Franchise Agreements: the Fdd, the Agreement, and What State Law Adds



Franchise agreements are governed by mandatory FTC disclosure requirements, a 23-item disclosure document, and state franchise laws.

The franchise agreement is the document that binds the franchisee to a system for the duration of the relationship, but it is not the document the franchisee receives first. The Franchise Disclosure Document arrives first, at least 14 days before any agreement is signed or any money changes hands, and it contains information about the franchisor's business, litigation history, financial condition, fees, territorial rights, and the financial performance of existing units that the franchisee should understand before the agreement is reviewed. The agreement itself is almost always non-negotiable for most prospective franchisees, drafted entirely by the franchisor, and heavily weighted in the franchisor's favor. Understanding what the FDD reveals and what the agreement requires, and knowing which protections state law adds regardless of what the contract says, is the work of franchise due diligence.

Franchise agreements are governed by the FTC Franchise Rule at 16 C.F.R. Part 436, which defines a franchise as any continuing commercial relationship under which the franchisee is granted the right to operate a business using the franchisor's trademark, the franchisor has a significant level of control over the franchisee's method of operation or provides significant assistance, and the franchisee is required to pay a fee; the Franchise Disclosure Document requirements that mandate disclosure of 23 specific categories of information at least 14 days before any franchise agreement is signed or consideration is paid; Lanham Act obligations that require the franchisor to maintain quality control over franchisees' use of the licensed marks; and state franchise registration and relationship laws in more than a dozen states that impose additional disclosure, registration, and relationship protections beyond the federal baseline.

Contents


1. What Franchise Agreements Are and How the Ftc Franchise Rule Defines a Franchise


The FTC's three-part definition of a franchise determines whether a business arrangement triggers the federal disclosure obligations and the regulatory framework that protects prospective franchisees.

The three elements are: the franchisee is granted the right to offer, sell, or distribute goods or services under the franchisor's trademark; the franchisor has a significant level of control over, or provides significant assistance to, the franchisee's method of operation; and the franchisee is required to pay a fee of $600 or more during the first six months of operation. All three elements must be present. An arrangement that involves a trademark license without operational control or assistance does not meet the franchise definition, though it may still trigger state business opportunity laws. An arrangement that involves significant operational control but no trademark grant is not a franchise under the FTC Rule, even if it feels like one commercially.

The 14-day disclosure period is mandatory. A franchisor who provides the FDD fewer than 14 days before the signing date or before any payment has violated the FTC Franchise Rule regardless of whether the franchisee claimed to need less time. The 14 days begins when the franchisee actually receives the complete, current FDD, not when it is sent. A franchisor who emails the FDD at 11:00 p.m. .n a Tuesday cannot count that Tuesday as Day 1 of the 14-day period for purposes of a Friday morning signing. The 14-day period exists to give prospective franchisees meaningful time to review the disclosure, consult advisors, and investigate the franchise before committing, and it cannot be waived by agreement. Franchise law and franchise disclosure document review requires confirming the 14-day period was observed and the FDD was current before the signing date.



What the 23-Item Fdd Must Disclose and How Prospective Franchisees Should Use It


The Franchise Disclosure Document organizes its required disclosures into 23 items, each addressing a specific category of information that the FTC determined prospective franchisees need to make an informed decision.

The most consequential items for most franchisees are Item 6, which discloses all fees the franchisee must pay including the initial franchise fee, royalties, advertising fund contributions, technology fees, and renewal fees; Item 12, which describes the franchisee's territorial rights and whether the franchisor or its affiliates can compete within or near the territory; Item 19, which contains financial performance representations about the historical or projected financial performance of existing franchise units; Item 20, which provides a list of current and former franchisees the prospective franchisee may contact; and Item 21, which contains the franchisor's audited financial statements for the prior three fiscal years. Item 19 is voluntary: franchisors are not required to include financial performance representations, but if they include any, the representations must comply with the FTC Rule's accuracy and substantiation requirements. A franchisor that makes no Item 19 disclosure gives the prospective franchisee no FTC-sanctioned basis for projecting revenues.

Item 20's list of former franchisees is one of the most valuable and underused due diligence resources available. Former franchisees who exited the system within the past three years are listed with their contact information, and they have no contractual obligation to the franchisor that would prevent them from speaking candidly. A prospective franchisee who contacts ten or fifteen former franchisees and asks why they left the system, whether the franchisor's support matched what was represented, and whether they would make the same investment again has obtained information that no document review can replicate.

Fdd ItemWhat It DisclosesWhy It Matters
Item 6All fees (initial, royalties, advertising, renewal, technology)Total cost of entry and ongoing obligation
Item 12Territorial rights; franchisor competition rightsWhether territory protects or permits competition
Item 19Financial performance representations (voluntary)Only sanctioned basis for revenue projections
Item 20Current and former franchisees with contact infoMost valuable due diligence resource available
Item 21Franchisor's audited financial statements (3 years)Franchisor's financial health and stability


2. What Franchise Agreement Terms Control and What Each Key Provision Means


The franchise agreement translates the FDD's disclosures into binding obligations, and its terms govern the relationship for the full duration of the franchise, which is typically 10 to 20 years including renewal periods.

