DATA STUDY · U.S. CENSUS COUNTY BUSINESS PATTERNS 2022

The Most Mom-and-Pop Industries in America

We analyzed 49 U.S. industries using Census County Business Patterns data, scoring each 0-100 on how fragmented — how “mom-and-pop” — its ownership structure is. Food trucks ranks #1, the most fragmented industry in the country, at an average of just 3.2 employees per location. Golf courses sit at the other end, averaging 30.3 employees per location. If you’re using this to pick an acquisition target, the guide to buying a business covers valuing and financing one once you’ve chosen a category.

Key findings

  • Most fragmented, top 3: Food trucks, Self-storage facilities, Laundromats — all score 95+/100, averaging under 4 employees per location.
  • Most consolidated, top 3: Golf courses, Hotels, Full-service restaurants — all average 20+ employees per location and score under 14/100.
  • Biggest surprise: Real estate agencies score 84/100 — the largest establishment count of any highly fragmented industry (165,585 nationally), yet still averages just 2.5 employees per office.
  • Payroll scales with consolidation: Golf courses average $1,191,470 in annual payroll per location — over 13x food trucks’ $88,459.
  • For buyers: high fragmentation means more small, independently owned targets and more room for a roll-up strategy — no chain has captured the category yet.
  • For starters: low fragmentation (golf courses, hotels, full-service restaurants) signals a category where scale, capital, and existing operators already have the advantage — harder to break in solo.

All 49 industries, ranked

Sort any column. 100 = most fragmented (mom-and-pop), 0 = most consolidated (chain/institutional).

1Food trucks
98
11,6113.2$88,459
2Self-storage facilities
97
18,2862.6$105,154
3Laundromats
95
10,9113.8$95,487
4Nail salons
90
33,8024.3$108,778
5Barber shops
89
7,3633.9$121,952
6Convenience stores
88
36,4264.8$106,760
7Chiropractors
88
40,1793.7$145,537
8Hair salons
84
82,9644.7$141,650
9Florists
84
11,9994.8$118,124
10Real estate agencies
84
165,5852.5$206,919
11Bed & breakfasts
80
2,4644.9$143,051
12Auto repair shops
74
84,1014.6$228,426
13Liquor stores
74
36,1735.4$146,880
14RV parks & campgrounds
73
4,9725.2$189,487
15Dry cleaners
72
16,3945.7$155,875
16Tattoo parlors
70
29,9365.7$167,444
17Pet grooming & boarding
66
24,2676.5$177,041
18Painting contractors
65
37,9635.2$275,358
19Bookkeeping & accounting services
63
46,4525.3$294,358
20Optometrists
52
22,7816.5$303,868
21Gas stations
51
96,4868.6$227,722
22Car washes
50
19,4638.5$237,952
23Landscaping services
49
117,1096.6$328,945
24Funeral homes
49
15,3757.2$300,343
25Coffee shops
46
78,85611.1$226,604
26Local trucking
46
45,4367.0$340,466
27Bars
46
40,25810.0$247,432
28Used car dealers
41
25,6077.3$378,839
29Insurance agencies
40
135,1006.0$503,590
30Bakeries
39
8,97910.4$323,000
31Dental offices
38
136,1407.6$437,633
32Taxi & rideshare services
35
3,1626.8$498,790
33Law offices
33
166,9726.5$782,657
34Gyms & fitness centers
32
40,78615.9$296,448
35Pest control
32
16,0808.7$437,787
36Daycares
29
80,12012.1$343,856
37Roofing contractors
28
24,5328.4$542,194
38Moving companies
25
9,80310.8$480,103
39Limited-service restaurants
24
265,17917.8$354,540
40Janitorial services
21
67,29515.9$457,336
41Vending machine operators
21
3,24312.0$488,980
42Bowling alleys
21
3,30520.1$419,554
43HVAC & plumbing contractors
19
109,60110.7$750,313
44Electricians
14
81,84211.6$835,918
45Veterinary services
14
34,00013.8$668,420
46Movie theaters
14
4,15826.2$474,122
47Full-service restaurants
9
257,28220.2$544,508
48Hotels
3
56,92024.0$859,577
49Golf courses
0
10,07630.3$1,191,470

Methodology

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, County Business Patterns, 2022 national-level data — establishments, employees, and annual payroll by NAICS industry.

Score formula: Fragmentation Score (0-100, 100=most fragmented/mom-and-pop, 0=most consolidated): for each industry compute avg employees per establishment and avg annual payroll per establishment (both from Census CBP national totals). Rank-normalize each metric across all industries in this set (percentile rank, lower avg = higher percentile = more fragmented), average the two percentiles, scale to 0-100, round to nearest integer.

What it means: the score isn’t a measure of company count or market size — it’s a measure of average operating scale. A high score means the typical location in that industry is small (few employees, low payroll) — the signature of an owner-operator business rather than a chain with centralized management.

Limitations: these are national aggregates — fragmentation can vary by metro or region within an industry. NAICS codes group related but non-identical businesses at a fixed level of granularity, so some categories blend adjacent sub-industries. Most importantly, CBP counts only employer establishments — businesses with at least one paid employee. It excludes solo, nonemployer businesses (a huge share of true mom-and-pop operations, like independent contractors and single-owner shops with no staff), so the real-world fragmentation of every industry here is almost certainly higher than what this data can show.

HOW TO CITE THIS DATA

Cite as: “IdeaCrystal Fragmentation Index, based on U.S. Census County Business Patterns (CBP) data.” Link to https://ideacrystal.com/en/data/most-mom-and-pop-industries.

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Fragmentation tells you the category has room for a buyer — it doesn’t tell you if one specific listing is priced fairly.