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Sign Shop Financial Benchmarks & Unit Economics
Pillar: financial-benchmarks | Date: March 2026
Scope: Raw financial data for sign shops — gross margins, net margins, revenue per employee, average ticket size, close rates, labor utilization rates, COGS ratios, cost of goods breakdown by material category. Sources: ISA industry surveys, FASTSIGNS and SIGNARAMA franchise disclosure documents (Item 19), SBA small business data, trade publication surveys, franchise system averages.
Sources: 30 gathered, consolidated, synthesized.
Table of Contents
- Industry Scale & Market Context
- Net Profit Margins — Multi-Year Benchmark Data (2023–2025)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise P&L Benchmarks (FDD Item 19)
- Signarama Franchise Unit Economics
- FASTSIGNS vs. Signarama: System Comparison
- Gross Margin & COGS Structure
- Labor Costs & Revenue Per Employee
- Pricing Methodology & Job Economics
- Equipment Investment Benchmarks
- Business Valuation Multiples
- Revenue Range Benchmarks by Business Type
- Data Quality & Comparability Notes
Section 1: Industry Scale & Market Context
The sign industry spans two structurally distinct segments tracked by IBISWorld. The Sign & Banner Shops segment (custom commercial sign production) reached a $2.2 billion market size in 2026 across 39,645 establishments, with a modest +1.7% CAGR forecast through 2029.[16] A broader Billboard & Sign Manufacturing category — which includes large outdoor advertising networks (Lamar, Clear Channel, Outfront) — registers $16.4 billion in 2026 revenue across 5,702 establishments, but this figure is not comparable to independent sign shop economics.[25]
Sign & Banner Shops Segment (NAICS Adjacent — Custom Commercial)
| Metric | Value |
| 2026 Market Size | $2.2 billion[16] |
| 2029 Projected Market Size | $2.3 billion[16] |
| Historical CAGR (2020–2025) | -1.4% annually[16] |
| 2024 Growth Rate | +0.3%[16] |
| Forecast CAGR (2025–2029) | +1.7%[16] |
| Number of Establishments (2025) | 39,645[16] |
| Business Count CAGR (2020–2025) | +7.7% (fragmentation trend)[16] |
| Market Concentration | Highly fragmented; no company exceeds 5% share[16] |
| Derived Avg Revenue per Establishment | ~$55,500 (distorted by micro/home-based operators)[16] |
Key finding: The ~$55K derived average is not representative of operating commercial shops — franchise and mid-size shop benchmarks consistently show $500K–$1.2M+ for businesses with at least one employee. The IBISWorld establishment count includes thousands of home-based and part-time operators that pull the figure dramatically down.[16]
Billboard & Sign Manufacturing Segment (Broader OOH Context)
| Metric | Value |
| 2026 Market Size | $16.4 billion[25] |
| 2031 Projected | $17.0 billion[25] |
| 5-Year CAGR (2021–2026) | 2.4%[25] |
| Long-Term CAGR (2026–2031) | 0.7%[25] |
| 2026 Forecast Change | -0.7% (slight decline)[25] |
| Number of Establishments | 5,702[25] |
| Implied Avg Revenue per Establishment | ~$2.9M (skewed by large OOH operators)[25] |
Historical Industry Shipments (SIC 3993 — Signs & Advertising Specialties)
| Year | Total Shipments | Workers | Revenue per Employee |
| 1992 | ~$4.9 billion[17] | ~60,000+[17] | — |
| 1997 | $7.9 billion[17] | ~70,000+[17] | — |
| 2000 | $9.7 billion[17] | 89,028[17] | $95,526[17] |
| 1995 | — | — | $90,046[17] |
| 2025 (est.) | — | 198,914[17] | — |
The 1992–1997 CAGR for the SIC 3993 segment was approximately 9% annually.[17] Production worker wages in 2000 averaged $12.63/hr (~$22–$25/hr in 2024 dollars).[17] Post-2005, wide-format inkjet printing lowered barriers to entry while digital file delivery reduced hand-fabrication labor, fundamentally reshaping the industry's cost structure.[17]
See also: Profit Economics & Model Theory; Competitive Dynamics
Section 2: Net Profit Margins — Multi-Year Benchmark Data (2023–2025)
The Signs of the Times (SoTSI) annual State of the Sign Industry survey is the primary cross-industry benchmark for sign shop profitability. It covers both independent and franchise operations, reporting on actual prior-year margins and forward expectations.
