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Franchise Buyer's Guide

How to Buy a Franchise: Complete Guide for 2026

22 min read
Updated April 2026
For first-time franchise buyers

Buying a franchise gives you a proven operating model, brand recognition, and a support system that independent businesses can't match. But franchises come with real costs, legally binding agreements, and ongoing obligations you must understand before signing. This guide covers everything: what franchise ownership actually costs, how to read a Franchise Disclosure Document, how to validate with existing franchisees, the right financing structures, and the red flags that experienced buyers catch before it's too late.

Introduction

Franchise vs. Independent Business: Which Is Right for You?

The franchise vs. independent debate has a clear answer once you define what kind of owner you want to be. Franchises aren't better or worse than independent businesses — they're different risk profiles, different obligations, and different paths to profitability. The mistake is choosing one without understanding the actual tradeoffs.

Factor Franchise Independent Business
Operating System Provided — SOPs, training, and tech stack included You Inherit It — quality varies widely by seller
Brand Recognition Established — regional or national name recognition Local Only — built over years in a specific market
SBA Lender Confidence Higher — franchises have FDD performance track records Depends — on cash flow history and collateral
Ongoing Fees Royalties — typically 4–8% of gross revenue, forever None — 100% of profit stays with the owner
Creative Control Limited — the FDD governs marketing, operations, and suppliers Full — pivot, rebrand, or change the model freely
Exit Flexibility Restricted — franchisor approval required for resale Full Flexibility — sell to any qualified buyer
Best For First-time buyers who want structure and a proven playbook Experienced operators who want freedom and full economics
The core franchise proposition

You're paying ongoing royalties to avoid two of the hardest problems in business: figuring out the operating model and building brand credibility from scratch. That's a rational trade — if the brand and system are actually worth what you're paying for them. The FDD will tell you whether they are.

Section 01

What Does It Actually Cost to Buy a Franchise?

Most people underestimate franchise costs because they focus only on the initial franchise fee. The real number — what you need to open the doors and stay solvent for six months — is usually 3–5x the franchise fee alone. Plan for all four cost buckets before committing to anything.

The Four Cost Components

01

Initial Franchise Fee — The Rights Payment

This is the one-time fee you pay the franchisor for the right to operate under their brand and system. Ranges from $10,000 for home-based service concepts to $50,000–$100,000 for food and fitness brands. Multi-unit agreements often include discounts on additional territory fees. This fee is non-refundable in most cases once you sign.

02

Buildout & Equipment — Often the Largest Single Cost

For brick-and-mortar franchises, buildout is typically the biggest line item. A fast-casual restaurant buildout runs $200,000–$600,000. A fitness studio: $150,000–$400,000. A home services franchise (no physical location): $10,000–$50,000 in vehicles and equipment. Read Item 7 of the FDD for the franchisor's disclosed range — it's the most accurate baseline you have.

03

Ongoing Royalties — The Permanent Cost of the Brand

Royalties are paid forever, calculated as a percentage of gross revenue (not profit). Typical ranges: 4–6% for service franchises, 5–8% for food concepts, 6–10% for premium brands. Some franchisors also charge a marketing/advertising fund fee of 1–3% on top of royalties. At $500K annual revenue with a 6% royalty + 2% marketing fee, that's $40,000/year — before taxes, before debt service.

04

Working Capital — The Reserve You Cannot Skip

Working capital covers operating losses during the ramp period while revenue builds to sustainable levels. Most franchisors recommend 3–6 months of operating expenses in reserve. Undercapitalized franchisees are the most common cause of early franchise failure — not bad systems, not bad markets. Budget $30,000–$100,000 minimum depending on your concept's ramp timeline. Include this in your financing package, not as an afterthought.

Total Investment Ranges by Category

Franchise Category Typical Total Investment Royalty Range Ramp Time to Profitability
Home Services $80K – $250K 5–8% 3–9 months
Food & Beverage (QSR) $250K – $750K 4–6% 9–18 months
Fitness & Wellness $200K – $600K 6–8% 6–15 months
Business Services $100K – $350K 6–10% 3–9 months
Senior Care $100K – $200K 5–7% 4–10 months
Don't forget the resale premium

If you're buying an existing franchise unit (a resale rather than a new territory), add a business valuation on top of buildout costs. Resale franchises are typically valued at 2–4x SDE, meaning a profitable unit generating $100K/year in seller's discretionary earnings might trade at $200K–$400K above asset value.

