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Should I open or buy a Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices franchise in 2027?

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Direct Answer

Probably not — unless you already have a producing real estate team, $200K+ in liquid capital, a $1M net worth, and at least one local broker on staff who can drive recruiting. The Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices (BHHS) franchise is structurally cheap to start ($45,300 to $90,375 all-in per Item 7 of the 2025 FDD), but the economics of a single-office residential brokerage in 2027 are punishing: 6% royalty on Gross Commission Income (GCI) plus 1.5% national marketing fee, $15,000 minimum annual royalty, and a post-NAR-settlement commission environment averaging 2.43% per side.

Realistic breakeven runs 18 to 30 months. Conservative Year-1 cash flow on a 10-agent shop lands between negative $40,000 and positive $60,000 depending on local price point and agent productivity.

The Real Numbers

The BHHS franchise is operated by HomeServices of America (a wholly-owned subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway Energy) under the brand license from HomeServices Franchise LLC. The 2025 FDD (effective for 2026 and likely 2027 sign-ups absent a new filing) discloses the following.

Line itemLowHighNotes
Initial franchise fee (Item 5)$25,000$25,000Non-refundable, paid at signing
Office build-out / signage$5,000$25,000Existing brokerages re-brand for less
Computer & technology$2,500$7,500RESource intranet, lead-routing, e-sign
Initial marketing & launch$5,000$15,000Local launch campaign
Training & travel$1,800$4,375Mandatory Irvine HQ orientation
Insurance & licensing$1,500$3,500E&O typically required separately
Working capital (3 months)$4,500$10,000Per FDD Item 7
Total Initial Investment (Item 7)$45,300$90,375Real 2025 FDD numbers
Ongoing royalty6.0% of GCI6.0% of GCI$15,000 annual minimum after Year 1
National marketing fee1.5% of GCI1.5% of GCI$500/month minimum
Net worth requirement$1,000,000Liquid: $200,000 minimum

Revenue range for a single-office BHHS franchise in 2027 — using HomeServices of America's own segment data ($4.3B revenue across ~48,000 affiliated agents in 2024, implying ~$90K GCI per agent) and a typical office of 8 to 25 agents — runs $500,000 to $2.4 million in annual GCI, of which the brokerage typically retains 20% to 35% after agent splits.

EBITDA margin for a healthy independent residential brokerage post-2024 NAR settlement, per the Federal Reserve's May 2025 "Commissions and Omissions" FEDS Note, sits around 3% to 8% of GCI — substantially below the 10-15% pre-settlement norm. On $1M in GCI that is $30K to $80K of EBITDA before the owner's salary.

Payback period: 24 to 36 months for a well-recruited office; never for an under-recruited one. The $15K minimum royalty plus $6K minimum marketing fee means a fixed $21K/year floor regardless of production.

Who Wins With This Business

Existing top-producing teams who already have 20+ agents under a different brand and want the Berkshire Hathaway luxury halo for listings above $1M. The Cabin (HomeServices' luxury division) listings averaged $2.4M sale price in 2024 versus $420K for the general MLS, so the brand premium is measurable.

Recruiters who can move 30 agents within 12 months win because the royalty is variable on GCI but the $15K minimum punishes sub-scale. Owners with W-2 income elsewhere win because they can absorb 18 months of negative cash flow without panicking. Buyers of an existing BHHS office at retirement win because the brand-transfer fee (Item 6 of the FDD) is lower than the initial $25K and they inherit producing agents.

Who Loses With This Business

Solo agents who think a franchise is a shortcut lose — the BHHS franchise is a brokerage agreement, not an agent agreement, and the $200K liquidity hurdle plus $1M net worth hurdle exists to filter exactly this profile. Anyone who can't recruit loses because the agent-split math (typical 70/30 in the franchisee's favor on first $100K of GCI, then 80/20 or 90/10 above that) requires scale to clear the 7.5% royalty-plus-marketing load.