2023 Actual Net Profit Margin Distribution
(From the 2024 State of the Sign Industry Survey)[1][10][19]
| Net Profit Range | % of Sign Shops |
| Under 5% | 4% |
| 5% to 10% | 14% |
| 10% to 20% | 34% |
| 20% to 30% | 32% |
| 30% to 40% | 10% |
| More than 40% | 6% |
- 66% of respondents reported 10–30% net profit margins in 2023[19]
- Only 4% reported sub-5% net profit[1]
- 16% reported above 30% (high-performing outliers)[19]
2024 Actual Net Profit Margin Distribution
(From the 2025 State of the Sign Industry Survey)[2][11][21]
| Net Profit Range | 2024 Actuals | 2025 Expectations |
| Under 5% | 4% | 0% |
| 5% to 10% | 17% | 18% |
| 10% to 20% | 39% (modal) | 36% |
| 20% to 30% | 28% | 30% |
| 30% to 40% | 6% | 9% |
| Over 40% | 6% | 7% |
The 2024 survey noted: "Numbers moved toward the middle ranges this year with only half as many under 5% net profit, but also only half as many in the 30%+ to 40% range."[2] The 2025 expectations showed zero respondents expecting below-5% profit — unusual optimism that foreshadowed the 2025 compression that followed.[21]
2025 Actual Net Profit Margin Distribution
(From the 2026 State of the Sign Industry Survey)[8][18]
| Net Profit Range | 2025 Actuals | 2026 Expectations |
| Under 5% | 8% | 2% |
| 5% to 10% | 22% | 18% |
| 10% to 20% | 34% | 38% |
| 20% to 30% | 18% | 22% |
| 30% to 40% | 12% | 14% |
| More than 40% | 6% | 6% |
Key finding: "Combined shops under 10% are up 43% vs. 2025 — not good." — SoTSI 2026.[18] The proportion of shops earning below 10% net profit jumped from 21% in 2024 to 30% in 2025, a significant compression driven by inflation and labor cost pressure.
Multi-Year Net Profit Distribution Trend
| Survey Year (Reporting Period) | Under 10% | 10–30% | 30%+ |
| 2024 Survey (2023 actuals)[1][19] | 18% | 66% | 16% |
| 2025 Survey (2024 actuals)[2][21] | 21% | 67% | 12% |
| 2026 Survey (2025 actuals)[8][18] | 30% | 52% | 18% |
| 2026 Expectations[8] | 20% | 60% | 20% |
The 2026 expectations indicate respondents anticipate recovering toward near-2024 levels, with the 30%+ cohort potentially rising to 20%.[8]
See also: Failure Modes; High-Performer Practices
Section 3: FASTSIGNS Franchise P&L Benchmarks (FDD Item 19)
FASTSIGNS is the largest sign franchise system in North America with 789 total locations as of December 31, 2024 (705 domestic, 84 international).[29] Their FDD Item 19 Financial Performance Representations contain audited financial data from franchisee-submitted statements, making this dataset among the most reliable sign shop financial benchmarks available.
System Scale
| Year | Centers In Operation (Full Year) | Full-Service | Satellite | Co-Brand |
| 2022 | 665[9] | — | — | — |
| 2023 | 672[4] | — | — | — |
| 2024 | 684[3] | 644 | 11 | 29 |
| Total (Dec 31, 2024) | 789[29] | Includes 84 international |
Average Unit Volume (AUV) — All Centers
| Year | All Centers Avg | All Centers Median | Full-Service Avg | Full-Service Median | % Meeting/Exceeding Avg |
| 2022 | $998,231[9] | $747,212[9] | $1,024,156[9] | $762,531[9] | 28.6%[9] |
| 2023 | $1,068,784[4] | $786,378[4] | $1,094,860[4] | $790,778[4] | — |
| 2024 | $1,111,091[3] | $816,576[3] | $1,136,387[3] | $823,945[3] | 32.2%[3] |
Only 28.6–32.2% of centers met or exceeded the average in any given year — the median ($816,576 in 2024) is the more representative figure for a typical FASTSIGNS center.[3][9]
Quartile Performance — Full-Service Centers (2024)
| Quartile | Centers | Average Gross Sales | Median Gross Sales |
| Top 25% | 171[3] | $2,469,417[3] | $1,851,621[3] |
| Bottom 25% | 171[3] | $344,430[3] | $358,014[3] |
Historical Quartile Revenue Trend
| Year | Top 25% Avg | Bottom 25% Avg | Top:Bottom Ratio |
| 2022[9] | $2,149,019 | $335,226 | 6.4× |
| 2023[4] | $2,340,922 | $345,198 | 6.8× |
