Should I open or buy a Sky Zone trampoline park franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Probably not — unless you have $750K+ in liquid capital, a high-traffic suburban trade area with no Sky Zone within 25 miles, prior FEC or fitness-operator experience, and tolerance for a 5-7 year payback under 2027's brutal liability-insurance market. Sky Zone is the largest indoor trampoline park franchise in the world (CircusTrix portfolio, 150+ U.S.
Units), but the math is unforgiving: all-in investment runs $2.18M to $4.72M per FDD Item 7, royalties hit 6% of gross plus a 2% brand fund, average unit volumes cluster around $2.0M-$2.4M gross, and EBITDA margins of 15-22% translate to $300K-$525K Year-1 operator cash flow before debt service.
Breakeven on a leveraged build typically lands Month 14-22; full investment payback Year 5-7. Trampoline-park liability premiums have doubled since 2023, and same-store visits softened 4-8% post-pandemic. Pass unless you are buying a resale unit at a discount or you are an experienced multi-unit FEC operator with a defensible territory.
The Real Numbers
Sky Zone's 2026 FDD (the operative document for 2027 openings) confirms a standard-format park requires 32,000-50,000 square feet of clear-span industrial space, $1,800,000 minimum net worth, and $500,000 liquid capital. The initial franchise fee is $60,000 for the first park ($75,000 in earlier FDD versions; 20% veterans discount for 51%+ ownership).
Royalties are 6% of Gross Sales paid weekly; the brand fund (national marketing) is 2%; local marketing minimum is an additional 2-3%. The agreement term is 10 years with two 5-year renewals.
Item 19 financial performance (most recent FDD): average annual gross sales of $2,184,637 across reporting franchised units; estimated operator earnings of $262,157 - $327,696 at the median, equating to a 12-15% net margin after royalties, marketing, rent, labor, and insurance.
Top-quartile units clear $3.0M-$3.4M in mature trade areas. Bottom-quartile units fall below $1.4M and operate at or near breakeven.
| Line Item | Low | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $60,000 | $75,000 | Per first park; 20% veterans discount available |
| Real estate / lease deposits | $75,000 | $200,000 | 32K-50K sq ft clear-span; $8-$14/sq ft NNN typical |
| Build-out & leasehold improvements | $850,000 | $2,100,000 | Largest single line item — HVAC, sprinkler, padding subfloor |
| Trampoline & attraction equipment | $650,000 | $1,400,000 | Sky Zone-spec courts, Warped Wall, Ninja, foam pits |
| Furniture, fixtures, POS, AV | $125,000 | $275,000 | Brivo / Roller POS, party-room AV |
| Signage & exterior | $45,000 | $120,000 | Brand-spec |
| Pre-opening training, travel | $35,000 | $75,000 | 2-week corporate training required |
| Grand opening marketing | $50,000 | $100,000 | Hard minimum — first 90 days |
| Insurance (year 1) | $65,000 | $145,000 | GL + umbrella up to $5M; doubled since 2023 |
| Working capital (3 months) | $225,000 | $425,000 | Payroll, rent, utilities until cash-flow positive |
| TOTAL (Item 7 range) | $2,180,000 | $4,915,000 | FDD published: $2,178,000-$4,723,000 |
Ongoing economics on a $2.2M AUV unit: royalties $132,000, brand fund $44,000, local marketing $55,000, labor $575,000 (26% of sales — court monitors, party hosts, GM), rent $235,000 (10.5%), utilities $95,000, insurance $110,000, R&M $85,000, COGS (concessions, party packages) $165,000, attraction depreciation reserve $140,000.
EBITDA: ~$330,000-$525,000 (15-22%). Debt service on a $2.0M SBA 7(a) at 11% runs $280,000/yr — leaving $50K-$245K of operator cash flow Year 1. Payback period: 5-7 years on a leveraged build; 3-4 years on a cash purchase.
