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Quick Answer

What is Franchise Agreement in Nashik?

Franchise Agreement Drafting under Trade Marks Act 1999 (S.

Senior Counsel · Same Day · Nashik

Franchise Agreement in Nashik

Franchise Agreement Drafting under Trade Marks Act 1999 (S.49) + Indian Contract Act 1872 + Competition Act 2002 — comprehensive 30-60 page contract for franchisor-franchisee relationships. Includes trademark licensing, territory, royalty structure, operations manual, training, exit framework. Single-unit / Multi-unit / Area Development / Master Franchise / International. Senior counsel drafted + Trademark Registry recordal.

Starts From₹9999
Timeline7-10 working days
JurisdictionTrade Marks Act + Contract Act + TM Registry recordal
Rating4.9 / 5 ★
Most Engaged Same Day

Engage Franchise Agreement

₹9999Starts From · All Inclusive*
Timeline
7-10 working days
Coverage
Nashik
Jurisdiction
Trade Marks Act + Contract Act + TM Registry recordal
Guarantee
Money Back
Starts From
₹9999
↑ Fixed transparent fee
All inclusive · No hidden charges
Delivery
7-10 working days
↑ Guaranteed timeline
Or 100% money back
📍 Jurisdiction
ROC Mumbai/Pune
↑ Maharashtra
Local expertise · 45L+ businesses
Track Record
4.9 / 5
↑ 2,847 reviews
15+ years senior counsel
Built on
Justice न्याय Compliance अनुपालन Speed गति Transparency पारदर्शिता Dignity गरिमा Excellence उत्कृष्टता Justice न्याय Compliance अनुपालन Speed गति Transparency पारदर्शिता
About This Service

What is Franchise Agreement?

Franchise Agreement in Nashik is a critical service for individuals, entrepreneurs, and enterprises operating in Maharashtra. At Nyaya Grah, we deliver this service under the direct supervision of senior counsel — never juniors masquerading — with complete process transparency and a binding money-back guarantee.

Nashik, with its 45L+ active businesses and ₹35L+ economic footprint, demands legal infrastructure that is both fast and accurate. Maharashtra's jurisdictional nuances — including a stamp duty of 5-6% and ₹2,500/yr professional tax — require local expertise that our team brings to every engagement.

Whether you are filing your first application, navigating a complex matter, or seeking specialist counsel, our practice in Nashik ensures every submission carries the imprimatur of seasoned review. We handle the regulatory machinery — you focus on your business.

What's Included

Your Engagement Includes

Everything required to complete your Franchise Agreement in Nashik — bundled into a single fixed fee.

Initial consultation + franchise structure recommendation
TRADEMARK + IP due diligence on franchisor mark
Trademark verification on ipindia.gov.in (class-wise)
FRANCHISE DISCLOSURE DOCUMENT (FDD) — optional/recommended
COMPREHENSIVE FRANCHISE AGREEMENT (30-60 pages, 30+ clauses):
· Parties + Definitions (detailed franchise terminology)
· Grant of Franchise (scope + territory)
· Trademark License (S.49 TM Act + Schedule of marks)
· Territory + Exclusivity
· Franchise Fee + Royalty (% of revenue / fixed)
· Term + Renewal (typically 5-10 years)
· Operations Manual incorporation (compliance mandatory)
· Training (initial + refresher)
· Marketing Fund (typically 1-3% of revenue) + accountability
· Quality Standards + Audit Rights
· Supply Arrangements (approved vendors)
· Store Location + Fit-out specifications
· Reporting + IT Integration (POS, royalty)
· Confidentiality + IP Protection
· Non-Compete (during + limited post-termination)
· Transfer + Succession (right of first refusal)
· Termination (cause + convenience)
· Post-Termination (deboardment, return, transition)
· Indemnity + Limitation of Liability
· Dispute Resolution (arbitration typical)
· Governing Law + Jurisdiction
OPERATIONS MANUAL drafting / review (separate engagement)
TRADEMARK REGISTERED USER recordal (Form TM-U) at Trademarks Registry
AREA DEVELOPMENT AGREEMENT (for multi-unit franchisees)
MASTER FRANCHISE AGREEMENT (for sub-franchising)
Negotiation iterations (2 rounds standard)
Counter-party MARKUP service (if franchisee side review)
For INTERNATIONAL: FEMA + DTAA + TDS u/s 195 + cross-border IP coordination
GST advisory (18% on fee + royalty, RCM for international)
Stamp Duty computation + e-Stamping coordination
Execution coordination + Trademark recordal
30-day post-execution clarification support
Our Method