| 2024[3] | $2,469,417 | $344,430 | 7.2× |
Full P&L Benchmarks — Financial Benchmarking Survey (Voluntary Respondents)
The P&L data covers centers that voluntarily submitted financial statements. The reporting group averages approximately $100K+ higher than system-wide AUV, indicating these are moderately above-average performers.[3][4][9]
| Metric | 2022 (338 centers) | % of Sales | 2023 (373 centers) | % of Sales | 2024 (319 centers) | % of Sales |
| Gross Sales | $1,138,596 | 100% | $1,201,287 | 100% | $1,295,260 | 100% |
| COGS (Materials/Subcontract) | $333,217 | 29.3% | $328,979 | 27.4% | $348,325 | 26.9% |
| Gross Profit | $805,379 | 70.7% | ~$872,308 | 72.6% | ~$946,935 | 73.1% |
| Labor (incl. owner) | $382,050 | 33.6% | $424,186 | 35.3% | $474,488 | 36.6% |
| Advertising | $34,114 | 3.0% | $34,799 | 2.9% | $39,805 | 3.1% |
| Auto Expenses | $15,481 | 1.4% | $17,379 | 1.4% | $18,786 | 1.5% |
| Facility (Rent/Utilities) | $61,969 | 5.4% | $66,196 | 5.5% | $69,914 | 5.4% |
| Equipment | $8,324 | 0.7% | $8,900 | 0.7% | $9,208 | 0.7% |
| G&A | $151,390 | 13.3% | $166,986 | 13.9% | $174,093 | 13.4% |
| EBITDA | $152,050 | 13.4% | $153,862 | 12.8% | $160,641 | 12.4% |
| Owner Salary Component | ~$80,162 | 7.0% | ~$95,215 | 7.9% | $108,213 | 8.4% |
| Total Owner Benefit (EBITDA + Owner Salary) | $232,212 | 20.4% | $249,077 | 20.7% | $268,854 | 20.8% |
Source: FASTSIGNS FDD Item 19 (2022–2024 data).[3][4][9][12][13][20][28][29]
Key P&L Trends (2022–2024)
- COGS% improving: 29.3% → 26.9% (materials/supply efficiency gains)[3]
- Labor% rising consistently: 33.6% → 36.6% (+3.0 percentage points — labor cost pressure)[3]
- EBITDA slightly compressing: 13.4% → 12.4% (-1.0 percentage point)[3]
- Total Owner Benefit stable at ~20.4%–20.8% — labor inflation offset by COGS gains[3]
- Revenue growing: $1.14M → $1.30M (+13.8% over 2 years)[3]
Profitability Quartile P&L — 2024 Data
| Metric | Top 25% (80 centers) | % of Sales | Bottom 25% (80 centers) | % of Sales |
| Gross Sales | $1,490,889 | 100% | $777,982 | 100% |
| EBITDA | $322,400 | 21.6% | -$16,657 | -2.1% |
| Total Owner Benefit | $483,863 | 32.5% | $33,489 | 4.3% |
Historical Profitability Quartile Comparison
| Year | Top 25% EBITDA% | Top 25% Owner Benefit% | Bottom 25% EBITDA% |
| 2022[9] | 22.4% | 30.8% | -1.1% |
| 2023[4] | 20.7% | 32.0% | -1.4% |
| 2024[3] | 21.6% | 32.5% | -2.1% |
Key finding: Bottom-quartile FASTSIGNS centers are consistently EBITDA-negative, averaging -$16,657 EBITDA on ~$778K revenue in 2024. The implied break-even revenue threshold is approximately $700K–$778K for a typical franchise center cost structure.[3][9]
Outside Sales Representative Impact on Revenue
| Year | Centers With OSR Avg Revenue | % of Centers With OSR |
| 2022[9] | $1,518,086 | ~34% (210/622 centers) |
| 2023[4] | $1,647,661 | 36.7% |
| 2024[3] | $1,738,064 | 38.4% |
Outside Sales Rep Productivity (2024 FDD Data)
| Hire Year | Reps | Avg Revenue Generated | Median Revenue Generated |
| 2022 hires[3] | 71 | $399,751 | $279,627 |
| 2023 hires[3] | 83 | $290,268 | $252,600 |
FASTSIGNS Initial Investment & Fee Structure
| Item | Amount |
| Total Franchise Investment | $240,080–$310,569[28] |
| Initial Franchise Fee | $49,750[28] |
| Service Fee (Royalty) — Year 1 | 3% of gross sales[28] |
| Service Fee (Royalty) — Year 2+ | 6% of gross sales[28] |
| Advertising Fund Fee — Year 1 | 1% of gross sales[28] |
| Advertising Fund Fee — Year 2+ | 2% of gross sales[28] |
See also: Failure Modes; High-Performer Practices
Section 4: Signarama Franchise Unit Economics
Signarama (part of United Franchise Group) is one of the largest global sign franchise systems. Unlike FASTSIGNS, Signarama's FDD Item 19 discloses gross sales data only — no COGS, labor costs, net profit, or EBITDA breakdowns are provided.[22]