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Section 02

Understanding the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD)

The FDD is the most important document in a franchise purchase. Federal law (the FTC Franchise Rule) requires franchisors to give you the FDD at least 14 calendar days before you sign any agreement or pay any money. Don't let a franchisor rush this timeline — that alone is a red flag.

The FDD has 23 standardized "Items." You need to understand all of them, but five are decisive:

The Five FDD Items That Matter Most

1

Item 5 & 6 — Initial Fees and Other Fees

Item 5 discloses the initial franchise fee and whether it's refundable. Item 6 lists every ongoing fee: royalties, marketing contributions, technology fees, training fees, renewal fees, and transfer fees. Read every line. Some brands collect 12–15 distinct fee categories. Model out your total fee burden as a percentage of projected revenue before making any other decision.

2

Item 7 — Estimated Initial Investment

Item 7 breaks down the full cost to open: franchise fee, real estate/lease deposits, construction and buildout, equipment, training expenses, opening inventory, and the working capital reserve. The range disclosed here is your floor — actual costs can exceed the high end. Get quotes from contractors and suppliers in your specific market before finalizing your budget.

3

Item 12 — Territory

Does your territory have exclusive protection, or can the franchisor open competing units nearby? Can they sell through alternative channels (online, ghost kitchens, corporate-owned units) that cannibalize your revenue? Territory encroachment is one of the most common franchisee grievances. Understand exactly what you own — and what you don't — before signing.

4

Item 19 — Financial Performance Representations

This is the most scrutinized item in any FDD. If the franchisor includes it (it's optional), it shows actual historical performance data for existing franchise units. Look for median unit-level revenue, not just averages (averages get skewed by top performers). Compare Item 19 numbers to your projected expenses from Item 7 to model realistic profitability. If Item 19 is absent, ask why — and call franchisees directly.

5

Item 20 — Outlets and Franchisee Information

Item 20 discloses the number of units opened, closed, and terminated in each of the past three years — and provides a list of every current franchisee with contact information. The closure rate tells you what the franchisor's published disclosure omits. The franchisee list is your research goldmine. Use it. Every call you make is due diligence.

Hire a franchise attorney — not a general business attorney

FDD review requires specialized expertise. A franchise-specific attorney knows which clauses are standard, which are unusual, and which are genuinely dangerous. Budget $1,500–$3,500 for a proper FDD review. It is not optional on a $200K+ investment.

Section 03

The Franchise Buying Process: Step by Step

The franchise buying process typically takes 60–120 days from initial contact to signing. Each step has specific objectives and deliverables — rushing any one of them creates downstream risk.

01

Research & Shortlist (Weeks 1–3)

Define your investment range, preferred categories, lifestyle requirements, and geographic target area. Research 10–15 brands. Narrow to 3–5 for serious exploration. Use franchise directories, broker networks like Venture Atlas, and industry associations (IFA). Avoid making first contact until you've done enough research to ask meaningful questions — franchisors remember your first impression.

02

Initial Discovery Call & FDD Receipt (Weeks 2–4)

Complete the franchisor's application and schedule a discovery call. If the fit is mutual, they'll provide the FDD — legally required at least 14 days before any signing. Do not discuss signing timelines or express urgency during discovery. Your leverage is your optionality. Treat this like evaluating a business partnership, not buying a product.

03

FDD Review & Attorney Consultation (Weeks 3–5)

Send the FDD to your franchise attorney immediately. Study Items 5, 6, 7, 12, 19, and 20 yourself before your attorney review. Prepare specific questions about territory protection, renewal terms, termination triggers, and transfer rights. Many franchise agreements are non-negotiable on most clauses — your attorney will tell you which items to push on and which battles to pick.

04

Franchisee Validation Calls (Weeks 4–6)

Call at least 10–15 franchisees from the Item 20 list. Don't let the franchisor hand-pick who you speak with — go to Item 20, pick randomly, and include some who recently closed or transferred units. Ask about actual revenue vs. Item 19 projections, the quality of corporate support, territory integrity, and whether they'd buy the franchise again. This is the most valuable due diligence you'll do.

05

Discovery Day (Week 5–7)

Most franchisors require a formal Discovery Day visit at their headquarters before awarding a franchise. Come prepared with specific questions from your FDD review and validation calls. Meet the leadership team, operations staff, and support personnel you'll actually work with post-launch. Assess culture fit — you're entering a long-term relationship. The franchisor is also evaluating you.