From Consultation to Delivery

A structured four-step process designed to be transparent, predictable, and accountable at every stage.

I

Consult

Free 30-min consultation with senior partner. Clear quote, timeline, document checklist.

Day 0
II

Engage

Signed engagement letter with fixed fee. Document collection begins.

Day 1
III

Execute

Strategy briefing · trademark + IP due diligence · FDD (optional) · 30-60 page agreement drafting · negotiation · stamping + execution · Trademark Registry recordal.

Day 2-7
IV

Deliver

Signed Franchise Agreement + Schedules · operations manual reference · Trademark recordal · marketing fund framework · 30-day support.

Final
What to Prepare

Documents Required

A typical checklist. Our team will customize this list during the consultation based on your specific case.

1
Identity proof of client (PAN + Aadhaar)
2
Address proof of client
3
All documents related to the dispute (contracts, invoices, communications)
4
Photographs / evidence (where applicable)
5
Prior correspondence with opposite party
6
Police / authority complaints filed (if any)
7
Bank statements / payment proofs (for monetary matters)
8
Vakalatnama (we draft and you sign)
Local Jurisdiction

Nashik, Maharashtra · Key Information

Jurisdictional details relevant to your Franchise Agreement in Nashik.

Multi-Statute Drafting + TM Registry
Trade Marks Act + Contract Act + TM Registry recordal
Stamp Duty
5-6%
Professional Tax
₹2,500/yr
State Economy
₹35L+ Cr
Active Businesses
45L+
Key Industries
Finance, IT, Automobiles
State Schemes
PSI, Udyog Ratna
Service Area
Nashik Metro
Transparent Pricing

What You'll Pay · No Surprises

Fixed professional fees. Government charges quoted separately and disclosed in the engagement letter.

ComponentWhat's IncludedCost
Franchise Agreement · Professional FeesSenior counsel · End-to-end serviceAll work above₹9999Fixed
Government FeesAuthority charges, filing feesPass-throughAt ActualsReceipts shared
Stamp Duty (if applicable)Maharashtra rate: 5-6%As per stateAt ActualsQuoted upfront
GST on Professional Fees18% as per Indian GSTStatutory18%On professional fee

All fees are disclosed in writing on the engagement letter before commencement. Money-back guarantee if we miss the quoted timeline.

Frequently Asked

Questions About Franchise Agreement in Nashik

Answers to questions most often posed by our clients in Maharashtra.

How much does Franchise Agreement cost in Nashik?

Our professional fee for Franchise Agreement in Nashik starts at ₹9999, all-inclusive. Government fees, stamp duty (5-6% in Maharashtra), and 18% GST are billed separately at actuals. The complete fee breakdown is disclosed in writing on the engagement letter before work begins.

How long does it take?

The standard timeline for Franchise Agreement is 7-10 working days. We provide a written timeline on the engagement letter — if we miss it for reasons attributable to us, our professional fee is fully refunded (binding guarantee).

Do you handle the filing with ROC Mumbai/Pune?

Yes. End-to-end. From document preparation to final filing with ROC Mumbai/Pune and follow-up till certificate issuance — every step is handled by our team in Nashik. You will receive real-time updates via WhatsApp at every milestone.