The grant clause defines the rights the franchisee receives: the right to use the franchised system, the licensed marks, and the proprietary methods under the operations manual, within the defined territory, for the defined term. The operations manual is incorporated by reference but typically not attached to the agreement, and its contents can be changed by the franchisor during the term without the franchisee's consent, subject to any limitations the agreement imposes on material modifications. A franchisee who signs an agreement without reviewing the current operations manual has accepted obligations whose full content the agreement does not disclose. The term and renewal provisions set the initial license period and the conditions under which the franchisee may renew, which typically require the franchisee to be in good standing, execute the then-current form of franchise agreement, complete any required remodeling or upgrades, and pay a renewal fee.

Royalties are the ongoing financial obligation that most significantly affects franchise economics. A royalty of 6 percent of gross sales sounds manageable until the franchisee also owes 2 percent to the national advertising fund, 1 percent to a regional cooperative, technology fees, and training fees, reducing the effective margin below what the Item 19 disclosure projected. The aggregate financial obligation, not the royalty rate alone, is the correct figure for evaluating franchise economics. Advertising fund contributions are typically pooled with other franchisees' contributions and controlled by the franchisor with limited franchisee input, and the agreement usually gives the franchisor broad discretion over how the fund is spent and does not guarantee that the funds will be spent in the franchisee's market. Franchise disputes and franchise litigation frequently center on advertising fund management and the gap between promotional support represented in Item 19 and the support actually delivered.



How Territorial Rights, Transfer Provisions, and Post-Termination Obligations Work


Territorial rights in a franchise agreement are not automatically exclusive, and the level of territorial protection the franchisee receives depends entirely on what the agreement specifically grants.

An exclusive territory grants the franchisee the right to be the only franchisee or company-operated unit within a defined geographic area and prevents the franchisor from establishing competing units within that territory. A protected territory may give the franchisee some protection while preserving the franchisor's right to sell directly, operate through alternative channels, or establish units at non-traditional locations such as airports or stadiums within the territory. A non-exclusive territory or a location-only grant gives the franchisee no geographic protection at all. Prospective franchisees who assumed their territory was exclusive based on marketing representations that were not memorialized in the agreement have no contractual basis to challenge the franchisor's subsequent competition within the area.

Transfer provisions control whether and how the franchisee can sell the business. Most franchise agreements require the franchisor's consent to any transfer, give the franchisor the right of first refusal on a proposed sale, require the buyer to qualify under the franchisor's then-current standards and complete training, and require the selling franchisee to pay a transfer fee. Post-termination obligations typically include a non-compete covenant, a covenant not to use or disclose the proprietary system or trade secrets, an obligation to de-identify the premises and return all proprietary materials, and the assignment of any telephone numbers or digital identifiers associated with the business. The geographic scope and duration of the non-compete must comply with applicable state law, which varies significantly, and an overly broad non-compete may be narrowed or voided by a court while the core post-termination obligations remain.


International and master franchise arrangements operate under a different structure from single-unit domestic franchise agreements. A master franchise agreement grants an individual or entity the right to sublicense the franchise system to sub-franchisees within a defined territory, typically a country or large region, in exchange for a share of sublicense fees and sub-franchisee royalties. Area development agreements grant the right to develop and operate multiple units within a territory according to a development schedule, without the right to sublicense. Both structures require the master franchisee or area developer to meet development milestones and may give the franchisor termination rights if the schedule is not met. International franchise arrangements must also address local law compliance, currency and remittance issues, trademark registration in the target country, import and export restrictions, local employment law for any staff, and the applicable dispute resolution forum. Franchise M&A and franchise resales practice involves the additional layer of transferring master or area development rights as part of any transaction.



3. What State Franchise Laws Add and How They Override the Franchise Agreement


Federal franchise law establishes a disclosure floor, not a ceiling, and approximately 15 states have enacted their own franchise registration and relationship laws that impose obligations the federal rule does not require and protections the franchise agreement typically does not provide.

State franchise registration laws in states including California, Illinois, Maryland, Minnesota, New York, Virginia, and Washington require franchisors to register their FDD with a state regulator before offering or selling franchises in the state, and to receive approval of the registration before any sale is made. A franchise sold in a registration state without a current, approved registration is voidable by the franchisee and may expose the franchisor to civil and administrative penalties. State regulators review the FDD for accuracy, completeness, and compliance with state disclosure requirements that may differ from or add to the federal 23-item format, and they may require modifications to the FDD or the franchise agreement as a condition of registration approval. A franchisor who uses a federally compliant FDD in a registration state without obtaining state approval has not satisfied its disclosure obligations in that state.