Average Gross Sales — 2022 vs. 2024
| Segment | 2022 Average | 2024 Average | Growth |
| With Full-Time Outside Sales Person | $1,090,392[14] | $1,309,879[5] | +20.1% |
| Without Full-Time Outside Sales Person | $376,467[14] | $445,662[5] | +18.4% |
| Combined (All Centers) | $798,517[14] | $846,534[5] | +6.0% |
Median vs. Mean Distribution (2022 and 2024)
| Year | Mean (All Centers) | Median (All Centers) | Mean-to-Median Premium |
| 2022[14] | $798,517 | $547,063 | +46% |
| 2024[5] | $846,534 | $519,170 | +63% |
The 38–45% gap between mean and median confirms the distribution is heavily right-skewed by top-performing centers. The median is far more representative of a typical Signarama franchisee.[22]
2022 vs. 2024 Detail Data
| Metric | 2022 (321 Centers) | 2024 (332 Centers) |
| Total centers reporting | 321[14] | 332[5] |
| Centers with OSP (outside sales) | 192 (59.8%)[14] | 154 (46.4%)[22] |
| Centers without OSP | 129 (40.2%)[14] | 178 (53.6%)[22] |
| Revenue range | $202,172–$6,540,656[14] | — |
| % meeting/exceeding avg | 30.5%[14] | 25%[22] |
| With OSP: avg / median | $1,090,392 / $795,500[14] | $1,309,879 / $1,034,404[22] |
| Without OSP: avg / median | $376,467 / $322,266[14] | $445,662 / $377,682[22] |
| Centers exceeding $1M (with OSP) | — | 51.3%[22] |
| Centers exceeding $1M (without OSP) | — | 2.2%[22] |
Having a dedicated outside sales person generates approximately $864K more revenue annually and drives a 2.94× revenue multiple vs. non-OSP centers.[22]
Performance Tiers — Circle of Excellence (2024, U.S. Centers)
| Tier | Revenue Range | Centers | 2024 Avg Revenue | Avg Years Operating | 2022 Avg Revenue |
| Gold | $1M–$2.5M | 64[5] | $1,468,654[5] | 20.7 years[5] | $1,371,242[14] |
| Platinum | $2.5M–$3.5M | 9[5] | $2,914,958[5] | 20.0 years[5] | $3,082,304[14] |
| Diamond | $3.5M+ | 11[5] | $4,914,992[5] | 21.4 years[5] | $4,810,679[14] |
Hall of Fame status requires 6+ years of operation and $1.5M+ in consecutive years; 95 total centers qualify (67 U.S.-based).[5] The average Circle of Excellence tier centers have operated 20+ years — longevity correlates strongly with top performance.[5]
Signarama Franchise Cost Structure (2024)
| Item | Amount |
| Initial Investment Range | $109,182–$188,540[15] |
| Royalty | Greater of $500/month or 6% of sales (capped at $1M; 4% above $1M)[15] |
| Marketing Fund | $840/month or 1% of gross sales (whichever is greater)[15] |
Key finding: Signarama's monthly sales reports are self-reported and "have not been audited" (per FDD disclosure). Twenty-three centers were excluded from 2024 reporting for incomplete data, and reporting selection bias may skew figures upward — centers with declining sales are less likely to submit data.[22]
Section 5: FASTSIGNS vs. Signarama — System Comparison
| Metric | FASTSIGNS (2024) | Signarama (2024) |
| System AUV (all centers) | $1,111,091[3] | $846,534[5] |
| System median | $816,576[3] | $519,170[5] |
| With outside sales rep avg | $1,738,064[3] | $1,309,879[5] |
| Investment range | $240K–$310K[28] | $109K–$189K[15] |
| Full P&L disclosed? | Yes (EBITDA, COGS, labor)[3] | No (gross sales only)[22] |
| EBITDA% (avg benchmarking center) | 12.4%[3] | Not disclosed |
| Break-even revenue estimate | ~$700K–$778K[3] | Not derivable from FDD |
| % centers exceeding $1M (with OSP) | — | 51.3%[22] |
| OSR revenue premium vs. no OSR | +$970K avg[3] | +$864K avg (2.94×)[22] |
Section 6: Gross Margin & COGS Structure
Gross margin benchmarks vary across sources based on whether COGS is defined as materials-only or materials-plus-direct-labor. The FASTSIGNS FDD defines COGS as materials and subcontracted work only (excluding internal labor), yielding the highest reported gross margins.