Will I speak to a senior partner or a junior?

You will speak to a senior partner with 15+ years of practice. We do not have juniors masquerading as senior counsel. Every consultation, strategic decision, and material communication is conducted by a partner. Routine execution may be delegated to qualified associates — but oversight remains with the partner throughout.

What documents do I need to provide?

A typical checklist includes PAN, Aadhaar, address proof, and service-specific documents. The complete list is customized during your free consultation. We accept digital scans (PDF/JPG) — physical visits to our office are not required.

Do you work across Maharashtra, or only in Nashik?

We serve clients across Maharashtra and all of India — 1,219+ cities. Our jurisdictional expertise for Maharashtra includes specific knowledge of ROC Mumbai/Pune procedures, Maharashtra stamp duty (5-6%), and applicable state schemes such as PSI, Udyog Ratna.

How do I begin?

Simply call +91 7878407950 or message us on WhatsApp. Your first 30-min consultation is complimentary, conducted directly with the senior partner relevant to your matter. You will leave the call with full clarity on cost, timeline, and process — with no obligation to proceed.

Legal Framework

Governing law & authority for Franchise Agreement

Every engagement at Nyaya Grah is grounded in the relevant statute. For founders and counsel reviewing this matter, here is the foundation.

Acts & provisions

  • FRANCHISE AGREEMENT — multi-statute drafting framework (India has NO single franchise law unlike US FTC Rule / EU Franchise Directive):
  • Indian Contract Act 1872 — Section 10 (essentials of contract), Section 23 (lawful object), Section 27 (restraint of trade — limits non-compete enforceability), Section 28 (restricting legal proceedings void)
  • Trade Marks Act 1999 — Section 18 (registered trademark), Section 28-29 (rights of trademark proprietor), Section 49 (registered user — for franchise brand use), Section 50 (recordal of registered user)
  • Copyright Act 1957 — for brand collateral, operations manual, training material
  • Patents Act 1970 — if franchise involves patented technology / processes
  • Designs Act 2000 — for product designs
  • Indian Stamp Act 1899 + STATE Stamp Acts — state-specific stamp duty (Maharashtra 0.1% of consideration min ₹500 / max ₹25K; Karnataka 1%; Delhi 1%; varies)
  • Indian Registration Act 1908 — generally NOT required for franchise (unless immovable property element)
  • Competition Act 2002 — Section 3 (anti-competitive vertical agreements — territorial restrictions, price fixing scrutiny), Section 3(4) — exclusive supply/distribution
  • Foreign Exchange Management Act 1999 — for INTERNATIONAL franchise (royalty payments to foreign franchisor — FEMA notification limits removed since 2009 (automatic route)), Form FC-GPR for capital infusion
  • Income Tax Act 1961 — Section 9(1)(vi) (Royalty taxable in India), Section 115A (royalty rate 10% basic + surcharge + cess), Section 195 (TDS on payments to non-residents), DTAA application
  • CGST Act 2017 — GST on franchise fee + royalty (18% typical) + supply of goods/services
  • Consumer Protection Act 2019 — franchisee protected if franchisor in deficiency
  • Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996 — for arbitration clause enforcement
  • Commercial Courts Act 2015 — Section 12A pre-institution mediation for commercial disputes
  • Sale of Goods Act 1930 — for franchise involving product supply
  • Specific Relief Act 1963 — Section 14(d) (specific performance of franchise terms generally not granted; damages remedy)
  • Information Technology Act 2000 + IT Rules — for digital franchise (e.g., online education, e-commerce franchises) + data protection
  • Digital Personal Data Protection Act 2023 — for customer data handling in franchise operations

Issuing authority

NO single regulatory authority — franchise is PRIVATE contractual relationship. Enforcement / dispute resolution: (a) ARBITRATION (per arbitration clause — most franchise agreements have arbitration), (b) COMMERCIAL COURTS for commercial disputes (Commercial Courts Act 2015, with S.12A pre-mediation > ₹3L), (c) CIVIL COURTS for breach + damages. REGISTERED USER recordal at TRADEMARKS REGISTRY (Office of Controller General of Patents, Designs & Trade Marks) — recommended for trademark licensing component. COMPETITION COMMISSION OF INDIA (CCI) for anti-competitive practices scrutiny. INCOME TAX DEPARTMENT for royalty taxation. RBI for international royalty repatriation (now automatic route post-2009). NOT MCA / NOT a registration service.

