Northwood Coffee Co. (Sample)
Plain-English read
Northwood Coffee Co. presents a moderate-risk profile for a first-time franchise buyer. The brand has a clear operating system, defined territory rights, and reasonable initial fees relative to the segment. However, several clauses in the disclosure document tilt the relationship strongly in favour of the franchisor and merit close attention before signing.
The most material concerns are broad termination rights for the franchisor, a transfer process that gives the franchisor wide approval discretion, and a combined royalty plus marketing fund obligation that compounds over time. None of these are unusual for the industry, but each one materially affects how much control and economic upside you retain after signing.
This report flags four items as red flags, lists eleven specific questions to put to the franchisor in writing, and recommends a focused legal review of three sections rather than a full-document review, which keeps your follow-on legal cost lower.
What is going to crack under load
The franchisor may terminate the agreement for a wide range of defaults, several of which are not curable. A single missed royalty payment, a failure to meet minimum performance benchmarks, or a public statement deemed harmful to the brand can each trigger termination. Termination forfeits the franchise fee and the value of the location.
Selling the business requires written franchisor approval, payment of a transfer fee equal to half the original franchise fee, and a release of all claims. The franchisor also retains a right of first refusal at the buyer's offer price. Together these clauses meaningfully reduce what you can realize on exit.
Royalties of 6.5% of gross sales plus a 2.5% marketing fund contribution are payable weekly on gross, not net. On a store doing $750,000 in annual revenue, this is roughly $67,500 per year before rent, payroll, or COGS. Model these against your projected margins, not the franchisor's averages.
At the end of the 10-year term, renewal is at the franchisor's discretion and requires signing the then-current form of agreement, which may have materially different economics. There is also a renewal fee equal to 25% of the then-current initial franchise fee. Treat this as a fixed-term business, not a perpetual one.
Fee breakdown across the term
Royalty plus marketing fund is calculated on gross sales. On a $750,000-revenue location, the combined 9% obligation is roughly $67,500 per year before rent, payroll, or COGS.
Put these in writing before signing
- Q01Can you provide unredacted contact information for the three closest franchisees who closed or sold in the last 36 months?
- Q02What is the median, not average, unit-level EBITDA across all units open for at least three years?
- Q03How many units have been terminated, not renewed, or transferred under duress in the last five years, and what triggered each?
- Q04How is the marketing fund spent in my province specifically, and can I see the last two years of fund-level financials?
- Q05Will you commit in writing to a defined cure period for the most common default events listed in Item 17?
- Q06What protected territory radius applies, and does it survive renewal, sale, or rebrand events?
- Q07What are the exact conditions under which you would refuse a qualified buyer in a transfer event?
- Q08Are there any pending or settled lawsuits, mediations, or arbitrations involving franchisees in Canada in the last seven years?
- Q09Can the supplier exclusivity clause in Item 8 be modified or scoped to brand-critical inputs only?
- Q10What happens to my equipment, lease, and customer database if the agreement terminates for any reason?
- Q11Will you provide a side letter clarifying the scope of the personal guarantee, and confirming it does not extend to spouse or family assets?
What to do next
- 01Save this report and bring it to a qualified Canadian franchise lawyer for a focused review of Items 6, 8, and 17.
- 02Call at least three current franchisees and one former franchisee. Ask the questions in the section above.
- 03Build your own unit-economic model using your real cost inputs, not the franchisor's averages.
- 04Confirm in writing the exact scope of any personal guarantee and any spousal consent requirement.
- 05Do not sign before the 14-day statutory review window has elapsed. Engage a qualified franchise lawyer before signing.
General business and document analysis only. Not legal, financial, or investment advice. Always consult qualified counsel before signing.