FASTSIGNS COGS & Gross Margin Trend (FDD Benchmark Survey)
| Year | COGS % of Gross Sales | Gross Margin % |
| 2022[9] | 29.3% | 70.7% |
| 2023[4] | 27.4% | 72.6% |
| 2024[3] | 26.9% | 73.1% |
COGS% has declined consistently over three years, indicating improved materials procurement, pricing power, or product mix shifting toward higher-margin custom work.[3]
Gross Margin Benchmarks by Source Type
| Source | Gross Margin Range | COGS Definition | Data Vintage |
| FASTSIGNS FDD (materials/subcontract only)[3] | 70.7%–73.1% | Materials + subcontract, no direct labor | 2022–2024 |
| Industry 4× COGS Rule (materials only)[24] | ~75% | Materials only | Practitioner rule-of-thumb |
| Humble Sign Co. practitioner estimate[27] | 50%–70% | Likely includes some labor | General estimate |
| InfoTrends wide-format survey (materials + direct labor)[23] | ~50% | Materials (21.3%) + direct labor (28.6%) | 2012–2013 |
Key finding: The 4× COGS multiplier (implying 75% gross margin on materials) and the FASTSIGNS FDD data showing 70.7%–73.1% gross margin are broadly consistent — the FDD figure is slightly lower because it includes subcontracted work within COGS. Independent shops with higher materials costs vs. franchise volume purchasing programs may land closer to the 50–70% practitioner range.[3][24][27]
Industry Pricing Rule: 4× COGS Multiplier
The most widely cited pricing rule in the sign industry:[7][24]
- Formula: Sell price = 4× cost of materials
- Implication: Materials = 25% of selling price → 75% gross margin on materials
- Example: $200 in materials → $800 sale price
Material Cost Benchmarks Per Square Foot
| Material | Cost per Sq Ft |
| Wrap Film | ~$2.60[24] |
| Intermediate Vinyl | ~$1.15[24] |
| Promotional Vinyl | ~$0.90[24] |
| Banner Material | ~$0.55[24] |
| Ink Costs | ~$0.30[24] |
Standard roll media basis: 54"×150' = 675 square feet.[24]
Wide-Format Print Shop COGS Composition (InfoTrends Survey)
| Cost Category | % of Revenue |
| Average materials costs | 21.3%[23] |
| Average labor costs (direct) | 28.6%[23] |
| Combined materials + direct labor | ~49.9%[23] |
| Implied gross margin (net of both) | ~50%[23] |
Note: InfoTrends data from 2012–2013; directional benchmark only. Covers broader mix of print-for-pay operations, not exclusively sign shops.[23]
See also: Profit Economics & Model Theory
Section 7: Labor Costs & Revenue Per Employee
Labor as % of Revenue (FASTSIGNS FDD — Most Reliable Industry Benchmark)
| Year | Total Labor % of Gross Sales | Dollar Amount (Avg Center) | Owner Salary Component | Non-Owner Labor Implied |
| 2022[9] | 33.6% | $382,050 | ~$80,162 (7.0%) | ~26.6% |
| 2023[4] | 35.3% | $424,186 | ~$95,215 (7.9%) | ~27.4% |
| 2024[3] | 36.6% | $474,488 | $108,213 (8.4%) | ~28.2% |
Labor costs are rising faster than revenue — +3.0 percentage points from 2022 to 2024 — consistent with post-COVID tight labor markets and wage inflation.[3]
Revenue Per Employee
| Source | Revenue per Employee | Revenue per Sales Rep | Data Vintage |
| InfoTrends wide-format survey (~60 shops)[23] | $174,000 avg | $965,000 avg | 2012–2013 |
| FASTSIGNS derived (at 5–7 employees)[3] | $159K–$222K | — | 2024 |
| SIC 3993 historical[17] | $95,526 (2000); $90,046 (1995) | — | 1995–2000 |
Key finding: "Wide-format print shops tend to have a lower revenue-per-employee count than commercial printers, probably because fewer processes — such as media handling and finishing — are automated in the wide-format business." — InfoTrends.[23] Revenue-per-employee for wide-format sign shops benchmarks at approximately $174K (InfoTrends 2013), with higher performers likely reaching $200K+ as automation adoption increases.
