You’re not here for fluff. You’re here because you want a business you can scale, run with solid systems, and build in a market that makes sense for you. Same Day Auto Repair welcomes franchise owners who want to open a location in their chosen area, with a franchise model built around real shop operations, clear standards, and repeatable processes.
If you’re exploring auto repair franchise opportunities, you’ll find the ownership path, support structure, and expansion plan laid out clearly right here.
Auto repair remains essential because vehicles keep aging, fleets stay on the road, and people rely on dependable service to get to work every day. The real advantage is consistency: steady demand, structured operations, and the ability to grow location by location with a proven system.
These are the right questions. Strong franchise owners think like operators.
You can approach this in a few ways, depending on your goals, budget, and how hands-on you want to be
Single Unit Ownership
A practical starting point is opening one location, stabilizing operations, and then expanding. This works well for owners who want control over staffing, operations, and local marketing decisions.
Multi-Unit Expansion
Some franchise owners plan to build multiple locations from the start. This approach works best when you have the capital and leadership structure to support more than one shop. Market selection, hiring strategy, and launch timing become critical at this stage.
Both approaches work within the franchise model. The key is choosing intentionally, since it impacts hiring, training, and how quickly you scale.
A strong franchise system gives you more than branding—it provides a structure you can replicate so the business doesn’t rely on one person to succeed.
When evaluating a franchise opportunity, these are the components that matter most:
This is where real growth happens: faster service cycles, consistent car count, stronger teams, and fewer operational setbacks.
Franchise owners want to know what happens after signing. That’s fair—the first year plays a major role in long-term success.
Here’s what support typically looks like:
This structure helps franchise owners avoid costly trial-and-error and build momentum faster.
You don’t need to be a mechanic to succeed. Many franchise owners focus on operations and hire experienced technicians to handle the technical side.
Many franchise owners choose this space because it offers a grounded, practical path to growth without relying on trends.
You can open in a market that makes sense for you. We work with you to evaluate territory, competition, lease considerations, and accessibility.
Strong franchise owners approach market selection carefully—focusing on visibility, traffic flow, and long-term demand.
This is part of operating within the broader automotive franchise space, where growth is tied to vehicle ownership, usage, and ongoing maintenance needs.
If you’re ready to explore a franchise ownership path that aligns with your goals, we can start the conversation around territory, staffing, and launch planning.
Talk to our franchise team and explore the numbers behind building your own location.
You get a defined path for your target area, allowing you to plan staffing, marketing, and timelines with confidence.
You build with repeatable systems, making expansion into additional locations structured and manageable.
You track performance through clear reporting, helping you identify issues early and maintain profitability.
A well-run shop typically targets 8% to 20% net profit margin after payroll and overhead, depending on car count, labor efficiency, and parts pricing.
Many locations aim for 14 to 36 months, depending on rent, hiring pace, marketing, and how quickly operations stabilize.
No. Most owners hire skilled technicians and focus on managing operations, pricing, and customer experience.
Requirements vary by location but typically include a business license, tax registration, zoning approval, and sometimes repair facility licensing.
Choose a site with easy access, strong traffic, visible signage, and sufficient parking. Bay access and nearby commercial activity also play a major role.