draft-franchise-agreement

Category: Design Risk: Low risk ★ 3.9 · Rating 3.9/5 (8) sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal MIT

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automation_control

name: draft-franchise-agreement
description: Use when drafting a franchise agreement granting a franchisee the right to operate a business under the franchisor's brand, systems, and standards in a defined territory. Covers the full clause structure (territory, fees, training, operations manual, brand use, renewal, termination, non-compete), MENA-specific considerations (commercial agency law traps, UAE Federal Franchise Law, KSA disclosure requirements, halal compliance), EU pre-contractual disclosure obligations, and common pitfalls including inadequate operations manual cross-references.
license: MIT
metadata:
id: draft.franchise-agreement
category: draft
practice_area: corporate
jurisdictions: [UAE, KSA, LB, EG, FR, UK, EU, US]
priority: P1
intent: [franchise agreement, franchising, franchise, master franchise, sub-franchise]
related: [draft-distribution-agreement, draft-distribution-agreement-mena-extension, draft-license-agreement, kb-commercial-agency-mena]
source: Louis — HAQQ Legal AI (github.com/sboghossian/mini-claude-for-legal)
version: "1.0"

Franchise Agreement

When to use this

A franchise agreement grants a franchisee the right to operate a business under the franchisor's brand name, systems, and operational standards in a defined territory. Unlike a distribution agreement (which is a buy-resell arrangement), a franchise involves:

  • A license of the franchisor's brand and operational system.
  • The franchisee operating in a branded manner that represents the franchisor to the public.
  • Ongoing support, training, and quality control by the franchisor.
  • Ongoing royalties paid to the franchisor.

Use this skill for:

  • Single-unit franchise agreements (one location).
  • Multi-unit development agreements (franchise for multiple locations in a territory).
  • Master franchise agreements (franchisee has the right to sub-franchise in an entire country or region).

The commercial agency trap in MENA: a franchise agreement that gives the franchisee broad local exclusivity and makes them economically dependent on the franchisor risks being characterized as a protected commercial agency under UAE/KSA/Egypt commercial agency laws. Structure carefully — see Jurisdictional Notes.

Required inputs

Input Why it matters Default
Franchisor (full legal name + jurisdiction of IP ownership) IP ownership must vest in the franchisor entity
Franchisee (full legal name + jurisdiction) Local compliance obligations
Territory (exclusive or non-exclusive) Defines franchisee's operating area Non-exclusive by default
Franchise territory type (single unit / multi-unit / master) Determines structure and sub-franchising rights Single unit
Term (initial + renewal) Commercial deal; renewal terms must be stated 5 years + 5-year renewal
Franchise fee (initial) One-time entry fee
Royalty rate (ongoing) Ongoing percentage of gross revenue 5–8% of gross sales
Marketing / advertising fund contribution Separate from royalty; pooled for brand advertising 1–2% of gross sales
Operations manual reference The manual governs operational standards; must exist Cross-reference by title

Optional inputs

  • Area development agreement terms (for multi-unit)
  • Sub-franchising rights and approval process (for master franchise)
  • Technology and POS system requirements
  • Supply chain restrictions (approved suppliers only)
  • Real estate approval rights (franchisor approves site)

Standard clause structure

1. Grant of franchise and territory

"Subject to the terms of this Agreement, Franchisor hereby grants to Franchisee the [exclusive / non-exclusive] right and license to operate [one / X] [brand name] franchise location(s) within the Territory defined in Schedule A, during the Term."

Territory definition: for single-unit franchises, define by address or radius (e.g., 2 km radius from the premises). For master franchises, define by country or countries with sub-franchising rights.

Exclusivity carries the same MENA agency-law risks as in distribution agreements — see Jurisdictional Notes.

2. Franchise fees

Initial franchise fee

  • One-time payment on signing; typically non-refundable.
  • State amount; payment date; whether any portion is refundable (e.g., if premises cannot be secured).

