Should I open or buy a Century 21 franchise in 2027?
Direct Answer
Yes — if you are already a licensed broker with $250K+ liquid, a sub-market with weak incumbent brand presence, and a 36-month runway to break even. A Century 21 franchise in 2027 is a brand-rental play, not a turnkey business. Real 2027 Item 7 startup investment runs $116,170 to $466,300 for a startup office (or $24,700 to $264,050 for a conversion of an existing brokerage), with a 6% gross commission income (GCI) royalty plus a 0.5% brand marketing fee off the top.
Conservative Year-1 cash flow is negative $40K to $80K post-royalty for a startup office; breakeven typically lands in months 24–36. Probably not — unless you have at least 15 producing agents committed on day one and a written buyer representation workflow already operational.
The Real Numbers
Century 21 Real Estate LLC is now a Compass International Holdings subsidiary (Compass closed its acquisition of the Anywhere Real Estate franchise group in January 2026). The brand operates ~14,000 offices and ~147,000 sales professionals across 86 countries.
The numbers below are pulled from the 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD), which is the most recent filing controlling 2027 grand openings (FDDs renew each April; the 2027 FDD will not be effective until April 2027).
| Line Item | Startup Office (Item 7) | Conversion Office (Item 7) | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $0 – $25,000 | $0 – $25,000 | 2026 FDD Item 5 |
| Build-out / leasehold improvements | $15,000 – $150,000 | $0 – $40,000 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| Furniture, fixtures, signage | $10,000 – $35,000 | $5,000 – $20,000 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| Computers, software, telecom | $8,000 – $28,000 | $5,000 – $18,000 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| Initial training & travel | $2,000 – $8,000 | $2,000 – $8,000 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| Insurance (E&O, GL, 3 mo.) | $2,500 – $9,500 | $2,500 – $9,500 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| Working capital (3 months) | $60,000 – $200,000 | $25,000 – $150,000 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
| TOTAL INITIAL INVESTMENT | $116,170 – $466,300 | $24,700 – $264,050 | 2026 FDD Item 7 |
Ongoing fees (off the broker's GCI, not net):
- Royalty: 6% of gross real-estate-sales revenue
- Brand marketing fee (NAF): 0.5% of gross revenue
- Property-management royalty: 1.5% of property-management revenue
- Technology / CRM (CB Studeo, Moxi, Zap): up to $2,000/year
- Local advertising commitment: 3%–5% of GCI (not paid to franchisor)
Item 19 financial performance. Century 21 does not publish a Financial Performance Representation in its FDD — a legal red flag any buyer must price in. Public Anywhere/Compass filings and the 2025 RealTrends Brokerage Profitability Study show the realistic revenue and EBITDA corridor for a small-to-mid C21 office:
| Office Size | Producing Agents | Annual GCI (Office) | Royalty + NAF (6.5%) | EBITDA Margin | Owner Cash Flow |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Boutique | 5–10 agents | $350K – $700K | $22.7K – $45.5K | 2% – 6% | $7K – $42K |
| Mid-size | 15–30 agents | $1.2M – $2.6M | $78K – $169K | 4% – 9% | $48K – $234K |
| Large | 40+ agents | $3.5M – $7.0M+ | $227K – $455K | 6% – 11% | $210K – $770K |
Payback period: 3–5 years for a startup office, 18–30 months for a conversion of an existing independent brokerage. 69.4% of brokerages reported positive EBITDA in 2025 (up from 55.8% in 2023), per the 2025 RealTrends study — the industry has stabilized post-NAR settlement but margins remain thin.
Who Wins With This Business
You win as a Century 21 franchisee if you check at least four of these six boxes:
- You are already a licensed real estate broker with 5+ years of in-market production and a personal sphere of 50+ closing clients/year. The brand does not generate leads — you do.
- You have $250K+ in liquid post-investment runway. C21 only requires $75K liquid and $150K net worth, but that floor is aspirational. Realistic breakeven needs 18–24 months of operating reserves.
- You are converting an existing independent brokerage (not a startup). Item 7 cost drops 70% for conversions, and you bring existing GCI day-one, collapsing payback from 48 months to under 24.
- You operate in a sub-$500K median-price secondary or tertiary market (think Boise, Knoxville, Tulsa, Spokane, Mobile) where the C21 brand still carries weight with sellers over 55 and the incumbent brokerage is a tired independent.
- You have a written recruiting plan to onboard 15 producing agents in 12 months. The 2024 NAR settlement killed cooperative-compensation on the MLS — agents who cannot articulate value are leaving the industry, and disciplined C21 offices are net-recruiting their book.
- You are a 1031-exchange or relocation specialist plugged into the C21 Global Referral Network, which sent $340M+ in referral GCI through the system in 2025 (Anywhere Q4 2025 10-K).
Who Loses With This Business
You lose — sometimes catastrophically — if any of these describe you:
- You are an unlicensed first-time business owner buying C21 as a "passive" investment. Every U.S. State requires the broker-of-record to hold a managing broker license. Hiring one costs $80K–$140K/year base and gutts your P&L.