Labor-Intensive Nature of Wide-Format Sign Production
Both InfoTrends and FASTSIGNS data confirm that sign production is more labor-intensive than commercial print operations:[6][23]
- Manual finishing work: cutting, weeding, laminating, mounting
- Large-format media handling and packing/shipping
- Less automated than commercial printing processes
- Higher material handling cost per square foot vs. digital-only workflows
Northeast and West regions achieve the highest average annual sales per employee; higher regional wages force operational efficiency in these markets.[23]
See also: Profit Economics; High-Performer Practices
Section 8: Pricing Methodology & Job Economics
Shop Rate Benchmarks
| Rate Metric | Value |
| Industry shop rate range | $85–$125/hr[24] |
| Design deposit (typical) | $200[24] |
| Minimum job cost threshold | $100–$200[24] |
| Vehicle lettering (two pickup doors) | $350–$450[24] |
Core Pricing Methodologies
| Method | Formula | Example | Implied Gross Margin |
| Time & Materials[24] | Materials + (Hours × Shop Rate) | $200 + 4 hrs @ $100 = $600 | ~33% (on these figures) |
| COGS Multiplier (industry standard)[7][24] | 4× cost of materials | $200 materials → $800 price | 75% (on materials) |
Average Order Value Benchmarks
| Business Type | Annual Revenue | Est. Daily Order Volume | Implied Avg Order Value |
| Solo/micro operator[26] | Under $200K | — | — |
| Small shop (no installations)[26] | $450K–$500K | — | — |
| High-volume established shop[26] | $1.8M–$3M | 50–100 orders/day | ~$150–$250/order |
For a $1.8M/year shop running 50 orders/day over ~20 working days/month: implied average order value is approximately $150/order.[26]
Key finding: "Sign shops make money on jobs they turn away" — practitioner guidance on selective project acceptance. Small jobs below minimum thresholds ($100–$200 minimum) erode blended margins because setup overhead is fixed regardless of job size.[7][24]
See also: High-Performer Practices; Profit Economics
Section 9: Equipment Investment Benchmarks
Annual Equipment Investment Plans — Signs of the Times Survey Data
| Investment Range | 2024 Planned[1][19] | 2025 Planned[2][21] | 2025 Actual[8][18] | 2026 Planned[8] |
| $0 / No investment | 13% | 15% | 16% (all-time high) | 13% |
| $1–$10K | 24% | 23% | 27% | 29% |
| $10–$20K | 15% | 16% | 12% | 16% |
| $20–$50K | 21% | 19% | 13% | 19% |
| $50–$100K | 16% | 13% | 12% | 14% |
| Over $100K | 11% | 14% | 20% | 9% |
2025 saw a bifurcation: a record 16% of shops made no investment at all, while 20% invested over $100K — indicating capital constraint among struggling shops and aggressive reinvestment among high performers.[8][18]
Equipment Categories Purchased (2025 Actuals)
| Equipment Category | % of Buying Shops |
| Computer/hardware upgrades | 51%[18] |
| Software | 32%[18] |
| Digital printers | 18%[18] |
Startup Capital Requirements (Independent Shops)
| Operation Type | Startup Cost Range | Key Equipment |
| Small-scale / home-based[27] | $5,000–$10,000 | Vinyl cutters, basic printers, design software |
| Full commercial operation[27] | $50,000–$100,000+ | Industrial wide-format printers, CNC routers, design software subscriptions, permits, licensing, insurance |
| FASTSIGNS franchise[28] | $240,080–$310,569 | Full center buildout including real estate, equipment, training, working capital |
| Signarama franchise[15] | $109,182–$188,540 | Full center buildout |
Key finding: The 2025 investment data shows a record 16% of shops made zero equipment investment — the highest "no investment" proportion recorded in the SoTSI survey series. Combined with the 43% increase in shops earning below 10% net profit, this suggests capital-constrained shops are beginning to under-invest as margin pressure intensifies.[8][18]
Section 10: Business Valuation Multiples
Peak Business Valuation publishes sign manufacturing valuation multiples derived from actual transaction data.[30]
Sign Manufacturing Valuation Multiples
| Multiple Type | Typical Range | Best For |
| EBITDA Multiple | 3.50×–4.70×[30] | Established businesses with consistent earnings |
| Revenue Multiple | 0.45×–0.70×[30] | Quick assessment regardless of profitability |
| SDE Multiple | 2.00×–3.50×[30] | Small owner-operated shops (most applicable) |
SDE = EBITDA + owner's salary/compensation add-backs
Implied Valuations at Benchmark Financial Levels
| Scenario | Financial Metric | Multiple Range | Implied Valuation |
| Average FASTSIGNS center (2024)[3][30] | $160,641 EBITDA | 3.5×–4.7× | $562K–$755K |
| $1M revenue shop[30] | $1M revenue | 0.45×–0.70× | $450K–$700K |
