How Much Does a Baseball Training Franchise Cost in 2026?
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How Much Does a Baseball Training Franchise Cost? (And the Cheaper Way to Own One)

The baseball training franchise cost runs from $158,000 to over $1,000,000 in total investment, plus a $40,000–$60,000 franchise fee and ongoing royalties of 6–8% of your gross revenue. That’s the real number behind the “own a baseball business” dream. But there’s a cheaper path to the same business β€” the same evaluation technology, programs, and brand-grade credibility β€” without the franchise fee or the royalty. Here’s the full cost breakdown and the alternative.

How Much Does a Baseball Training Franchise Cost?

The franchise route has three cost layers, and most buyers only see the first one:

The three cost layers
What a Baseball Franchise Actually Costs
Cost layer Franchise What it’s for
Total investment $158,000–$1,031,000 Build-out, equipment, working capital
Franchise fee $40,000–$60,000 Upfront, one-time entry
Royalty 6–8% of GROSS, forever Ongoing right to use the brand
Ad fund 2–4% of gross Brand marketing pool
Renewal fee 25–50% of original fee Every 10–20 years
Ranges: Sharpsheets, franchise.com, Franzy, Guidant — 2026. Generic figures; no brands named.

A large national batting-cage academy franchise runs $536,000–$1,031,000 all-in; mid-size baseball training franchises land around $158,000–$557,500 (Sharpsheets; franchise.com). On top of the build, you pay an upfront franchise fee of roughly $40,000–$60,000, then royalties of 6–8% of gross revenue β€” for the life of the agreement β€” plus a marketing-fund fee (Franzy).

Own a baseball business cheaper - full development tech from a phone, no franchise required

What Do the Royalties Actually Cost You?

This is the layer that quietly dwarfs the others. At an industry-average 6.7% royalty on gross, a facility doing $500,000 a year pays about $33,000 annually β€” charged before your expenses, whether you profit or not. Over a typical 10–20 year franchise term, that’s $330,000 to $670,000 paid out for the ongoing right to use someone else’s name. The franchise fee is the down payment; the royalty is the mortgage that never ends.

The Cheaper Way to Own the Same Business

Here’s what the franchise brochures don’t mention: an independent baseball facility buildout costs roughly $75,000–$100,000 for cages, netting, machines, and working capital (RunSwift) β€” a fraction of the franchise number. What the franchise was really selling you was the system on top: the evaluation tools, the programming, the certification, the credibility. And that part you can license.

Two ways to own a baseball facility
Franchise vs. Build + License
$536K–$1M+
Franchise route
Six- to seven-figure total investment
$40K–$60K franchise fee
6–8% royalty on gross, for life
Operate under their brand & rules
~$75K–$100K + flat fee
Independent + license
Independent buildout ~$75K–$100K
No franchise fee
License the system: $1,250–$2,500/mo, no royalty
Keep 100% of revenue & your own brand

The TopVelocity Performance Center license puts the enterprise system on your independent facility for $1,250–$2,500/month β€” no franchise fee, no royalty on revenue, month-to-month, under your own brand. You get AI evaluations with national percentiles, MechanicsDNA 3D analysis, PitchDNA, ForceIQ testing, 15+ training programs, the org portal for roster and billing, coach certification, and marketing materials. Build the facility for ~$75K–$100K, license the system for a flat monthly fee, and keep 100% of your revenue and your name.

License the MLB-grade development system on your own independent facility

What Is the Baseball Training Franchise Cost vs. License Profit?

An eight-cage indoor facility generates roughly $250,000–$600,000 a year in revenue at 15–30% net margins (Upper Hand). The structured-development model β€” memberships, evaluations, team partnerships β€” pushes that higher, as we detail in the 8 revenue streams of a profitable performance center. On the license, partner facilities target a 4.4x–11.7x return and report 40%+ revenue increases β€” and none of that upside is shared back as royalty.

$250K–$600K
annual revenue for an 8-cage facility at 15–30% net margin
$1,250–$2,500
per month to license the full system — no royalty, no franchise fee
~30 days
to launch on the license · month-to-month

Model Your Numbers

Plug your local pricing and roster size into the free Performance Center Revenue Calculator to see your net profit after the license β€” then compare it to a franchise paying 7% off the top. When you’re ready, ask Coach Brent’s AI what launching would look like for your facility, or register your organization and the team will build the plan with you. For the head-to-head model comparison, see franchise vs. license: which is more profitable.

Coach Brent’s AI
Price the cheaper path
Coach Brent’s AI will compare the franchise cost to building independent + licensing for your market:
“What does it cost to open without a franchise?”
“What’s included in the license?”
“Set up a demo with the team”

💬 Talk to Brent — Free, No Signup

topvelocity.org/talk-to-brent · answers in seconds, 24/7

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does it cost to open a baseball training franchise?

A baseball training or batting cage franchise typically costs $158,000 to over $1,000,000 in total investment, plus a $40,000-$60,000 franchise fee and ongoing royalties of 6-8% of gross revenue. Large national academy franchises run $536,000-$1,031,000 all-in.

Is there a cheaper alternative to a baseball franchise?

Yes. An independent facility buildout costs roughly $75,000-$100,000, and you can license the development system – evaluations, MechanicsDNA, ForceIQ, programs, certification – for $1,250-$2,500/month with no franchise fee and no royalty, keeping your own brand and 100% of revenue.

How much do baseball franchise royalties cost?

Baseball training franchises typically charge 6-8% of gross revenue as a royalty, plus a 2-4% advertising fund, both for the life of the agreement. On a facility doing $500,000 a year, that’s roughly $40,000-$50,000 annually, or $400,000-$1,000,000 over a 10-20 year term.

How much can a baseball training facility make?

An eight-cage indoor facility generates roughly $250,000-$600,000 a year in revenue at 15-30% net margins. A structured-development model adding memberships, evaluations, and team partnerships pushes revenue higher, with licensed facilities targeting a 4.4x-11.7x return on the platform.


About the Author

Brent Pourciau, M.S., is the founder of TopVelocity. After tearing his rotator cuff at 18 and being told he would never pitch again, he rebuilt his delivery through peer-reviewed biomechanics research and returned to throw 94 mph in professional baseball. He holds a master’s degree in kinesiology with doctoral work in health sciences, and has trained 10,000+ athletes including 100+ MLB draft picks through the TopVelocity Player Portal and Performance Center licensing program.

Brent Pourciau

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