- You target a top-25 metro with entrenched competition. In Dallas, Phoenix, Atlanta, or Seattle, Compass, eXp, Keller Williams, and Redfin have lapped C21 on agent splits (80/20 to 100% cap models vs. C21's traditional 50/50 to 70/30). You will lose every recruiting battle.
- You undercapitalize. Owners who open with the FDD minimum $116K routinely close inside 18 months — they cannot fund payroll while commissions float 60–90 days from contract to close.
- You sign the 10-year franchise agreement without a sub-license exit clause. Anywhere/Compass charges a transfer fee equal to 50% of the initial franchise fee and reserves right of first refusal on sale to a non-C21 buyer.
- You ignore the 0.5% NAF. The National Advertising Fund is non-negotiable and rises with revenue. At $3M GCI that is $15,000/year with no veto on creative or media mix.
- You bet on the 6% commission holding. Post-Burnett v. NAR settlement (effective August 2024), buyer-side commissions have compressed 50–125 basis points in 2025–2026. A C21 office modeling 3% buyer-side in 2027 is already underwater.
2027 Market Conditions
Five forces shape the Century 21 franchise economics entering 2027:
- NAR settlement compression is now permanent. Buyer-broker compensation is decoupled from MLS listings. Federal Reserve FEDS Notes (May 2025) documented average buyer-side commissions falling from 2.62% to 2.34% in the first nine months post-settlement — a 10.7% revenue haircut that flows straight to the bottom line of every C21 broker.
- Compass ownership reshapes the system. Compass closed its $3.0B acquisition of Anywhere Real Estate in January 2026, putting Century 21, Coldwell Banker, Sotheby's, Better Homes & Gardens, and ERA under one parent. Expect technology consolidation onto the Compass platform by Q3 2027 and likely NAF increases to fund the migration.
- Mortgage rates plateaued at 6.25%–6.75%. The MBA April 2026 forecast projects 30-year fixed at 6.4% through year-end 2027. Transaction volume is recovering from the 2023 trough of 4.09M existing-home sales to a projected 4.8M in 2027 — still 20% below 2021 peak.
- Agent count is contracting. NAR membership peaked at 1.6M in 2022, fell to 1.46M in 2025, and is projected at 1.38M by end-2027. Net-recruiting C21 offices are eating share from independents that cannot fund the buyer agreement training and technology stack.
- iBuyer wind-down accelerates. Opendoor narrowed inventory 63% YoY in Q1 2026; Offerpad delisted. C21's traditional listing model has recovered share in markets where iBuyer cash offers previously skimmed 3–5% of transactions.
The 90-Day Decision Tree
- Days 1–10 — Pull the 2026 FDD (free at the California DBO or Wisconsin DFI registry). Read Item 3 (litigation), Item 6 (fees), Item 7 (investment), Item 17 (termination/renewal), and Item 20 (system outlets — 3-year unit count trend). If terminations + non-renewals exceed 8% of system size, walk.
- Days 11–25 — Call 10 existing C21 franchisees from Item 20 Exhibit J. Ask three questions: actual GCI vs. Plan, actual months to breakeven, and whether they would re-sign today. Anywhere/Compass cannot prohibit these calls.
- Days 26–40 — Build a sub-market heat map. Pull MLS closed-transaction data for your target ZIPs. Count C21 listings, competitor listings, and average DOM. If C21 is below 5% market share with DOM 15%+ over market, the brand is not worth the 6% royalty.
- Days 41–55 — Validate the recruiting pipeline. Have 15 specific named agents verbally commit before signing. Verbal commits convert at 40–50% in real estate recruiting — you need 30+ pipeline names for 15 day-one producers.
- Days 56–70 — Model three P&L scenarios (conservative, base, stretch) with the 6% royalty, 0.5% NAF, and 3% local marketing hard-coded. Conservative case must clear owner draw of $60K by month 30. If it does not, renegotiate the franchise fee ($25K is the ceiling — $0 is achievable for conversions).
- Days 71–85 — Secure financing. SBA 7(a) loans are available; Anywhere/Compass is on the SBA Franchise Directory. Target $200K loan at SBA Prime + 2.75% with 10-year amortization, no balloon.
- Days 86–90 — Final go/no-go. Sign the 10-year franchise agreement only if (a) $250K+ liquid is in escrow, (b) 15 agents signed independent-contractor agreements, and (c) office lease is at ≤ 8% of projected Year-2 GCI.
Alternative Plays
If the C21 economics do not pencil for your market, consider these alternatives — each addresses a specific weakness of the C21 model:
- eXp Realty (cloud-based, no office overhead). $149 startup, $85/month, 80/20 split capped at $16,000. Zero royalty above the cap. Better for solo brokers with 10–25 personal closings/year who do not want a physical office.
- Keller Williams Market Center franchise. $35K franchise fee, 6% royalty capped at $3,000/agent/year plus 30% company split capped at $21,000/agent/year. Cap structure rewards high-producing offices that C21 punishes with uncapped 6%.
- Coldwell Banker conversion (same parent — Compass). Identical 6% royalty, but CB targets higher-end median price points ($600K+) where commission compression is less severe and luxury referral network is denser.