State franchise relationship laws in states including California, Hawaii, Iowa, Minnesota, New Jersey, and others regulate the ongoing relationship between franchisors and franchisees in ways that the federal rule does not. These laws may require good cause for termination rather than allowing the franchisor to terminate on breach of any contract provision, may require notice and cure periods before termination even when the agreement does not, may restrict the franchisor's right to refuse renewal, and may prohibit non-compete provisions that are inconsistent with state law. A franchise agreement governed by a state with strong relationship protections may be substantially more favorable to the franchisee than the agreement's plain language suggests, because the statutory protections apply regardless of what the contract says and regardless of a governing law clause that attempts to apply the law of a different state.



How Termination, Renewal, and Transfer Rights Work under State Franchise Law


Franchise agreements give franchisors broad termination rights, but in states with franchise relationship laws, those rights are constrained by statutory good cause requirements that apply independently of the contract.

In states with good cause termination requirements, the franchisor must demonstrate that the franchisee materially breached the agreement and that the breach was not cured within the statutory notice period before termination can be effective. Termination for trivial violations, pretextual defaults, or reasons not recognized as good cause under the applicable statute can expose the franchisor to damages claims, injunctions, and, in some states, statutory penalties. A franchisor that terminates a franchise relationship without a documented pattern of material, uncured defaults in a good cause state has taken an action that the agreement may authorize but the law does not permit.

Renewal rights under state law may require the franchisor to offer a renewal on terms that are not materially different from the original agreement, or may give the franchisee a right of renewal that the agreement does not independently provide. A franchise agreement that purports to give the franchisor complete discretion over whether to renew may be subject to the state's implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing or to a statutory renewal right that limits that discretion. Transfer provisions are similarly affected: a state that restricts unreasonable refusals to consent to transfer may give the franchisee transfer rights that the agreement's language, standing alone, does not. Franchise insolvency and small business transactions practice in franchise contexts requires identifying the applicable state's franchise relationship law before advising on any termination, renewal, or transfer dispute.



4. Frequently Asked Questions about Franchise Agreements


Franchise agreement questions arrive from prospective franchisees who received an FDD and want to understand what they are being asked to sign, from existing franchisees facing termination or non-renewal who want to understand what rights they have, from entrepreneurs evaluating whether to franchise their business, and from parties involved in a franchise resale who need to understand what the agreement permits.



What Is a Franchise Agreement and How Does It Differ from the Fdd


A franchise agreement is the binding contract that governs the franchisee's rights and obligations throughout the franchise relationship, covering fees, territory, operations standards, renewal, transfer, and termination. The Franchise Disclosure Document is the pre-sale disclosure the franchisor must provide at least 14 days before any agreement is signed or money is paid. The FDD discloses information about the franchisor, the system, and existing franchisees, but it is not itself a contract. The franchise agreement, not the FDD, creates binding obligations. Many franchisees are surprised to discover that representations in the FDD, particularly about financial performance, territorial protection, and support, do not automatically become contractual obligations unless they are incorporated into the agreement itself.



Can a Franchise Agreement Be Negotiated?


Most franchise agreements are offered on a take-it-or-leave-it basis, particularly by established franchisors with large systems where uniformity across franchisees is operationally important. Smaller or newer franchisors may have more flexibility. Even where the core operating terms are fixed, franchisors sometimes negotiate ancillary provisions such as the scope of territory, the personal guarantee terms, the transfer fee amount, development schedule milestones, and the conditions for renewal. The more consequential negotiation opportunity for most prospective franchisees is not in the agreement itself but in the pre-signing due diligence: understanding what the FDD actually discloses before committing, speaking with former and current franchisees about the reality of the system, and independently verifying any financial representations made during the sales process.



What Protections Do State Franchise Laws Provide That the Federal Rule Does Not?


State franchise registration laws in about 15 states require franchisors to register their FDD with a state regulator and obtain approval before selling franchises in the state. A franchise sold without a current state registration is voidable by the franchisee. State franchise relationship laws in a smaller number of states impose good cause requirements for termination, cure rights before termination is effective, renewal protections, and restrictions on non-compete provisions that apply regardless of what the franchise agreement says. A franchise agreement in a relationship law state is effectively a different contract than the same agreement in a non-relationship law state, because the statutory protections override the franchisor-favorable terms that the agreement would otherwise enforce.



What Should a Franchisee Review before Signing a Franchise Agreement?


The most important pre-signing steps are reviewing Item 6 of the FDD to understand the total financial commitment, not just the royalty rate; reviewing Item 12 to understand exactly what territorial protection is provided and what the franchisor can do within or near the territory; reviewing Item 19 to see whether financial performance representations are included and whether they reflect a system with enough franchisees and consistent enough results to be meaningful; contacting former franchisees listed in Item 20 to ask about their experience with the system; reviewing the agreement's termination provisions to understand what defaults trigger the franchisor's rights and whether cure periods are provided; and confirming whether the state's franchise relationship law provides any protections beyond what the agreement says. Each of these steps requires time, and the 14-day disclosure period exists to ensure that time is available before any commitment is made.


10 Jun, 2026


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