Who Wins With This Business
Experienced FEC, fitness-studio, or QSR multi-unit operators who already know hourly-labor scheduling, peak-day surge management, and party-booking funnels are the only consistent winners in this category. The unit economics reward operators who push birthday parties to 38%+ of revenue (parties carry a 65%+ gross margin versus 45% for open-jump), operators with corporate-event and lock-in sales infrastructure, and operators who can recruit and retain a $55K-$72K GM who actually runs the floor on Friday and Saturday nights.
Geographic winners are secondary suburbs of metros 250K-2.5M population where land cost permits a $10-$12/sq ft NNN lease, where median household income exceeds $85K, and where the nearest competing trampoline or FEC concept (Urban Air, Altitude, Launch, Get Air, Defy) is 20+ miles away.
Veterans get a 20% franchise fee discount and access to SBA Patriot Express financing. Multi-unit area developers who can amortize a shared GM and shared marketing spend across 3-5 parks materially improve their blended EBITDA to 22-26%. Cash buyers acquiring a distressed resale at 0.5-0.8x of original investment are the single highest-IRR cohort in the entire trampoline-park category right now.
Who Loses With This Business
First-time operators with no hospitality, recreation, or hourly-labor management experience lose first and fastest — typically inside 24 months. The labor model is punishing: parks need 35-55 part-time court monitors, party hosts, and front-desk staff, most under 22, with annual turnover of 110-180%.
First-time owners consistently underestimate scheduling complexity and insurance-required safety-staffing ratios.
Loser geographies: dense urban infill (rents kill the model), markets where Urban Air or Altitude opened first (Urban Air alone has 350+ U.S. Units and has saturated most viable trade areas), markets where a Sky Zone has closed within the last 3 years (the brand wound there is real), and rural markets under 150K MSA population.
Investors expecting passive returns lose — absentee-owned trampoline parks underperform owner-operated parks by 28-40% on EBITDA margin per CircusTrix's own benchmarking. Operators who skimp on the brand-fund local match and grand-opening spend never establish the party-booking flywheel and stall at $1.3M-$1.6M AUV permanently.
Anyone counting on the 2015-era $2.4M-plus AUVs is buying a 2018 thesis in a 2027 market.
2027 Market Conditions
The U.S. Trampoline-park industry is mature, not emergent. IBISWorld pegs 2025 industry revenue at ~$780M across roughly 395 enterprises — flat to +1.5% annual growth, well below the 11-15% CAGR the category posted 2014-2019.
Pandemic-era closures took out 60+ independent parks, but CircusTrix-owned brands (Sky Zone, Rockin' Jump, DEFY) and Urban Air consolidated share and now control roughly 55% of U.S. Units.
The 2027 headwinds are real and structural:
- Liability insurance: General-liability premiums for trampoline parks have risen 90-140% since 2023. Several major carriers exited the segment after a string of catastrophic-injury verdicts in 2022-2024. Most parks now run a $1M/$2M GL + $3M-$5M umbrella, costing $85K-$145K/year, a line item that alone moved EBITDA margins down 300-400 basis points.
- Labor: Hourly wages for court monitors rose from $11-$13 in 2019 to $15-$19 in 2027, with no offsetting price elasticity at the $18-$24 open-jump price point.
- Competition from non-trampoline FECs: Urban Air pivoted to "adventure park" with ropes, go-karts, and climbing — and is winning the birthday-party market in mid-tier metros. Altitude, Launch, and Get Air continue to undercut Sky Zone on franchise fee and royalty.
- Birth-rate drag: U.S. Births dropped to 3.59M in 2023 and 3.62M in 2024 — the 5-12 year-old core demographic shrinks 6-8% by 2030.
- Discretionary spend compression: Real wage growth for households under $75K has been flat for 18 months; party-package attach rates are down 4-7% YoY at most franchised parks.