| $300K SDE (typical mid-market)[30] | $300K SDE | 2.0×–3.5× | $600K–$1.05M |
| $200K EBITDA business[30] | $200K EBITDA | 3.5×–4.7× | $700K–$940K |
Cross-Check: Multiple Consistency
Revenue multiple internal consistency check: 0.55× revenue ÷ 4.0× EBITDA = 13.75% implied EBITDA margin — consistent with FASTSIGNS' ~12.4% average EBITDA margin, confirming the multiples are internally coherent.[30][3]
Premium Valuation Drivers
Businesses achieving the higher end of valuation multiples typically demonstrate:[30]
- Diversified customer base (no single client >20% of revenue)
- Recurring revenue / long-term contracts
- Strong management team beyond the owner
- Modern equipment fleet
- Digital signage adoption / growth story
Key finding: At FASTSIGNS' average benchmarking center metrics ($1.30M revenue, $160K EBITDA, 12.4% margin), a valuation of $562K–$755K implies a payback period of roughly 2.4–3.3 years at the Total Owner Benefit level ($268,854) — making franchise sign centers attractive to owner-operators but not to financial buyers seeking leveraged returns.[3][30]
See also: Profit Economics; Transformation Case Studies
Section 11: Revenue Range Benchmarks by Business Type
Revenue Ranges Across Business Models
| Business Type | Annual Revenue Range | Source |
| Solo / micro operator | Under $200,000[26] | Community self-reported |
| Small shop (no installation capability) | $450,000–$500,000[26] | Community self-reported |
| FASTSIGNS (system median, 2024) | $816,576[3] | FDD Item 19 |
| Signarama (system median, 2024) | $519,170[5] | FDD Item 19 |
| FASTSIGNS (system average, 2024) | $1,111,091[3] | FDD Item 19 |
| Signarama (system average, 2024) | $846,534[5] | FDD Item 19 |
| Mid-market established operation | $800,000–$1.5M[26] | Community self-reported |
| FASTSIGNS with outside sales rep (2024) | $1,738,064 avg[3] | FDD Item 19 |
| High-volume established operation | $1.8M–$3M[26] | Community self-reported |
| Signarama Diamond tier (2024) | $3.5M+ ($4.9M avg)[5] | FDD Item 19 |
Industry Sales Growth Trends
| Reporting Period | Shops With Higher Sales | Shops With Lower Sales | Flat |
| 2025 actuals (from 2026 survey)[8][18] | 48% | 25% | 27% |
| 2026 expectations[8] | 72% | 5% | 23% |
Historical InfoTrends data showed wide-format shop year-over-year sales growth of 8% (2012–2013 survey).[23]
Industry Structure Bifurcation
| Segment | Business Count CAGR 2020–2025 | Revenue CAGR 2020–2025 | Implication |
| Sign & Banner Shops[16] | +7.7% | -1.4% | Fragmenting — more but smaller players |
| Billboard & Sign Manufacturing[25] | ~0.1% | +2.4% | Consolidating — fewer, larger operators |
Commodity sign printing is fragmenting into many small operations; professional sign manufacturing is consolidating into fewer, larger players.[16][25]
Section 12: Data Quality & Comparability Notes
Source Reliability Hierarchy
| Source Type | Reliability | Caveats |
| FASTSIGNS FDD Item 19 (P&L data)[3] | Highest — audited, verified | Voluntary reporter bias (~$100K above system AUV); franchise overhead not representative of indie shops |
| SoTSI Annual Survey (net profit distributions)[1][2][8] | High — consistent methodology, annual series | Self-reported ranges, not dollar amounts; no revenue-size stratification |
| Signarama FDD Item 19 (gross sales only)[22] | Moderate — self-reported, unaudited | Per FDD: "monthly sales reports have not been audited"; 23 centers excluded 2024 |
| IBISWorld industry analysis[16][25] | Moderate — modeled estimates | Includes micro/home-based operators; establishment count distorts per-unit averages |
| InfoTrends wide-format survey[23] | Moderate (for era) — ~60 shops | 2012–2013 vintage; pre-dates recent digital transformation; not exclusively sign shops |
| Community self-reported (Signs101 forum)[26] | Low — anecdotal, highly variable | Selection bias toward active/experienced practitioners; no standardized definitions |
| Practitioner blog estimates[27] | Low — general guidance only | Methodology and sample not disclosed |
Key Definitional Inconsistencies
- Gross margin: FASTSIGNS FDD uses materials/subcontract-only COGS (yielding 73.1%); InfoTrends uses materials + direct labor COGS (yielding ~50%); practitioner estimates vary.[3][23]
- Net profit vs. EBITDA vs. Owner Benefit: SoTSI reports "net profit" without defining whether it includes or excludes owner compensation. FASTSIGNS distinguishes EBITDA (12.4%), Owner Salary add-back (8.4%), and Total Owner Benefit (20.8%).[3]
- Average vs. median: For both FASTSIGNS ($1.11M avg vs. $817K median) and Signarama ($847K avg vs. $519K median), the mean is materially inflated by top performers. The median is more representative of a typical franchisee.[3][5]
