Youth Sports Franchises/Venue-Light vs. Facility-Based Models

🏟️ Venue-Light vs. Facility-Based Models

Compare i9 Sports, Skyhawks, TGA, Soccer Stars, KidStrong, D1 Training, ninja gyms, Urban Air, and other children’s activity franchises by capex, fixed cost, labor model, and demand risk.

Key diligence frame

Do not buy a children’s activity franchise on category growth alone. Underwrite local channel access, repeat enrollment, labor quality, safety systems, and fixed-cost break-even by model type.

Venue-light models use parks, schools, churches, community centers, or rented courts instead of a dedicated facility. That keeps initial investment lower and makes demand testing easier.

Facility-based models can create a stronger brand experience but introduce lease, buildout, utilities, insurance, and daily staffing risk. The underwriting question is whether the location can stay full across classes, camps, parties, and off-peak programming.

For first-time buyers, this page treats venue-light concepts as the default first screen and facility-heavy concepts as selective buys only after local utilization is proven.

Comparable brands to review

BrandInvestmentUnitsScreening note
i9 Sports$59.9K–$69.9K245Venue-light recreational league model; strong low-capex benchmark.
Skyhawks$37.8K–$89.8K5Camp/program model; validate territory depth and school/parks channels.
Amazing Athletes$72.8K–$98.8K17Early-childhood activity programming; coach quality and local channel access matter.
Soccer Stars$70.4K–$102.3K85Single-sport youth training brand under the Youth Athletes United umbrella.
KidStrong$448.1K–$600K37Facility-based developmental fitness; bigger AUV potential but higher lease/labor risk.
D1 Sports$480.6K–$933.4K90Athlete performance training; validate youth/adult mix, utilization, and payroll load.
Redline Athletics$373.5K–$578.8K49Sports-performance facility model; manager/coach bench is a gating issue.
The Little Gym$519.3K–$757K12Established child-development gym; diligence renewals, staffing, and class occupancy.

Practical no-buy triggers

  • Rent and payroll require unrealistic class-fill rates before owner pay.
  • Franchisee validation points to owner dependence, weak coach pipelines, or heavy unpaid owner hours.
  • Most reported revenue comes from launch promotions, camps, or birthdays rather than repeat registration.
  • Safety, background-check, and incident-response systems are vague or inconsistently used.

Last updated: May 2026