technician retention.

The Numbers That Don’t Lie (But Also Don’t Tell the Whole Story)

House Doctors was founded in 1995, and the 2026 FDD lays out a clean path: a franchise fee around $50,000, a total Item 7 investment of roughly $110,000 to $180,000, a royalty near 6%, and a marketing fee. That’s a home-based, low-overhead model—no retail buildout, no rent sucking your margin dry.

Mature territories gross $500,000-$1,400,000, and owners clear $80,000-$240,000 on margins of 13%-24%.

Sounds great, right? But here’s the kicker I’ve seen trip up more operators than anything: technician labor eats 40%-50% of gross revenue. That’s not a line item—that’s your single biggest variable cost, and it’s tied to a labor market where the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports skilled-trades shortages getting worse every year.

Let me walk you through the real math on a typical $900K territory:

That $180K looks solid—until your best technician quits to go independent, and you spend three months running at 60% capacity while recruiting. I’ve watched that exact scenario turn a $240K year into an $80K one.

Who Actually Wins Here?

The winners aren’t the people who love fixing things. They’re the ones who love recruiting, managing, scheduling, and marketing. You need $55,000-$95,000 liquid (the $110K-$180K total investment), business-hours commitment, and a suburban homeowner market. If you can build a team of skilled technicians and keep them happy enough to stay, the durable repair/maintenance demand and repeat customers will make your phone ring.

The losers? The ones who think this is passive. The ones who can’t recruit and retain skilled technicians. The ones who won’t market for clients. The ones who mismanage scheduling. The ones in low-homeowner-density markets. And the ones who expect to sit back and watch the money roll in.

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2027 Market Reality Check

The demand side is genuinely strong: home repair, maintenance, and improvement are durable, growing needs driven by aging housing and time-scarce homeowners. The Joint Center for Housing Studies and IBISWorld both confirm this is recession-resilient. Repeat customers add stability. The home-based model is capital-efficient.

But the labor side is brutal. You’re competing for skilled technicians against Ace Handyman, Handyman Connection, Mr. Handyman, TruBlue, and every local handyman who can hang a shingle. The International Franchise Association’s 2027 outlook flags labor as the top constraint for home-service franchises.

My 90-Day Decision Tree

Here’s what I’d actually do if I were you:

  1. Day 1-15: Read the 2026 FDD and confirm the handyman/improvement model. Don’t skim—read every Item 19 footnote.
  2. Day 16-30: Interview 8+ owners—not the ones the franchisor sends you. Ask specifically about technician retention, repeat customers, and actual take-home (not the FDD’s best-case).
  3. Day 31-45: Validate your suburban homeowner-repair market. Is there density? Are homes older than 20 years?
  4. Day 46-60: Start recruiting skilled technicians before you sign anything. If you can’t find two good ones in 14 days, rethink.
  5. Day 61-80: Acquire clients through local marketing.
  6. Day 81-90: Launch and immediately start building repeat customers.
  7. Ongoing: Scale technicians faster than you scale jobs—or you’ll hit a capacity wall.

The Alternatives Worth Considering

The Bottom Line

Open a House Doctors if you want a low-capital ($110K-$180K), home-based handyman franchise serving the durable repair/maintenance market with business hours and repeat customers—and you genuinely enjoy recruiting and retaining skilled technicians. The accessible capital and durable demand are real strengths.

Skip it if you can’t recruit/retain technicians, won’t market, or are in a low-homeowner-density market. This isn’t a passive check-cashing business—it’s an active people-management operation dressed up in a tool belt.

I’ve seen too many operators buy the dream without understanding the labor reality. The ones who thrive are the ones who treat technician retention as their primary product. The ones who don’t? They’re the cautionary tales at franchisee conferences.

If you want to dig deeper into franchise economics and see how House Doctors stacks up against every other model in the Pulse library, that’s exactly the kind of comparative analysis we build at CRO Syndicate. But that’s a conversation for another day.


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