Ongoing royalties

  • Percentage of gross revenue (before VAT) payable [weekly / monthly].
  • Definition of "gross revenue" is contested — be precise: include or exclude discounts, refunds, VAT, employee meals, catering orders, delivery partner fees.
  • Payment mechanism: direct debit preferred; wire transfer alternative.

Marketing / advertising fund contribution

  • Percentage of gross revenue paid into a pooled brand-advertising fund.
  • Franchisor manages the fund; provides periodic reporting to franchisees on use.
  • Franchisee's contribution does not guarantee local advertising spend.

Technology and POS fees

  • Monthly license fee for franchisor's POS system, ordering platform, customer data system.
  • Franchisee must use franchisor's approved technology; no alternative systems.

3. Training and support obligations (Franchisor)

  • Initial training: [X] weeks at franchisor's training facility (and/or on-site); franchisor provides trainers; franchisee bears travel and accommodation.
  • Opening support: [X] days of on-site support at launch.
  • Ongoing training: access to franchisor's online training portal; annual training updates.
  • Field support visits: [X] per year; unannounced inspections permitted under operations manual authority.
  • Hotline / helpdesk access for operational support.

4. Operations standards (Franchisor controls)

  • Franchisee must comply with the Operations Manual (the "Manual"), as amended from time to time.
  • Manual governs: menu / product specification, service standards, store design and layout, hygiene and safety, staffing ratios, and customer-service procedures.
  • Franchisor's right to update the Manual with reasonable notice.
  • Franchisee's obligation to implement updates within [60 / 90] days of notification.

Important: the operations manual must exist and be provided to the franchisee at or before signing. A franchise agreement that cross-references a manual that doesn't exist yet is incomplete and creates disputes.

5. Brand and IP usage

  • License to use Franchisor's trademarks, trade names, logos, and service marks solely in connection with the operation of the Franchised Business in the Territory.
  • No sublicensing without written consent (except to sub-franchisees under a master franchise).
  • Quality control right: Franchisor may inspect and require correction of non-compliant brand use.
  • On termination: immediate cessation of all use; removal of signage; return of branded materials.
  • No modification of marks; no use in domain names, social media handles, or email addresses without prior written approval.
  • GCC trademark note: franchisee should not register the franchisor's marks in the Territory without authorization; any unauthorized registration creates a parallel-ownership problem.

6. Reporting and audit rights

  • Weekly or monthly sales reporting (format specified).
  • Annual audited financial statements (for master franchisees).
  • Franchisor's right to audit franchisee's books and records with [X] days' notice; no limitation on frequency if non-compliance is suspected.
  • Franchisee bears audit costs if shortfall in reported royalties exceeds [X]%.

7. Approved suppliers

Franchisee must source products/ingredients/materials from Franchisor's approved supplier list. Franchisor may add/remove suppliers with reasonable notice. Franchisee may propose new suppliers; approval process must be transparent.

Note: EU competition law (Vertical Agreements BER 2022/720) restricts exclusive sourcing obligations beyond what is genuinely necessary for quality control. For EU markets, the "approved supplier" mechanism must not amount to exclusive purchasing above the block-exemption thresholds.

8. Renewal

  • Franchisee has the right to renew for [X] years by giving [X] months' written notice before expiry.
  • Conditions: (a) franchisee is not in breach; (b) franchisee has met minimum performance standards; (c) franchisee signs the then-current form of franchise agreement (which may differ from this Agreement); (d) franchisee has paid a renewal fee of [amount].
  • No automatic renewal; positive election required.

9. Termination

Immediate termination (no cure):

  • Abandonment of the franchise.
  • Unauthorized use of IP post-warning.
  • Criminal conviction of franchisee or its principals.
  • Insolvency.
  • Material misrepresentation in the franchise disclosure document or application.