06

Site Selection & Lease Negotiation (Weeks 6–10)

For brick-and-mortar concepts, site selection is one of the most critical decisions in the entire process. Franchisors typically have real estate support teams and approved site criteria — use them, but also hire an independent commercial real estate broker who represents your interests, not the franchisor's. Get the lease reviewed by your attorney before signing. A bad lease in a bad location is a death sentence regardless of the brand.

07

Signing the Franchise Agreement (Week 8–12)

The franchise agreement is the binding legal contract. It is typically non-negotiable on most terms, but your attorney should review every clause — especially termination triggers, renewal conditions, post-termination non-competes, and dispute resolution requirements. Understand what can cause the franchisor to terminate your agreement and what happens to your investment if they do. Sign only when you fully understand what you're agreeing to.

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Section 04

Franchise Financing: SBA, Franchisor Programs, and ROBS

Franchises are among the most lender-friendly business purchases available. The FDD's track record of franchisee performance, combined with brand name recognition, gives lenders more underwriting comfort than most independent business acquisitions. You have three primary financing options.

SBA 7(a) Loans — The Most Common Franchise Financing Tool

The SBA 7(a) program is the dominant financing vehicle for franchise purchases in the $100K–$5M range. Key terms:

  • Down payment: 10–15% of total project cost (including working capital)
  • Loan amounts: Up to $5M, covering franchise fee, buildout, equipment, and working capital
  • Interest rates: Prime + 2.25–2.75% (variable), currently in the 10–11% range
  • Terms: Up to 10 years (25 years if real estate is included)
  • SBA Franchise Registry: Over 1,800 franchise brands are pre-approved on the SBA Franchise Registry, significantly speeding up loan processing

Check the SBA Franchise Registry before selecting a franchise — brands on the registry get faster processing times and higher lender confidence. Brands not on the registry require additional review and can slow your timeline by 30–60 days.

Franchisor Financing Programs

Some franchisors offer in-house financing for qualified buyers — typically for the initial franchise fee or equipment, not the full investment. Terms vary significantly. Advantages: streamlined process, relationship-driven underwriting, sometimes deferred fees for high-potential buyers. Disadvantages: typically higher interest rates than SBA, and the franchisor becomes both your business partner and your lender.

When franchisor financing makes sense

If a top-tier franchise offers fee deferral or partial financing for qualified buyers in high-demand markets, it can be a smart supplement to an SBA loan. Never rely on it as your primary financing source — most in-house programs cover only a fraction of total investment.

ROBS — Rollover for Business Startups

ROBS allows you to use existing retirement account funds (401k, IRA) to fund your franchise equity without early withdrawal penalties or taxes. The structure requires forming a C-corporation, establishing a new retirement plan, and rolling funds into that plan before investing in the franchise. ROBS is IRS-approved but requires specialized legal and administrative setup ($5,000–$10,000 in setup costs plus ongoing compliance). It's most commonly used as the equity injection for an SBA loan — covering the 10–15% down payment requirement with retirement funds instead of liquid savings.

Financing Type Best For Down Payment Required Typical Rate
SBA 7(a) Most franchise buyers, $100K–$5M projects 10–15% Prime + 2.25–2.75%
Franchisor Financing Supplement to SBA, specific brands only Varies Higher than SBA
ROBS Buyers with significant retirement savings 0% (uses retirement funds) No interest (equity)
Conventional Bank Loan Buyers with strong collateral, established credit 20–30% Prime + 1–3%
Section 05

Franchise Red Flags: What Experienced Buyers Watch For

The franchise industry has excellent concepts and genuinely bad ones. The FDD is designed to disclose enough for you to tell the difference — if you know where to look. These are the red flags that experienced franchise buyers use to eliminate candidates before spending money on legal fees.

Item 19 Red Flags

  • Item 19 is missing entirely. Franchisors are not legally required to include financial performance data. Many that omit it do so because the numbers aren't favorable. A brand that won't show you what franchisees actually earn deserves a very direct question about why.
  • Item 19 shows averages without medians. Average revenue can be pulled up dramatically by top performers. If the top 10% of franchisees do $1.5M and the bottom 60% do $400K, the "average" of $650K tells you almost nothing useful.
  • Item 19 shows gross revenue only — no profitability data. Revenue without margin context is useless for investment decisions. A $700K revenue franchise with 8% royalties, 15% labor, 35% COGS, and $12K monthly rent is not a good business.
  • Item 19 discloses only top-quartile or "mature unit" data. Some franchisors selectively disclose only their best-performing units or units that have been operating for 5+ years. Verify what the disclosure actually represents.

