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Should I open or buy a Caliber Collision franchise in 2027?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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📅 Published · 9 min read
Caliber Collision logo

Direct Answer

No — Caliber Collision is not a franchise, it is a private-equity-owned corporate chain that buys independent body shops rather than selling franchises, so the real decision is whether to sell your existing shop to Caliber, open a genuine auto-body/auto-services franchise, or build an independent collision center. Caliber operates 1,800+ company-owned collision centers across the US and grows by acquiring existing shops, not by franchising — there is no Caliber FDD and no franchise fee.

If you want a franchised path into the $45B+ collision and auto-services market, the real plays are Maaco, CARSTAR, Fix Auto USA, Abra (now part of Caliber), and Tuffy/Midas on the mechanical side — with total investments of $300,000 to $1.5M, royalties of 5%-9%, and shop revenues of $700K-$2.5M.

A typical franchised collision center nets the owner $120,000-$300,000 depending on insurance DRP volume.

The Real Numbers

Caliber Collision is a roll-up, not a franchisor. Backed by private equity (Hellman & Friedman / Leonard Green), it grows by acquiring profitable independent body shops and rebranding them, then routing insurance Direct Repair Program (DRP) volume through its national network.

There is no way to "buy a Caliber franchise" — you either sell your shop to Caliber or you compete with it via a different franchise brand.

What selling to Caliber looks like: a healthy independent collision center doing $1.5M-$3M revenue with 15%-20% EBITDA typically sells for 4-6x EBITDA, i.e. $900,000-$3.6M, depending on DRP relationships, real estate, and certifications. That is the only Caliber "transaction" available to an operator.

What the comparable franchised plays cost you (per their 2026 FDDs):

ConceptTotal InvestmentFranchise FeeRoyaltyAd FeeTypical Shop Revenue
Caliber Collision (NOT a franchise)Acquisition target onlyN/AN/AN/A$1.5M-$3M+
CARSTAR (collision)$300,000-$700,000$40,0005.5%0.5%$1.5M-$2.5M
Maaco (paint & collision)$370,000-$700,000$40,0009% (8% royalty + 1% NABC)incl.$1.0M-$1.6M
Fix Auto USA (collision)$200,000-$500,000 (conversion)$25,000-$40,000~4%-5%~2%$1.5M-$2.5M
Tuffy Tire & Auto (mechanical)$215,000-$525,000$25,0005%5%$700K-$1.2M

Revenue reality: a franchised collision center doing $1.8M revenue with strong insurance DRP relationships runs gross margins of 45%-50% and owner cash flow of 10%-15%, or $180,000-$270,000 before debt service. Without DRP volume, that drops to $80,000-$140,000 — DRP access is the single biggest variable in collision economics, and Caliber's scale advantage in DRP is exactly why it dominates.

flowchart TD A[Want a Caliber Collision business?] --> B{Is Caliber a franchise?} B -->|No - PE-owned roll-up| C[Cannot franchise Caliber] C --> D{What is your situation?} D -->|I own a body shop| E[Sell to Caliber at 4-6x EBITDA] D -->|I want a collision franchise| F[CARSTAR / Maaco / Fix Auto] D -->|I want mechanical auto| G[Tuffy / Midas / Christian Brothers] D -->|Max equity, no royalty| H[Build independent collision center] E --> I[Get EBITDA-based valuation] F --> J[Validate DRP access in market] G --> J H --> J J --> K{Owner cash flow > $150K?} K -->|Yes| L[Proceed] K -->|No| M[Walk away]

Who Wins With This Business

The winning collision/auto-services operator is a hands-on owner who can secure insurance DRP relationships, manage technician labor, and run a high-throughput repair operation.

The typical operator who succeeds is 40-58, has automotive or DRP-network experience, $200,000+ liquid, and a plan to secure insurance referral volume from day one.

CRO Syndicate — Need a fractional Chief Revenue Officer? Kory White, Fractional CRO · 25 yrs · $0 to $200M scaled. Quick call.