- IBISWorld establishment count distortion: The derived ~$55K revenue-per-establishment figure is meaningless for benchmarking operating sign shops — the count includes thousands of home-based and part-time micro-operators.[16]
Key finding: The FASTSIGNS FDD Item 19 P&L data — covering 319–373 centers over three years with audited financials — is the single most reliable comprehensive cost structure benchmark available for the sign industry. It should be treated as the primary reference for COGS%, labor%, EBITDA%, and owner compensation ratios. SoTSI margin distribution surveys provide the best cross-system profitability picture but at the distribution level only, not absolute dollar amounts.[3][1][2][8]
Sources
- 2024 State of the Sign Industry - Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2025 State of the Sign Industry - Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise Review 2026: Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and/or Profits - Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise Review 2025: Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and/or Profits - Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Signarama Franchise Review 2026: Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and/or Profits - Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- InfoTrends Metrics for Wide-Format Print Shops vs. Commercial Printing Shops - PIWorld (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- How Do We Price in the Digital Printing and Sign Industry? - Premium Sign Supplies (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2026 State of the Sign Industry - Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise: $1.02M Average Sales vs. $240K-$310K Franchise Cost - Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2024 State of the Sign Industry Survey — Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2025 State of the Sign Industry Survey — Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS FDD Talk 2024 Review — Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and Profits (Franchise Chatter) (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise Review 2026 — Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and Profits (Franchise Chatter) (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Signarama FDD Talk 2024 Review — $798K Average Sales (Franchise Chatter) (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Signarama Franchise Review 2026 — Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and Profits (Franchise Chatter) (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Sign & Banner Shops in the US Industry Analysis 2025 — IBISWorld (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- SIC 3993 Signs and Advertising Specialties — Reference for Business (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2026 State of the Sign Industry Survey — Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2024 State of the Sign Industry Survey — Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise Review 2026: Costs, Fees, News, Average Revenues and/or Profits — Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- 2025 State of the Sign Industry Survey — Signs of the Times (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- SIGNARAMA Franchise Review 2026: Costs, Fees, News, Average Revenues and/or Profits — Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- InfoTrends Metrics for Wide-Format Print Shops vs. Commercial Printing Shops — PI World (Printing Impressions) (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- How Do We Price in the Digital Printing and Sign Industry? — Premium Sign Supplies (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Billboard & Sign Manufacturing in the US — IBISWorld Industry Analysis 2025/2026 (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Average Yearly Revenue for Sign Shop — Signs101.com Forum Thread (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Is Sign Making Business Profitable? — Humble Sign Co. (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise Review 2024: Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and/or Profits — Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- FASTSIGNS Franchise Review 2025: Costs, Fees, Average Revenues and/or Profits — Franchise Chatter (retrieved 2026-03-30)
- Sign Manufacturing Valuation Multiples — Peak Business Valuation (retrieved 2026-03-30)
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