Franchisee Turnover Red Flags

  • High unit closure rates in Item 20. Calculate the percentage of units that closed or were terminated over the past three years. Above 10% annually is a serious warning sign. Above 15% is disqualifying for most buyers.
  • Franchisors with active litigation from franchisees. Item 3 discloses pending litigation. Franchisee-initiated lawsuits about territory encroachment, earnings misrepresentation, or failure to provide promised support are alarm bells — not isolated grievances.
  • Validation calls where franchisees are guarded or negative. If your first five validation calls produce hesitant, scripted, or negative responses — stop. The franchisee community knows whether the brand supports them or abandons them after the check clears.

Earnings Claims Red Flags

  • Verbal earnings claims not in the FDD. If a franchise development rep tells you what you'll "typically earn" in a conversation or email and that figure doesn't match Item 19 — that's an illegal unregistered earnings claim. Document it and walk away from that rep, if not the brand.
  • Projections that assume top-line revenue immediately. Any financial model that shows profitability in month 3 for a food franchise is projecting fantasy. Real ramp curves take 6–18 months. Validate projections against Item 19 medians and franchisee calls.
The one question that reveals everything

Ask every franchisee you call: "Knowing what you know now, would you buy this franchise again?" The answer — and how quickly they give it — tells you more than any Item in the FDD.

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FAQ

Franchise Buying: Frequently Asked Questions

How much money do I need to buy a franchise? +
Total investment depends heavily on the concept. Home service franchises can be entered for $80,000–$200,000 all-in. Food and fitness concepts typically require $250,000–$750,000. With SBA 7(a) financing, you need 10–15% in liquid capital as a down payment — so $80,000–$120,000 gets you into an SBA-financed $600,000–$800,000 project. Add working capital reserve on top of the down payment. Undercapitalization is the leading cause of early franchise failure, so budget conservatively.
Is buying a franchise less risky than starting a business from scratch? +
For most people, yes — but with important caveats. Franchises provide a proven operating system, brand recognition, and structured training that reduce the learning curve and early-stage operating risk. The IFA cites franchise failure rates as meaningfully lower than independent startups. However, franchise success still depends on market selection, capital adequacy, operator quality, and brand health. A weak franchise brand or undercapitalized operator will fail regardless of the franchise model. The FDD's Item 20 closure data will show you whether the specific brand you're considering actually performs better than average.
What is a franchise royalty fee and how does it affect profitability? +
A royalty fee is an ongoing percentage of your gross revenue paid to the franchisor — typically 4–8% for most franchise categories, plus an additional 1–3% marketing/advertising fund contribution. These fees are paid on gross revenue regardless of whether your unit is profitable. At $600,000 annual revenue with a 6% royalty and 2% marketing fee, you're paying $48,000/year to the franchisor before any other expenses. Model this cost explicitly when evaluating the unit economics of any franchise concept. A higher royalty rate is only justified if the brand support, lead generation, and marketing materially drive the revenue that pays for it.
Can I negotiate the franchise agreement terms? +
Most franchise agreements are standardized and non-negotiable on major terms — royalty rates, system standards, and termination clauses are typically fixed. However, negotiation is sometimes possible on: initial fee discounts (especially for multi-unit agreements or veterans), territory size, development timeline, and training support. A franchise-specific attorney will know which terms the franchisor has modified for other buyers and where push-back is viable. Attempting to negotiate core terms is often taken as a signal of misalignment — use your leverage on meaningful items, not as general principle.
What's the difference between buying a new franchise territory and buying a franchise resale? +
A new franchise territory means you're opening a new unit from scratch in a territory the franchisor grants you. A franchise resale is purchasing an existing operating franchise unit from a current franchisee. Resales have key advantages: existing cash flow, trained staff, established customer base, and operational history you can verify. You also pay more — typically a business valuation premium on top of asset value. New territories require full buildout and a ramp period before profitability. The right choice depends on your capital, timeline, risk tolerance, and whether quality resales are available in your target market.
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