Most people buy a franchise because they want a proven business model. They want to skip the guesswork — the product is tested, the brand is built, the systems are in place. They pay $50,000, $200,000, sometimes more, trusting that the franchisor has figured it out.
Some of them are right. Many are not.
The difference often sits in a document most buyers skim: the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD). Before you invest anything, that document tells you — in plain legal language — whether you're buying into a thriving system or a franchise heading for collapse. You just have to know what you're looking for.
This guide covers the 12 most critical FDD red flags. Each one appears in a specific Item of the FDD. Each one has cost real people real money. If you're new to the FDD structure, start with our guide on what an FDD is or how to read an FDD step by step.
Bottom line first: Red flags don't mean automatic rejection. They mean you need answers. Demand those answers before you sign anything.
Why Red Flags Matter More Than Marketing
Franchise marketing is designed to make you excited. The discovery days, the slick brochures, the "success story" franchisee videos — all of it is engineered to build emotional commitment before you've done the hard analysis.
The FDD is the antidote to that. It's a legal document, not a sales pitch. Franchisors are required to disclose the truth inside it — including the ugly parts. That's why the FDD is where red flags live.
Here's the problem: most prospective franchisees don't know which items to prioritize. They flip through the document looking for something obviously wrong, miss the subtle signals buried in the numbers, and sign anyway. Then, 18 months later, they're wondering why their location is losing money while the franchisor cashes royalty checks.
Franchise failure is expensive. The average initial investment for a mid-market franchise ranges from $150,000 to $500,000. Unlike a failed startup, a failed franchise often comes with lease obligations, equipment loans, and ongoing royalty commitments. You can lose everything — and still owe money.
Reading the FDD carefully isn't pessimism. It's the only rational thing to do.
Financial Red Flags: Items 19, 20, and 21
Three Items in the FDD tell you most of what you need to know about the financial health of a franchise system. Item 19 is the earnings data. Item 20 is the franchise turnover data. Item 21 is the audited financial statements of the franchisor itself. Together, they paint a picture no marketing brochure will ever show you.
Red Flag #1: No Item 19 Earnings Data
The FDD contains no Item 19 Financial Performance Representation — or the data is so vague it's effectively useless.
Item 19 is the only place in the FDD where a franchisor can legally share financial performance data about existing locations. They are not required to include it — but if they don't, you should ask why.
A franchisor that refuses to disclose earnings data is either hiding poor performance or, at best, leaving you completely blind on the most important question you have: Can I actually make money doing this?
When Item 19 is present, scrutinize it carefully:
- Is it showing gross revenue or net profit? Gross revenue looks impressive. Net profit is what you take home.
- What percentage of franchisees are included? Some franchisors cherry-pick top performers.
- Is the data from corporate-owned locations that don't pay royalties the way franchisees do?
- How many locations does the data represent? A sample of 12 out of 400 is not representative.
Red Flag #2: Negative or Declining Franchisor Financials
Item 21 shows the franchisor's audited financials are deeply negative, declining year-over-year, or contain a going-concern warning from their auditor.
Item 21 contains the franchisor's audited financial statements for the past three fiscal years. This is critical. If the franchisor is financially unstable, your entire investment is at risk — even if your location is performing well.
A bankrupt franchisor can't support your marketing, your training, your supply chain, or your brand. Franchisees of collapsed systems often discover their brand is worthless and their business model no longer functions without the franchisor's infrastructure.
Look specifically for:
- Losses in two or more consecutive years with no clear path to profitability
- A going-concern opinion from the auditor (this is a literal warning that the business may not survive)
- Total liabilities that significantly exceed total assets
- Revenue derived almost entirely from franchise fees (vs. ongoing royalties), which signals they depend on selling new franchises to survive — a Ponzi-like structure
Red Flag #3: High Franchisee Failure Rate
Item 20 shows a large number of franchise transfers, terminations, or non-renewals — especially relative to the total number of locations.
Item 20 is one of the most information-dense sections of the entire FDD. It lists every outlet opened, transferred, closed, terminated, or not renewed over the past three years. When you calculate turnover rate — exits divided by total locations — you get a real measure of how franchisees are doing.
A healthy system has low turnover. A struggling system has high turnover and will use language like "transferred" to obscure what are effectively failures. Compare the number of outlets at the start of each year to the end. If the system isn't growing, and closures are accelerating, that's a sign.