Markets with median home price below $250K lose because the flat $15K royalty minimum becomes a punishing fixed cost. Owners who underestimated the NAR settlement — the August 2024 practice changes mean buyer-agent compensation is no longer guaranteed via the MLS, and offices that hadn't trained their agents on buyer representation agreements saw measurable churn in 2025.

flowchart TD A[Considering BHHS franchise 2027] --> B{Net worth $1M+ and liquid $200K?} B -->|No| Z[STOP - Not eligible] B -->|Yes| C{Existing team of 10+ agents?} C -->|No| D{Can you recruit 10+ in 90 days?} D -->|No| Z D -->|Yes| E{Market median home price $400K+?} C -->|Yes| E E -->|No| F[Risk: $15K royalty floor punishes low GCI] E -->|Yes| G{Comfortable with 6% royalty + 1.5% marketing?} F --> G G -->|No| H[Consider eXp or Real - lower royalty] G -->|Yes| I{18-30 month runway funded?} I -->|No| Z I -->|Yes| J[Apply via franchise.bhhs.com] J --> K[Mutual NDA + financial review] K --> L[FDD review 14-day cooling period] L --> M[Sign + $25K fee + HQ training]

2027 Market Conditions

The U.S. Residential brokerage business in 2027 is being shaped by three structural forces that any BHHS franchise buyer must price into the business model.

First, the NAR settlement aftermath. The August 2024 practice changes decoupled buyer-agent compensation from MLS listings. Federal Reserve research published May 2025 found that average commission per side has dropped from 2.71% pre-settlement to 2.43% in 2025 — a roughly 10% revenue hit on every transaction.

Most franchise economics are not yet repriced for this floor.

Second, transaction volume. NAR's 2025 existing-home-sales report projected 4.3 to 4.6 million transactions in 2027 — well below the 5.5 to 6 million annual norm of 2019 to 2022. Lower transaction count means fewer at-bats per agent, which means fewer agents per office can survive, which means harder recruiting for a new franchise.

Third, the brokerage-model shift. eXp Realty and Real Brokerage continue to take share from traditional franchise brands. Both offer flat-fee splits, stock equity, and revenue share that BHHS cannot match because BHHS is licensed from a privately-held Berkshire Energy subsidiary.

The competitive pressure on agent splits has compressed the brokerage's net retention to 22% to 28% of GCI at most independent BHHS franchisees per 2024 data.

The luxury segment is the one bright spot. Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices has the strongest brand recognition above the $1M price point of any non-Sotheby's franchise. Markets with a meaningful luxury inventory — Naples FL, Aspen CO, Greenwich CT, Newport Beach CA, Park City UT, Jackson WY — remain the highest-probability franchise wins.

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Days 1 to 10: Pull the latest 2025 BHHS FDD from the FTC franchise rule disclosure or via franchise.bhhs.com. Read Item 7 (initial investment), Item 19 (financial performance representations), and Item 20 (outlet table) line-by-line.
  2. Days 11 to 20: Build a 10-agent recruiting list for your local market. Use MLS production data to identify agents producing $3M to $10M in volume annually. You need commitments from 5 of these 10 before you sign.
  3. Days 21 to 35: Run the brokerage P&L model at three scenarios — pessimistic ($500K GCI), base ($1M GCI), optimistic ($2M GCI) — and confirm personal cash runway covers 18 months of pessimistic case.
  4. Days 36 to 50: Interview 3 existing BHHS franchisees in non-competing markets (FDD Item 20 lists every franchisee). Ask specifically about royalty true-up audits, technology fee creep, and agent retention post-NAR-settlement.
  5. Days 51 to 65: Engage a franchise attorney (typical fee $5K to $10K) for FDD review. Negotiate territory rights, minimum royalty waiver in Year 1, and transfer-fee schedule if possible.
  6. Days 66 to 75: Secure office lease (BHHS does not require dedicated retail space; co-working is permitted), E&O insurance (typically $2,500 to $4,500/year), and state real estate broker license under the new entity name.
  7. Days 76 to 85: Sign Franchise Agreement, pay $25,000 initial fee, attend mandatory HQ orientation in Irvine CA (3 days).
  8. Days 86 to 90: Execute agent transfer paperwork, launch local brand campaign (budget $5K to $15K), and announce opening.