- Independent brokerage (no franchise). Skip the 6.5% royalty + NAF entirely. Trade brand equity for 65 bps of margin — viable if your personal brand is already #1 or #2 in your sub-market.
- Real Brokerage (REAX). Public-company brokerage; 85/15 split capped at $12,000, stock-grant program, revenue share. Net-recruited 6,000 agents in 2025 — the fastest-growing model in the category.
- Side, Inc. White-label platform. No public brand at all. Pay ~15% of GCI for tech, compliance, and back-office; keep 100% of brand equity as the team operator. Best for established teams of 10+ producing $4M+ GCI.
FAQ
What is the actual royalty on a Century 21 office doing $2M in GCI?
You will pay $120,000 in royalty (6% of $2M) plus $10,000 NAF (0.5%), totaling $130,000 off the top before any agent splits, payroll, or rent. At a typical 50/50 agent split, the office retains $1.0M before that royalty, meaning the C21 cut is 13% of office-retained GCI.
Compare to a Keller Williams Market Center at the same volume: capped 6% royalty lands closer to $45,000–$70,000 depending on agent count.
Does Century 21 provide leads or just brand?
Brand and referral network only. The C21 Global Referral Network routed $340M+ in referral GCI in 2025 (Anywhere 10-K), but referrals carry a 25–35% referring-broker fee. The brand does not generate direct buyer or seller leads to your office — all lead generation is your responsibility through personal SOI, paid digital, open houses, and agent recruiting.
How long is the franchise agreement and can I exit early?
The standard C21 franchise agreement is 10 years with one 10-year renewal option at then-current terms. Early termination triggers liquidated damages typically calculated as the lesser of (a) the average monthly royalty over the trailing 24 months times the months remaining, or (b) 24 months of average royalty.
On a $2M GCI office, that is $240,000+ in exit cost — read FDD Item 17 before signing.
What financing is available?
SBA 7(a) loans up to $5M are available; Anywhere/Compass is on the SBA Franchise Directory, which streamlines underwriting. Conventional commercial loans require 20–30% down and personal guarantees. Seller financing is common on conversions (existing independent owner carries 30–50% of purchase price at prime + 3% over 5–7 years).
How does the 2024 NAR settlement affect a new C21 office in 2027?
The settlement decoupled buyer-broker compensation from the MLS and requires written buyer representation agreements before showing property. Practical impact: every new agent in your office needs buyer-agreement training, scripts for justifying buyer-side fees, and a compliance workflow.
Offices that have not updated their training are seeing buyer-side GCI compress 50–125 bps, which is $25K–$60K of lost revenue on a $2M office.
Bottom Line
A Century 21 franchise in 2027 is a bet on brand-as-recruiting-tool in a post-NAR-settlement real estate market where agent count is contracting, commissions are compressing, and technology platforms are consolidating under Compass/Anywhere. Win this bet with conversion economics (not startup), a sub-$500K median-price secondary market, and 15 producing agents committed before signing.
Lose this bet by undercapitalizing the $116K FDD minimum, opening in a Compass/eXp/KW-saturated metro, or signing the 10-year agreement without modeling 3% buyer-side commissions as the new base case. Conservative Year-3 owner cash flow for a well-run mid-size office is $48K–$234K; realistic payback is 3–5 years for startups and 18–30 months for conversions.
If you are not a licensed broker with $250K liquid and a named recruiting pipeline, the alternative plays above will produce better risk-adjusted returns.
Sources
- Century 21 Real Estate LLC, 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document, filed with state regulators April 2026 (Items 5, 6, 7, 17, 19, 20).
- California Department of Financial Protection & Innovation (DFPI), Franchise Registry — Century 21 Real Estate LLC filings.
- Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions, Franchise Disclosure Registry — Anywhere Real Estate brand FDDs.
- Federal Trade Commission (FTC), Franchise Rule 16 CFR Part 436 — required FDD disclosure framework.
- Anywhere Real Estate Inc. (NYSE: HOUS), 2025 Annual Report (10-K) and Q4 2025 earnings supplements — segment GCI, royalty revenue, and referral network volume.
- Compass, Inc. (NYSE: COMP), January 2026 8-K filing announcing Anywhere acquisition close; March 2026 investor presentation on franchise integration roadmap.
- National Association of Realtors (NAR), *Burnett v. NAR* settlement documents (final approval November 2024) and 2025–2026 member-count statistics.
- Federal Reserve FEDS Notes, "Commissions and Omissions: Trends in Real Estate Broker Compensation," May 12, 2025.
- RealTrends 2025 Brokerage Profitability Study (published by HousingWire) — EBITDA-margin distribution by brokerage size.
- Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), April 2026 Mortgage Finance Forecast — 30-year fixed rate and existing-home-sales projections through 2027.
- U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA) Franchise Directory — Anywhere/Century 21 SBA eligibility designation.
- IBISWorld Industry Report 53121, "Real Estate Sales & Brokerage in the U.S.," 2026 edition — industry revenue, margins, and concentration.
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