Legal Red Flags: Items 3, 4, and 5
The legal section of the FDD reveals the history of the franchisor and its key people. This is where you find out if the people you're trusting with your investment have a history of deceiving or harming others.
Red Flag #4: Prior Franchising-Related Litigation
Item 3 reveals the franchisor has settled or lost lawsuits brought by franchisees alleging fraud, misrepresentation, or violation of the franchise agreement.
Item 3 lists all pending, completed, and material litigation involving the franchisor and its principals. A legal dispute or two is normal for any company of scale. What you're looking for are patterns: multiple lawsuits from franchisees making the same allegations, large settlements, or judgments against the franchisor.
Franchisee-initiated litigation is especially meaningful. If current or former franchisees were willing to spend money on lawyers to sue their franchisor, their frustration was serious. Read those case descriptions carefully.
Red Flag #5: Prior Bankruptcy of the Franchisor or Its Officers
Item 4 discloses that the franchisor or its key executives filed for bankruptcy within the past 10 years.
Prior bankruptcy isn't automatically disqualifying — people and companies recover. But bankruptcy on the record demands an explanation. What happened? What changed? What prevents it from happening again with your investment?
Most concerning is when the people involved in a previous bankrupt franchise company have simply rebranded and are now selling a new franchise. The FDD will show this if you compare Item 4 disclosures against the prior company histories in Item 2.
Red Flag #6: Unusual Fee Structures in Item 5
Item 5 reveals royalty structures, marketing fund contributions, and additional fees that are unusually high, have no cap, or favor the franchisor's own affiliated vendors.
Item 5 lists every fee you'll pay — initial franchise fee, ongoing royalties (typically 4–8% of gross revenue), marketing fund contributions, technology fees, training fees, renewal fees, and more. High royalties aren't automatically bad if the brand delivers high value. But watch for:
- Royalty rates above 10% of gross revenue — this leaves little margin for most business models
- Marketing fund contributions with no requirement to spend the money in your market
- Required purchases from franchisor-owned or affiliated suppliers at above-market prices (Item 8 connection)
- Technology fees for proprietary systems that give the franchisor significant ongoing revenue at your expense
Operational Red Flags: Items 8, 9, and 11
The operational items in the FDD describe how the day-to-day business works — what you're required to buy, how tightly controlled your operations are, and what training and support actually looks like. Weak infrastructure at the franchisor level becomes your problem at the franchise level.
Red Flag #7: Required Purchases from Franchisor-Controlled Suppliers
Item 8 shows you're required to purchase key inventory or supplies exclusively from franchisor-owned or approved suppliers, often at prices you cannot negotiate.
Some level of supplier control is normal and good — it protects brand consistency. The red flag is when the franchisor profits from your supply purchases. Look for language indicating the franchisor or its affiliates are the approved supplier, receives rebates from approved suppliers, or has not disclosed the financial benefit they receive from your required purchases.
This is a common but underappreciated way franchisors extract additional revenue beyond royalties. In some cases, supply markups effectively double the true royalty rate.
Red Flag #8: Highly Restrictive Territory or Encroachment Rights
Item 9 or the franchise agreement gives the franchisor the right to open competing locations, sell through alternative channels, or limit your protected territory in ways that could cannibalize your revenue.
Your territory protection is only as good as what's written in the agreement. Some franchisors grant territories but carve out the right to operate company-owned locations, sell online directly to customers in your area, or establish alternative distribution channels that compete with you. This is your income, not the franchisor's experiment.
Red Flag #9: Thin or Unstructured Training and Support (Item 11)
Item 11 describes a training program that is short, vague about content, or relies heavily on self-directed learning without dedicated franchisor support.
Item 11 covers training and support. Compare what you're promised in marketing materials against what's actually committed to in the FDD. If initial training is only a few days, ongoing support is a phone number and a website, and field visits are rare or non-existent, the franchisor's operational value-add is minimal. You're paying royalties for a brand and systems — not just a name.
Growth and Turnover Red Flags: Item 20 Deep Dive
Item 20 deserves its own extended focus because it contains multiple data points that most buyers underutilize. The tables in Item 20 are dense, but they're also extremely revealing when read together.
Red Flag #10: Stalled or Shrinking System Growth
Item 20 tables show the number of franchise locations has been flat or declining for two or more consecutive years.
A healthy franchise system grows. Franchisors that are delivering genuine value attract new franchisees. If the system has been stagnant or shrinking, ask why. Are existing franchisees unhappy? Are they not earning enough to inspire referrals? Is the model becoming obsolete?