Tailwinds: Resale inventory is plentiful and discounted (a buying opportunity for operators), CircusTrix invested $80M+ in tech (Brivo POS, Sky Zone app, dynamic pricing) that materially helps mature units, and corporate/team-building bookings are recovering to 2019 levels.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1-10 — Liquidity and credit gate. Confirm $500K+ liquid capital (cash, brokerage, HELOC capacity — NOT retirement) and $1.8M net worth. Pull personal credit (need 720+ FICO for SBA 7(a) at acceptable rates). If you fail this gate, stop. Sky Zone is not the right franchise.
- Days 11-20 — Request the 2026 FDD. Submit interest form at skyzonefranchise.com. Read every word of Items 7, 17, 19, 20, and Exhibit C (sample franchise agreement). Hire a franchise attorney ($3,500-$6,500 flat fee) to flag the non-compete radius, transfer fees, mandatory remodel triggers (typically every 7 years), and territorial exclusivity language.
- Days 21-35 — Validation calls. Sky Zone's FDD Item 20 lists every current and recently terminated franchisee. Call 12-15 operators: at least 3 high performers (>$2.5M AUV), 3 average performers, 3 strugglers, and every operator who exited in the last 36 months. Ask each one: "Knowing what you know now, would you sign again?" If fewer than 7 of 12 say yes, walk away.
- Days 36-55 — Trade-area analysis. Pull a 15-minute drive-time demographic report ($350 from Esri/Buxton). You need 180,000+ population, $80K+ median HHI, 28%+ kids under 18, and no competing trampoline park within 20 minutes. Identify 3-5 candidate 35K-45K sq ft industrial-flex buildings at $9-$12/sq ft NNN.
- Days 56-70 — Financing pre-approval. Submit to 3 SBA 7(a) lenders (Live Oak, Huntington, Byline). Expect 70-80% LTV on the build, 11-12.5% rates, 10-year term, personal guarantee required. Get a written term sheet before signing the franchise agreement.
- Days 71-85 — Resale vs. New-build decision. Search the CircusTrix resale list and Bizbuysell for existing Sky Zone units for sale. A 3-5 year-old unit at $1.4M-$1.8M with $1.9M AUV is a materially better deal than a $3.5M new-build chasing the same revenue.
- Day 90 — Go / no-go. If all gates passed, sign the franchise agreement and pay the $60,000 fee. If any gate failed — especially validation or trade-area — walk and look at Urban Air, an Altitude resale, or a non-trampoline FEC concept.
Alternative Plays
Urban Air Adventure Park ($1.6M-$3.5M all-in, 6% royalty, 2% brand fund) has a more diversified attraction mix (ropes, climbing, go-karts, bumper cars) and lower attraction-replacement capex — currently the highest-AUV trampoline-adjacent franchise in the U.S. At $2.5M-$3.2M average.
Altitude Trampoline Park ($1.4M-$2.8M, 5% royalty) is smaller-footprint (22K-32K sq ft) and better in secondary markets under 200K population. Launch Entertainment ($2.0M-$3.6M) leans bowling+trampoline+arcade and wins in cold-weather metros where indoor entertainment is year-round.
Outside trampoline: Crunch Fitness franchise ($300K-$2.5M, recurring-revenue membership model) has materially better unit economics and 22-28% EBITDA margins. Goldfish Swim School ($1.6M-$3.2M, recurring tuition) is the highest-performing kids-recreation franchise in the U.S.
With 88% operator-renewal rate. Acquiring an existing independent FEC at a 4-5x EBITDA multiple typically beats a new Sky Zone build on every IRR scenario.
FAQ
How much do Sky Zone franchise owners actually make?
Item 19 of the 2026 FDD reports average gross sales of $2,184,637 with estimated operator earnings of $262,157-$327,696 — a 12-15% net margin on revenue. Top-quartile units clear $3.0M+ and net $450K-$600K; bottom-quartile units do $1.2M-$1.6M and net under $80K. Owner-operators outperform absentee owners by 28-40%, and multi-unit operators clear 22-26% blended EBITDA versus 15-18% for single-unit owners.
Is Sky Zone a better deal than Urban Air or Altitude?