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Who Loses With This Business

Anyone expecting to "franchise a Caliber" loses immediately — no such offering exists. Other failure modes in collision/auto-services:

2027 Market Conditions

Collision repair is a structurally growing, consolidating market entering 2027 — and Caliber's roll-up dominance is the central force shaping it.

flowchart LR D1[Day 1-30: Confirm Caliber is not a franchise + shortlist real brands] --> D2[Day 31-60: Pull CARSTAR/Maaco/Fix Auto FDDs + validate Item 19] D2 --> D3[Day 61-90: Secure DRP relationships + site-select] D3 --> D4[FDD legal review with franchise attorney] D4 --> D5[Secure SBA financing + equipment leasing] D5 --> D6[Sign franchise agreement] D6 --> D7[Build/convert shop + certify technicians] D7 --> D8[Open + ramp DRP volume] D8 --> D9[Hit revenue target then add Shop 2]

The 90-Day Decision Tree

  1. Day 1-15: Confirm the Caliber reality. Verify that Caliber Collision does not franchise and is an acquisition-only roll-up. If you own a shop, request an EBITDA-based valuation from Caliber's acquisitions team as a benchmark.
  2. Day 16-30: Shortlist the real franchised plays. Request FDDs from CARSTAR, Maaco, and Fix Auto USA. Read Items 5, 6, 7, and 19.
  3. Day 31-45: Validate DRP access. Contact State Farm, GEICO, Progressive, and Allstate about DRP openings in your market. No DRP, no deal — confirm referral volume potential before signing.
  4. Day 46-60: Secure technicians and site. Map I-CAR/ASE-certified tech availability and select a site with frame, paint-booth, and ADAS-calibration capacity.
  5. Day 61-75: Secure financing. Collision underwrites at 20%-25% equity, 1.3x DSCR, SBA 7(a), plus equipment leasing for paint booths and frame machines.
  6. Day 76-85: FDD legal review. Budget $5,000-$8,000. Flag DRP-network obligations, territory, and certification requirements.
  7. Day 86-90: Decide sell vs. Open. If you own a shop, compare Caliber's acquisition offer against converting to a franchise. If starting fresh, choose the brand with the strongest DRP-network access in your market.

Alternative Plays

Since Caliber can't be franchised, these are the real auto-services ownership paths:

FAQ

Is Caliber Collision a franchise I can buy?

No. Caliber Collision is a private-equity-owned corporate chain of 1,800+ company-operated centers. It grows by acquiring independent body shops and rebranding them, not by selling franchises. There is no Caliber Franchise Disclosure Document and no franchise fee.

The only Caliber transaction available to an operator is selling your existing shop to Caliber, typically at 4-6x EBITDA.

Should I sell my body shop to Caliber or franchise with another brand?

It depends on your goals. Selling to Caliber gives you a liquidity event at 4-6x EBITDA but ends your ownership. Franchising with CARSTAR or Fix Auto keeps you as owner with network DRP access while building equity you can sell later. If you want to exit now, Caliber.

If you want to own and grow, a franchise. Get the Caliber valuation either way as a benchmark.

What is the closest franchise to Caliber I can actually buy?

CARSTAR is the closest franchised equivalent — a large collision network ($1.5M-$2.5M shop revenue, 5.5% royalty) that provides the insurance DRP relationships single independents struggle to secure alone. Fix Auto USA is the best fit if you already own a shop and want to convert it into a network at lower cost.

How much does DRP access matter in collision repair?

It is the single most important variable. Shops with Direct Repair Program relationships with State Farm, GEICO, Progressive, and Allstate receive a steady stream of insurer-referred work, often running 30%-40% higher revenue than non-DRP shops. Caliber's entire competitive advantage is its national-scale DRP volume, which is why franchising for network DRP access beats going fully independent for most new operators.

How is EV and ADAS changing collision economics in 2027?

Significantly. ADAS calibration is now mandatory on most repairs, adding $300-$1,500 per claim in revenue but requiring expensive tooling and training. EV collision repair demands high-voltage certification and OEM-specific equipment (Tesla, Rivian, Ford). Shops that invest in these capabilities capture a growing, higher-margin segment; those that don't forfeit it.

This is a key reason single operators benefit from a franchise network's shared tooling and training standards.

Bottom Line

You cannot buy a Caliber Collision franchise — it is a private-equity roll-up that acquires shops, not a franchisor — so reframe the decision. If you own a body shop, get a 4-6x EBITDA valuation from Caliber as a benchmark and decide whether to sell now or keep building equity.

If you want to enter collision fresh, CARSTAR (best DRP network), Fix Auto (best conversion), or an independent center are the real plays. The entire game is insurance DRP access and technician retention — secure both before signing anything, because a collision shop without DRP volume nets half what a networked one does.

In the aging-fleet, ADAS-driven 2027 market, the operators who win are those who certify for EV/ADAS work and lock in insurer referral volume early.

Sources

Best franchises to buy under $100,000 in 2027 — every franchise on PULSE, ranked.

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