Compare the total outlet count at the start and end of each of the three reported years. If the system grew by fewer than 3% per year — especially in a favorable economic environment — that's a signal worth investigating.
Red Flag #11: High Ratio of Terminations to Transfers
Item 20 shows significantly more terminations (franchisor-initiated closures) than transfers (franchisee-initiated sales), suggesting many exits are failures rather than profitable exits.
When a franchise is profitable, franchisees sell it. The business has value; a buyer pays for it. When a franchise is losing money, the franchisee walks or is terminated. Terminations tell you locations failed. Transfers tell you locations had value.
A high termination count relative to transfers is a serious signal. Divide the three-year termination total by total locations to get a rough termination rate. Anything above 5% per year for a mature system is worth serious scrutiny.
The 5 Red Flags Most Franchisees Miss
The obvious red flags get attention. The subtle ones are where most buyers get caught. Here are the five warning signs that rarely make the checklist but show up repeatedly in franchise failures.
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1The FDD was just amended (Item 23 receipt date vs. version date) If an FDD was recently amended — especially near the end of fiscal year or following litigation — ask what changed. Amendments sometimes quietly remove unfavorable data or update litigation disclosures. Request the previous version and compare.
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2Long mandatory renewal terms with no exit rights (Item 17) Item 17 covers termination, transfer, and renewal. Some agreements auto-renew on significantly different terms than your original agreement. You can be locked into a renegotiated deal with higher fees, changed territory, or different support levels — and have no practical exit.
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3Key executive turnover in Item 2 Item 2 lists the franchisor's key people and their employment history. If the CEO, COO, and training director have all changed in the last 24 months, the leadership that built the system you're buying into is gone. The team executing the model now may be completely different.
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4No required validation calls (unwritten pressure, not FDD-related) The FDD lists existing franchisees in Item 20 with contact information. You are legally entitled to call them. If the franchisor discourages those calls, steers you only to "approved" references, or pressures you to sign before completing validation — that pressure is itself the red flag.
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5Marketing fund with no third-party audit (Item 11) You may be required to contribute 1–4% of gross revenue to a marketing fund. Item 11 should describe how that fund is managed and audited. If there's no independent audit requirement and the franchisor has sole discretion over spend, that money may not be working for you.
Red Flag #12 — the final one: The franchisor can't or won't provide a clear answer when you ask, "What percentage of your franchisees are profitable after three years?" If they deflect, dismiss the question, or pivot to enthusiasm instead of data — that is your answer.
How to Protect Yourself
Red flags are information. Your job is to collect that information before you sign, not after. Here's how to approach the FDD with discipline:
1. Read the FDD yourself first
Don't outsource your first read to a lawyer. Spend a few hours with the document before you pay anyone for analysis. You'll develop a feel for the system and have far better questions when you do bring in experts. Our step-by-step FDD reading guide is a good place to start.
2. Call at least 5–10 existing franchisees
Item 20 lists every franchisee in the system with their contact information. Call at least five — not the ones the franchisor recommends. Choose randomly from the list. Ask them directly: Are you profitable? Would you buy this franchise again? What does the franchisor do well? What don't they do well?
3. Hire a franchise attorney to review the agreement
Not a general business attorney — a franchise attorney who reviews franchise agreements regularly. The FDD tells you what's disclosed. The franchise agreement tells you what you're legally bound to. They're not always the same document.
4. Get the numbers independently analyzed
If Item 19 is present, have an accountant or financial analyst model your unit economics. Factor in royalties, marketing contributions, required supply costs, staffing, and your specific market. The question isn't whether the average franchisee makes money — it's whether you will, in your location, at your investment level.
5. Use a professional FDD analysis
The FDD is designed to disclose, but not to explain. Tools like ClearlyFDD extract the key data from Items 19, 20, and 21, flag anomalies, and produce a plain-English summary you can actually use to make a decision. If you're looking at one franchise or comparing several, starting with a professional analysis saves time and helps you know what questions to ask.
Buying a franchise should be one of the most thoroughly researched financial decisions of your life. The FDD gives you the information you need — but only if you know how to read it, what to look for, and what the warning signs actually mean.
The 12 red flags in this guide aren't a reason to give up on franchising. They're a reason to dig deeper before you commit. The franchises that survive scrutiny are often the best ones to own.