Wisconsin · Cleaning & Maintenance · Registration State
Best Cleaning & Maintenance Franchises in Wisconsin
122 cleaning & maintenance franchise systems with FDDs on file, available to qualified Wisconsin buyers. Median investment $91K–$223K; 66% disclose Item 19 financial performance.
Franchises
122
Median Investment
$91K–$223K
Item 19 Disclosed
66%
Wisconsin Reg Status
Registration State
Wisconsin buyer notes for cleaning & maintenance franchises
- • WFDL good-cause and 90-day cure provisions cannot be waived by contract.
- • WFDL applies broadly — even franchise relationships not formally registered may qualify for WFDL protection.
Lower-Investment Cleaning & Maintenance Options in Wisconsin
Cleaning & Maintenance franchise systems with initial investment under $100K.
Other Franchise Categories in Wisconsin
Browse all categories in WisconsinFrequently Asked Questions
How much does a cleaning & maintenance franchise cost in Wisconsin?
Across the 122 cleaning & maintenance franchise systems in our database, median initial investment runs $91K–$223K. Note that some emerging brands may not yet be registered to sell in Wisconsin — verify status before signing. Each FDD's Item 7 provides the exact investment range for that brand.
Do cleaning & maintenance franchises in Wisconsin disclose Item 19 financial performance?
66% of the cleaning & maintenance franchises in our Wisconsin dataset disclose Item 19 financial performance representations. The remainder rely on Item 1 (business background) and Item 7 (initial investment) without making earnings claims. Brands disclosing Item 19 give you the strongest basis for projecting unit-level revenue.
What Wisconsin-specific factors affect cleaning & maintenance franchise unit economics?
WFDL good-cause and 90-day cure provisions cannot be waived by contract. WFDL applies broadly — even franchise relationships not formally registered may qualify for WFDL protection.
Is the franchise I'm interested in registered to sell in Wisconsin?
Wisconsin is a registration state. Verify the franchisor's registration with the Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions (DFI) before signing anything. An offer to sell a franchise in Wisconsin without registration is itself a violation of state law and a major red flag.