The pool service franchise question comes up constantly in forums and industry groups, and the answers range from "franchises are a scam" to "I couldn't have built my business without the support." Both extremes exist because the right answer genuinely depends on your situation. Here is a clear-eyed comparison that doesn't favor either path — just the factors that actually matter for your decision.
Before deciding whether a franchise is worth the cost, you need to understand specifically what you are paying for. Legitimate pool service franchises provide some combination of:
The franchise fee and royalty structure deserves careful analysis before signing.
| Cost Component | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise fee | $30,000–$70,000 | Paid upfront; non-refundable |
| Royalty fee | 6–10% of gross revenue | Paid monthly, forever |
| Marketing/advertising fee | 1–3% of gross revenue | Paid to franchise fund, not your local marketing |
| Required purchases | Varies | Some franchises require buying chemicals/equipment from approved suppliers |
On a $200,000/year gross revenue route, a 7% royalty is $14,000/year. Over 10 years, that is $140,000 — plus the initial fee. The question is whether the franchise delivers more than $140,000 in value over that period through chemical discounts, leads, and operational support. For some operators in the right markets, it does. For others, it definitively does not.
Read the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) before signing anything. The FDD includes audited financial statements from the franchisor, a list of all current and former franchisees (call them), litigation history, and the specific terms of every fee. You are legally entitled to receive this document and to review it with an attorney before committing. Never sign a franchise agreement without having an attorney who specializes in franchise law review it.
The pool service industry is uniquely suited to independent operation because:
There are specific situations where franchise affiliation genuinely makes sense:
The single best research step before deciding on any franchise: call five current franchisees and five former franchisees (both lists are in the FDD). Ask former franchisees specifically why they left. The patterns in those calls will tell you more than any marketing material the franchisor provides.
For most people entering pool service with some capital, buying an independent route from a retiring operator is often the best option: immediate cash flow, established client relationships, an existing reputation, and no ongoing royalty obligations. Route brokers in most states list available residential routes regularly. This path skips the slow organic growth phase without incurring franchise overhead.
Going independent doesn't mean going without systems. PoolLens gives every independent operator professional service documentation, chemistry tracking, and account management — no franchise required. Free for pool service professionals.
Open PoolLens Free →The largest pool service franchises in the United States include Poolwerx and several regional franchise groups. No single national franchise dominates the residential pool service industry the way some other service franchises do — the market remains highly fragmented and local, which is an advantage for independent operators.
Pool service franchise initial fees typically range from $30,000–$70,000, plus royalty fees of 6–10% of gross revenue ongoing. Total initial investment (fee + working capital + equipment + vehicle) often runs $80,000–$150,000.
Yes. The majority of pool service routes available for sale are independent operations — no franchise affiliation required. Route brokers facilitate these transactions. Routes are typically priced at 10–15 times monthly gross revenue for residential accounts. An independent purchase keeps 100% of your gross with no ongoing royalties.
Legitimate pool franchises typically provide: initial training program, brand recognition, preferred chemical supplier pricing, business management software, an established service protocol, and ongoing operational support. The value of each depends heavily on the specific franchise and whether you need what they offer.