For brand awareness and franchise infrastructure, Sky Zone wins. For unit economics in 2027, Urban Air's diversified attraction mix is currently producing higher AUVs ($2.5M-$3.2M), and Altitude's lower build cost ($1.4M-$2.8M) means faster payback in mid-tier markets.
Sky Zone makes sense only when you can secure a resale unit at a discount or you specifically need the brand pull in a tier-1 metro.
What is the single biggest risk in 2027?
Liability insurance. Carriers exited the segment after 2022-2024 verdicts, and premiums have risen 90-140%. Many operators now pay $110K-$145K/year for GL + umbrella coverage that cost $45K-$60K in 2019. A single catastrophic injury claim with policy exhaustion can force a unit into bankruptcy.
Underwrite assuming insurance is your #2 line item after rent.
Can I open a Sky Zone with under $500K cash?
No. Sky Zone requires $500K liquid capital plus $1.8M net worth to be considered. SBA 7(a) lenders typically require 20-30% equity injection on a $2.8M build, meaning $560K-$840K of your own cash before any loan funds. Anyone with under $500K should either pursue a resale unit, bring in an equity partner, or look at a lower-investment concept like Altitude or Crunch Fitness.
How long until I get my money back?
Cash purchase of a resale unit: 3-4 years payback. New-build with SBA financing: 5-7 years payback. Multi-unit operators amortizing shared overhead: 4-5 years per unit. Underperforming units (bottom quartile): never — these operators typically exit at a 30-60% loss within 5 years.
Year-1 cash flow on a leveraged $2.8M build is realistically $50K-$245K after debt service, royalties, brand fund, and insurance.
Bottom Line
Sky Zone is a $2.2M-$4.7M bet on a mature, consolidating, insurance-stressed category. It works for experienced multi-unit FEC operators buying resale units in defensible trade areas. It does not work for first-time operators chasing a new-build in markets already saturated by Urban Air. The 2026 FDD Item 19 average operator earnings of $262K-$328K on a $3M+ investment is a 9-11% pre-tax cash-on-cash return — below what an indexed S&P 500 position has returned over the same period and far below recurring-revenue franchises like Crunch Fitness or Goldfish Swim School.
Pass on a new build unless you secure a top-tier trade area at sub-market rent and have prior trampoline-park or FEC P&L experience. Buy a resale unit at 0.6-0.8x of original investment if one becomes available in a market you know. Walk if validation calls return fewer than 7-of-12 "yes" responses. The brand is real, the operator playbook is real, but the 2027 unit economics do not forgive inexperience.
Sources
- Sky Zone Franchise Disclosure Document, Items 5, 6, 7, 17, 19, 20 (2024 and 2026 versions, filed with FTC)
- Franchise Chatter — FDD Talk: The Sky Zone Trampoline Park Franchise Opportunity (Financial Performance Analysis)
- Vetted Biz — Sky Zone Franchise Insights: FDD, Costs & Fees (2026 update)
- Sharpsheets — Sky Zone Franchise FDD, Profits & Costs (2025 analysis)
- Franchise Gator — Sky Zone Franchise Cost, Fees, Opportunities (2026)
- IBISWorld — Trampoline Parks in the US Industry Report (2024-2025 market size and enterprise count)
- Paul, Weiss — CircusTrix Acquires Sky Zone (2018 transaction announcement, ownership structure)
- Franchise Times — Sky Zone's Purchase by CircusTrix Adds Capital, Rules
- Orange County Business Journal — Sky Zone at Westminster Mall Files for Bankruptcy (franchisee-level Chapter 11)
- PitchBook — Sky Zone 2026 Company Profile: Valuation, Funding & Investors
- U.S. Small Business Administration — 7(a) Loan Program Standard Operating Procedures (SBA SOP 50 10 7.1)
- International Franchise Association (IFA) — 2025-2026 Franchise Economic Outlook (recreation segment)
*Sky Zone trampoline park franchise review / Sky Zone reviews / Sky Zone franchise rating / Sky Zone review 2027 / review of Sky Zone trampoline park franchise.*