# Should I Buy a K-9 Franchising Franchise? 2026 Decision Framework

> Should I buy a K-9 Franchising? Decision framework for the mobile vs facility models, with go/no-go criteria for trainers, investors, and pet-services operators.

**Last updated**: 2026-06-05
**URL**: https://vetmyfranchise.com/blog/should-i-buy-a-k-9-franchising-franchise?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md

> **Quick answer:** The decision framework for [K-9 Franchising](/franchise/k-9-franchising-llc?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md) starts with a model choice — mobile or facility — because they are functionally two different franchises sharing one FDD. The mobile model is buyable for experienced trainers with the right capital and discovery diligence. The facility model is structurally harder to underwrite and should be reserved for operators with prior facility-business experience.

## Step One: Pick a Model

The 2026 K-9 Franchising FDD discloses a $1,500 to $3,949,331 total investment range. This is not a continuum — it describes two distinct businesses.

**Mobile model.** Owner-operator trains dogs on-site at client homes or community locations. No facility. Vehicle, training equipment, and operator capacity define the business. Investment realistically $50K-$150K. Time-to-revenue weeks to months. Operator income tied directly to operator's working capacity.

**Facility model.** Built-out training facility with kennels, training rooms, retail space, and trainer staff. Real-estate-anchored. Investment up to $3.95M including build and equipment. Time-to-revenue 6-12 months for facility completion plus 12-18 months for ramp. Operator can be a business operator with trainer staff rather than a working trainer.

The decision tests below split by model. **Pick the model first**, then apply the corresponding tests.

## Mobile Model: The Three Tests

### Test 1: Training Credentials

**Threshold: Active dog-training credentials, prior client-service experience, or willingness to complete the franchisor's full training program before opening.**

The mobile model sells operator-delivered training. Customers are paying for the operator's skill, applied to their dog, in their home. The franchise provides the brand, methodology, and customer-acquisition systems; the operator provides the training labor.

Buyers without prior training experience can complete the franchisor's training program, but should expect a longer ramp and weaker customer outcomes during the first 12-18 months. Buyers with existing certifications (CPDT, IAABC, similar) have a head-start.

**If the buyer is not a trainer and is unwilling to develop trainer skills, the mobile model is a no-go.**

### Test 2: Customer-Acquisition Capacity

**Threshold: Either an existing dog-owner network the operator can convert, or comfort with cold customer-acquisition through digital marketing, community partnerships, and referrals.**

A mobile dog-training business needs a steady inflow of new customers (training engagements end after a finite number of sessions; the customer base churns continuously). The franchise provides marketing systems, but the operator does the outreach.

Operators with prior pet-services networks (veterinarians, groomers, boarding facility relationships) have a head-start. Operators starting from cold need 6-12 months of active community presence to build referral flow.

**If the buyer cannot or will not invest in active customer acquisition, the mobile model produces a weak revenue ramp.**

### Test 3: Capital and Patience Floor

**Threshold: $50K-$150K available capital, 6-12 month income coverage outside the business.**

Mobile-model capital requirements are low by franchise standards, but the operator should not deploy 100% of available capital into the franchise. A 6-12 month cushion of non-business income or savings is required during ramp.

**If the buyer is fully deploying available capital into the franchise with no income cushion, the mobile model is fragile to normal ramp delays.**

### Mobile Model: The Decision

Three tests pass → proceed to discovery with 6+ operator interviews. Two tests pass → identify and cure the failing test before proceeding. One or zero tests pass → mobile-model K-9 is not the right franchise.

## Facility Model: The Four Tests

### Test 1: Capital Test

**Threshold: $750K-$1M liquid capital minimum.**

The facility model's $3.95M ceiling investment is real-estate-anchored. Financing structures typically combine SBA 7(a) up to limits, commercial real-estate financing for the property, and 20-25% equity contribution.

**If liquid capital is below $750K, the facility model is undercapitalized.**

### Test 2: Real-Estate and Facility-Business Experience

**Threshold: Prior experience with commercial real-estate buildout, facility business operations, or strong operating partnership.**

The facility model requires the operator to manage a multi-trainer staff, recurring customer scheduling, facility operations, and the underlying real estate. This is a more complex operational footprint than the mobile model and substantially more complex than a typical first franchise.

**If the buyer has no facility-business experience and no operating partner with such experience, the facility model carries operator-skill risk on top of franchise-fit risk.**

### Test 3: Item 19 Tolerance

**Threshold: Comfort underwriting a $3M+ facility build against an Item 19 sample of 17 units.**

The 2026 FDD's Item 19 sample of 17 is too small to confidently anchor a multi-million-dollar facility build. Buyers must compensate by:

- Interviewing 8+ current operators, with at least 3 from facility-model units
- Pulling third-party pet-training industry benchmarks
- Building proforma against the buyer's own market-specific demand analysis
- Pricing in meaningful underwriting buffer for the small-sample risk

**If the buyer requires franchisor-disclosed Item 19 to anchor underwriting, the K-9 facility model is structurally a no-go.** Larger franchises in the pet-services category disclose Item 19 across substantially larger samples.

### Test 4: Closure History Diligence

**Threshold: Satisfactory explanation of the 5 historical closures.**

The 2026 FDD reports 5 franchise closures against 37 active units. A 13.5% historical-closure-to-active ratio in a small system requires expanded diligence:

- Cause-by-cause breakdown from the franchisor
- Validation through current-operator interviews in the same markets as the closures
- Direct interviews with exited operators where accessible
- Pattern analysis: are closures concentrated by model type, geography, tenure, or franchisor relationship?

**If the closure history reveals structural franchise-economics problems (vs operator-fit problems), the facility model is a no-go.** Operator-fit closures are normal; structural-economics closures are a franchisor-quality signal.

### Facility Model: The Decision

Four tests pass → proceed to deep discovery (10+ operator interviews including facility-model operators). Three tests pass → resolve the failing test before committing. Two or fewer pass → the facility model is the wrong franchise. Look at larger, more established pet-services or facility-business franchises.

## What Most Buyers Should Do

The honest read on K-9 Franchising for most prospective buyers:

- **Experienced trainers entering as mobile owner-operators**: closer to a yes, with discovery diligence
- **Pet-services operators adding training as a service expansion**: closer to a yes if integrated with existing facility and customer base
- **First-time franchise buyers considering the facility model**: closer to a no — pick a larger, more established franchise for first-facility-business risk
- **Capital deployers without operating involvement**: closer to a no — the franchise rewards operator engagement at both model levels

The decision is workable for the right buyer. The decision framework above is the filter for being the right buyer — buyers who try to force-fit the wrong profile will struggle, regardless of franchise quality.
