Should I open or buy a Hampton Inn franchise in 2027?

Published June 25, 2026 · Updated June 25, 2026
Direct Answer
Open or buy a Hampton by Hilton (Hampton Inn / Hampton Inn & Suites) franchise only if you can fund a roughly $9M–$22M ground-up project (or a multi-million-dollar acquisition) and you want the single most consistently top-rated franchisee value proposition in mid-scale lodging. Hampton is Hilton's flagship limited-service brand and routinely ranks at or near the top of franchisee-satisfaction surveys for a reason: the Hilton Honors engine drives an exceptional share of direct, repeat bookings.
The economics: an initial franchise fee of $75,000 (or $500 per room for the portion above 150 rooms), a royalty of 6% of gross rooms revenue, and a program/marketing fee of about 4% of gross rooms revenue. Hampton is a real-estate development first and a franchise second — your land basis, build cost, and management discipline drive returns more than the flag.
If you have lodging operating experience, access to SBA 504 or CMBS financing, and a market with proven demand, Hampton is one of the safest and most respected flags you can fly. If you are a first-time operator seeking a passive small business, the capital intensity and operating complexity make this the wrong entry point.
What You Are Actually Buying
A Hampton franchise is a license to operate under Hilton's brand standards and to connect to Hilton's distribution machine. The value is concrete:
- Hilton Honors — one of the largest and stickiest loyalty programs in travel, with well over 180 million members, driving a very high share of direct, lower-cost bookings.
- Hilton's reservation and revenue-management technology, feeding bookings from Hilton.com, the Hilton Honors app, OTAs, and corporate travel managers.
- The "Hampton 100% Satisfaction Guarantee", a brand promise that anchors guest trust and repeat stays.
- National and regional Hilton sales teams chasing corporate and group business beyond your reach.
You are not buying a building or guaranteed occupancy. You bring the land, the debt, and the daily operation; Hilton brings the sign and the reservations.
The Real Numbers (FDD-Style)
Hampton franchise economics, drawn from Hilton's Franchise Disclosure Document and industry development data, look approximately like this for a typical 90-to-110-room new-build:
- Initial franchise fee: $75,000 for up to 150 rooms, plus $500 per room above 150.
- Total project investment: $9 million to $22 million+ for a ground-up build, depending on land cost and market; conversions run materially less.
- Royalty fee: 6% of gross rooms revenue.
- Program / marketing fee: ~4% of gross rooms revenue (funds brand marketing, loyalty, and reservations).
- Hilton Honors charges: loyalty reimbursement and per-stay costs that pass through on points-based stays.
- Technology and other fees: several per-room or per-reservation charges for the reservation system, training, and required IT.
- Term: typically a 22-year license for new construction (shorter for conversions), often with a mid-term Product Improvement Plan.
- System size: Hilton operates roughly 2,900+ Hampton properties worldwide, making it one of the largest mid-scale brands on the planet.
Net effective fees — royalty plus program fee plus loyalty costs — commonly run in the 12%–14% of rooms revenue range. Underwrite to that, not the headline 6%.

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Should You Build, Convert, or Buy Existing?
Ground-up build delivers the newest product and the longest runway before a PIP but carries the highest cost and a 2–3 year stabilization curve. Conversion lets you enter at a lower basis while inheriting an aging asset and a near-term PIP. Buying an existing Hampton is the fastest path to cash flow and the easiest to finance because the trailing operating history de-risks the loan — but you pay for stability in the cap rate.
The Application and Development Process
Expect the full timeline to run 18–36 months for a new build and 6–12 months for a conversion. Hilton runs an impact study to evaluate whether your hotel would cannibalize a nearby franchisee — territory is not exclusive, but Hilton assesses market saturation before approving construction.
Who Should Open a Hampton
This brand fits a specific operator profile:
- Experienced hoteliers expanding a portfolio with established lender and management relationships.
- Real-estate developers with construction expertise treating the hotel as an income-producing asset.
- Family ownership groups building generational hospitality wealth, often clustering flags regionally for management efficiency.
It does not fit someone seeking a passive investment or a low six-figure entry. The margins are thin and labor-intensive, and one bad GM hire or a regional demand shock can erase a year of profit.
Risks You Must Underwrite
Capital intensity is the headline risk — millions deployed into an illiquid, cyclical real-estate asset. Demand cyclicality swings RevPAR with the economy and local events. PIP exposure at renewal can demand $1M+ in mandatory renovations.
Labor cost and availability pressure margins constantly. And brand-standard enforcement is strict — fail a Hilton quality inspection and you risk fees, remediation, or loss of the flag. Treat the franchise agreement and PIP schedule as the documents that decide your returns, and have a hospitality attorney review both.
FAQ
How much does it cost to open a Hampton Inn franchise in 2027? Plan for a total project investment of $9 million to $22 million or more for a ground-up build, plus a $75,000 initial franchise fee (up to 150 rooms). Conversions cost considerably less because they reuse the existing structure.
What is the royalty fee for Hampton by Hilton? The base royalty is 6% of gross rooms revenue, plus a ~4% program/marketing fee and loyalty costs, putting effective fees around 12%–14% of rooms revenue.
Is Hampton a good franchise to own in 2027? For well-capitalized, experienced operators, yes — Hampton consistently ranks at the top of franchisee-satisfaction surveys, largely because Hilton Honors drives a high share of direct bookings. For under-capitalized first-timers, the capital intensity makes it high-risk.
Do I need hotel experience to buy a Hampton? Not strictly, but without it you must hire a third-party hotel management company, and Hilton weighs operator experience in its application. Lenders strongly prefer experienced sponsors.
How long does it take to open a Hampton? A new build typically takes 18–36 months; a conversion runs 6–12 months, depending on the scope of the required Product Improvement Plan.
Is the territory exclusive? No. Hilton does not grant exclusive territories but runs an impact study before approving new construction to limit cannibalization of nearby franchisees.
Bottom Line
Hampton by Hilton is a best-in-class flag for serious lodging investors. The brand delivers exceptional, measurable value through Hilton's reservation engine and the enormous Hilton Honors base, and it earns its reputation as one of the highest-satisfaction franchise relationships in lodging.
But it is fundamentally a multi-million-dollar real-estate development, not a small-business franchise. With the capital, the experience (or a management partner), and a market with proven demand, Hampton belongs at the top of your shortlist. Without those, choose a service or food franchise first and work toward lodging.
Sources
- Hilton — Development & Franchising
- Hilton Honors — Loyalty Program
- U.S. Small Business Administration — 504 Loan Program
- American Hotel & Lodging Association — Industry Data
- STR / CoStar — Hotel Performance Benchmarks
- FTC — Franchise Rule & FDD Guidance
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