Alternative Plays

eXp Realty — no franchise fee, $16K agent-cap model, stock equity. Better economics for solo agents and small teams; lower brand prestige for luxury. Real Brokerage — similar to eXp but with revenue share instead of stock.

Compass — not a franchise; employee brokerage model with agent equity. Sotheby's International Realty — direct luxury competitor to BHHS with stronger international referral network but higher entry costs (~$50K franchise fee per the 2024 Sotheby's FDD). Coldwell Banker — owned by Anywhere Real Estate; similar 6% royalty but stronger residential mid-market brand.

Building a true independent brokerage under a state license — no royalty, full margin retention, no brand halo. Buying an existing BHHS office at retirement is often the strongest play: you inherit agents, listings, and revenue without the 18-month recruitment ramp.

flowchart LR A[$245K starting capital] --> B[Year 1: -$40K to +$60K] B --> C[Year 2: +$30K to +$120K] C --> D[Year 3: +$80K to +$200K] D --> E[Year 4-5: Brokerage sale at 0.8-1.2x revenue] A --> F[Or: Buy existing office] F --> G[Year 1: +$60K to +$150K] G --> H[Faster payback - no recruiting ramp]

FAQ

How much does a Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices franchise actually cost in 2027?

The 2025 FDD Item 7 discloses a total initial investment of $45,300 to $90,375, including the $25,000 initial franchise fee. Beyond that, expect ongoing 6% royalty on GCI, 1.5% national marketing fee, a $15,000 minimum annual royalty after Year 1, and a $500 monthly marketing minimum.

The hidden cost is personal cash runway — plan for $150K to $250K in additional working capital to survive the 18- to 30-month breakeven window.

Is the BHHS brand worth the 6% royalty in 2027?

It depends on price point. In luxury markets (median above $1M), the Berkshire Hathaway halo is measurably worth 15% to 30% higher list-to-sale ratios per HomeServices of America's 2024 annual data. In median-priced markets ($250K to $500K), the brand premium is negligible and the 7.5% combined royalty + marketing load crowds out margin that eXp or Real would let you keep.

Be brutally honest about your market.

How has the NAR settlement affected BHHS franchise economics?

The August 2024 NAR practice changes removed MLS-based buyer-agent compensation offers. Federal Reserve research from May 2025 found commission per side dropped from 2.71% to 2.43% — a 10% top-line hit. BHHS franchisees who had not retrained agents on buyer representation agreements saw measurable transaction loss.

The 2027 BHHS franchise economics assume agents are fully fluent in the new compensation disclosures.

Can I run a BHHS franchise as an absentee owner?

Functionally no. The franchise agreement requires a designated broker of record who is state-licensed, physically present in the office, and directly supervises agents per state real estate law. You may own the franchise without being the broker, but you must employ one at $80K to $180K/year base plus override on production.

Absentee ownership of residential brokerages has a very high failure rate per IBISWorld's 2025 brokerage industry report.

What is the realistic exit value of a BHHS franchise?

Residential brokerage businesses sell at 0.5x to 1.2x trailing twelve-month GCI, per CT Acquisitions' 2025 brokerage valuation report. A BHHS franchise generating $1.5M in annual GCI with 25% net retention would value at $750K to $1.8M at exit. The brand transfer fee (FDD Item 6) is typically 50% of the then-current initial franchise fee, paid by the buyer.

Build the business for 3 to 5 years before listing.

Bottom Line

The Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices franchise in 2027 is a scale game disguised as a brand game. The $45K to $90K initial investment is a fraction of the real cost: the $15K royalty floor, $500 marketing minimum, 18- to 30-month breakeven, and $150K to $250K of personal runway that the FDD does not warn you about.

Win it by bringing an existing team, targeting luxury markets, or buying an existing office at retirement. Lose it by going solo, chasing brand prestige in a sub-$400K market, or underestimating the NAR settlement's revenue compression. The math works for maybe one in five qualified applicants.

Be the one.

Sources

Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices review / reviews / rating / review 2027 / review of Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices franchise.

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