Termination with cure period (typically 30 days):

  • Non-payment of royalties.
  • Breach of the Operations Manual.
  • Failure to meet minimum performance standards after written warning.

Convenience termination:

  • Neither party should have an unqualified right of convenience termination. Franchise relationships require investment by both sides; build in a long notice period (6–12 months) if convenience termination is permitted at all after the initial term.

10. Non-compete post-termination

  • Franchisee and its principals shall not operate a directly competing business in the Territory for [12–24] months post-termination.
  • Scope: the same or closely similar business activity.
  • Territory: the Territory plus a reasonable buffer zone.
  • Enforceability varies widely by jurisdiction — see Jurisdictional Notes.

Jurisdictional notes

UAE — Franchise and Agency Law interface

UAE Federal Law 18/1981 on Commercial Agency can capture franchise relationships if the franchisee is exclusively promoting the franchisor's brand in a defined territory. The risk markers are: exclusivity + dependence + long-term relationship.

Mitigation: non-exclusive franchise territory where commercially feasible; explicit acknowledgment that relationship is not a commercial agency; franchisee operates independently on its own account (not for and on behalf of franchisor).

UAE also enacted Federal Law No. 9/2022 on commercial concession (franchise); this law requires pre-contractual disclosure and governs franchisee protections. Confirm the latest implementing regulations before finalizing a UAE franchise agreement.

KSA — Commercial Agency Law

Same agency-law risk as UAE. Additionally:

  • KSA Commercial Agencies Law may require registration.
  • Halal compliance: specify whether the franchise's product/service has halal certification; include ongoing compliance obligation.
  • MISA investment license may be required for foreign franchisors operating directly in KSA.

France — Pre-contractual disclosure (DIP)

French Loi Doubin (Law of 31 December 1989, codified in Code de Commerce) requires franchisors to provide a Document d'Information Précontractuelle (DIP) at least 20 days before the signing of the franchise agreement or any pre-contract payment. The DIP must include:

  • 5 years' financial history of the franchisor.
  • List of franchisees and their turnover.
  • Number of franchisees who joined and left in the past year.
  • Pending litigation.
  • Description of the network and local market.

Failure to provide the DIP entitles the franchisee to rescind the agreement within 5 years.

EU

  • Block Exemption Regulation 2022/720 covers franchise agreements as vertical agreements.
  • Exclusive territory grants, passive-sales restrictions, and RPM are the primary competition-law risks.
  • Online sales restrictions have become harder to justify post-2022.

US

  • Federal Trade Commission (FTC) Franchise Rule requires pre-sale disclosure via a Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD); 14-day pre-contract disclosure period.
  • Many states have additional franchise registration and disclosure requirements.

Common mistakes

  1. Operations manual not delivered — cross-referencing a manual that doesn't exist at signing leaves standards undefined and unenforceable.
  2. Royalty base not defined — "gross revenue" without exclusion of VAT, refunds, and inter-company transactions leads to royalty disputes.
  3. No minimum performance standards — franchisor has no right to terminate underperforming franchisees without MSPs; include annual minimum sales targets.
  4. Trademark registered by franchisee — the franchise agreement should prohibit unauthorized trademark registration; include a provision requiring franchisee to cooperate in trademark recordal/deregistration.
  5. Pre-contractual disclosure missed — in France (DIP), the US (FDD), and UAE (new franchise law), missing disclosure is a basis for rescission.
  6. Non-compete wider than necessary — post-termination non-competes in EU and common-law jurisdictions must be reasonable in scope, time, and territory; excessive clauses are void.
  • [[draft-distribution-agreement]] — reseller structure where no brand/system license is involved
  • [[draft-distribution-agreement-mena-extension]] — MENA agency-law risk analysis applicable to both distribution and franchise
  • [[draft-license-agreement]] — standalone brand or IP license without the full franchise structure
  • [[kb-commercial-agency-mena]] — commercial agency law reference for UAE, KSA, Egypt, Lebanon