Before you invest in any franchise, a franchisor is legally required to hand you one of these. Here's what it is, what's in it, and why most people don't read it closely enough.
A Franchise Disclosure Document is a legally mandated document that every franchisor must give to prospective franchisees at least 14 days before they sign a contract or pay any money. It's regulated by the FTC (Federal Trade Commission) and many state franchise regulators.
Think of it as the franchise equivalent of a stock prospectus — a legally required document designed to give you the full picture before you commit. In theory, it tells you everything you need to know. In practice, it runs 200 to 500+ pages of dense legal language, financial schedules, and exhibit-heavy contracts.
The FDD is organized into exactly 23 standardized sections, called Items. Every franchisor must follow this structure — which makes FDDs comparable across brands, once you know how to read them.
The FDD follows a federally mandated format. Every franchisor uses the same 23 Items — in the same order. Here's what each one actually covers.
Background on the franchisor — who they are, what they do, how long they've been in business, and any parent or affiliated companies.
Profiles of the franchisor's key executives, including their prior work history. You're checking if the leadership team has actually done this before.
Any current or prior lawsuits involving the franchisor or its executives — especially franchisee disputes, regulatory actions, or fraud allegations.
Whether the franchisor or any of its principals have filed for bankruptcy in the past 10 years. A red flag if recent.
The upfront franchise fee and any other initial payments required before you open. This is separate from your total startup cost.
Every ongoing fee you'll pay: royalties, marketing fund contributions, technology fees, renewal fees, transfer fees, and more. Read this carefully.
A high/low range for everything you'll spend to open — from build-out and equipment to working capital and grand opening costs.
Whether you must buy supplies, ingredients, or inventory from approved suppliers — and whether the franchisor profits from those purchases.
A cross-reference table listing every obligation you agree to as a franchisee — pointing you to the specific contract section for each one.
Whether the franchisor (or an affiliated lender) offers financing, and the terms. Most don't; some do for specific costs like equipment.
What support you get before and after opening — initial training, ongoing field support, marketing materials, technology systems.
Whether you get an exclusive territory (and how it's defined), or whether the franchisor can open competing units nearby — including through alternative channels.
The brand's registered trademarks and service marks. You want to see federally registered marks — not just state-registered or pending applications.
Any patents, trade secrets, or proprietary processes the system relies on, and what happens to your business if those rights are lost or challenged.
Whether you must personally manage the franchise location, or whether you can own it as a semi-absentee or passive investor.
Limits on the products or services you're allowed to offer — you may be prohibited from selling anything outside the approved menu or catalog.
The terms under which your agreement can be renewed, terminated, or sold — including how much control the franchisor has over each scenario.
Whether any celebrity or public figure is involved in the franchise system and what they're being paid. Usually empty — but worth checking.
This is the one number that tells you whether franchisees actually make money. If the franchisor chooses to share it, Item 19 contains actual revenue, sales, or earnings data from existing locations. Many franchisors provide only partial data — average unit volumes but not profitability — which tells you something too. If Item 19 is blank, the franchisor is not making any financial performance claims, and you're flying blind. This is the most important item in the entire document.
How many units are open, how many closed or were transferred last year, and a full list of current franchisees with contact info. Call them.
Audited financial statements of the franchisor for the last three years. You're checking whether the parent company is financially stable.
All the agreements you'll be asked to sign — franchise agreement, lease addendum, personal guarantee, and any others. These are what you're actually legally bound to.
A signature page acknowledging you received the FDD. Required by law; it starts your 14-day waiting period before you can sign or pay anything.
The FDD exists to protect you. But in practice, most buyers don't read it — and that's not entirely their fault.
We translate the FDD into plain English — so you can make an informed decision, not just a hopeful one.
Every Item covered in plain English — what it says, what it means, and what to watch for.
We extract and contextualize the financial performance data — or flag clearly if the franchisor hasn't disclosed it.
Litigation history, high termination rates, weak territory protections — we highlight what deserves scrutiny.
Ask any question about the FDD in plain English and get an instant, sourced answer from the actual document.
We source documents from public state regulatory filings — not from franchisors — so you get an unfiltered view.
Pay $99, choose your brand, get your Clearly Report™ and 30-day Workspace access. No waiting, no back-and-forth.
$99 per brand. Includes AI-powered analysis of all 23 Items, Item 19 deep-dive, and 30 days of Workspace access.