Portal / filing channel

NO single portal. FRANCHISE-RELATED PORTALS: (1) TRADEMARKS REGISTRY — ipindia.gov.in / publicsearch.ipindia.gov.in (for trademark verification + registered user recordal). (2) e-STAMP via SHCIL + state stamp portals. (3) Income Tax — incometax.gov.in for TDS u/s 195 + Form 15CA/15CB for royalty repatriation. (4) GSTN — gst.gov.in for franchise fee GST handling. (5) CCI — cci.gov.in for combination filings + anti-competitive complaints. (6) PRIVATE PLATFORMS: Franchise India (franchiseindia.com), FranchiseIndia.com, FranchiseGator, OpenWeb (franchise discovery + databases). (7) International: International Franchise Association (IFA), Franchise Direct.

2026 · Recent changes you should know

INDIAN FRANCHISE MARKET 2024-25 — ~₹2 LAKH CRORE INDUSTRY with 200,000+ franchise outlets across 5,000+ brands. Sectors growing: education, healthcare, F&B, fitness, beauty, automotive after-sales. FEMA Royalty payments under AUTOMATIC ROUTE since 2009 (no RBI approval needed). E-INVOICE THRESHOLD reduced to ₹5 Cr turnover — affects franchisee compliance. COMPETITION COMMISSION OF INDIA (CCI) — increasing scrutiny on franchise vertical restraints; major brands (e.g., car manufacturer-dealer) facing investigations. TRADEMARKS REGISTRY processing time improved — TM registration ~12-18 months currently. DPDP Act 2023 — affects customer data handling in franchise operations. BNS / BNSS / Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (1 July 2024) — affects legal references in dispute clauses. FOREIGN FRANCHISES growing in India — McDonald's, Starbucks, KFC, Burger King expanding aggressively.

Realistic timeline

What happens, when — phase by phase

No vague timelines. Here's the actual phase-wise breakdown for Franchise Agreement in Nashik.

  1. 01

    Franchise Strategy + Business Model Briefing

    Day 1-3

    BRIEFING SESSION: business model (food/retail/services/education/healthcare/automotive), franchise structure (Single-unit / Multi-unit / Area Development / Master Franchise / International), brand strength (trademark registration status), unit economics, royalty structure (% of revenue, fixed fee, mixed), territory definition, term + renewal, franchisor support (training, marketing, supply chain, technology, ongoing). KEY DECISIONS: (1) UNIT vs AREA vs MASTER franchise, (2) SINGLE-BRAND vs MULTI-BRAND franchisee, (3) DOMESTIC vs INTERNATIONAL (FEMA + DTAA implications), (4) PRODUCT SUPPLY vs SERVICES franchise.

  2. 02

    Trademark + IP Due Diligence

    Day 3-7

    CRITICAL: FRANCHISE depends on STRONG TRADEMARK. (1) Verify FRANCHISOR'S TRADEMARK REGISTRATION on ipindia.gov.in (class-wise registered, validity, opposition status). (2) Check OPERATIONS MANUAL + KNOW-HOW protection as trade secret. (3) COPYRIGHT in brand collateral (logos, training material, marketing assets). (4) PATENTS / DESIGNS if applicable. (5) DOMAIN NAMES (.com / .in registered). (6) For international franchise: trademark registration in India + Madrid Protocol coverage. (7) PREPARE Schedule of IP for agreement reference. PRELIMINARY DRAFT of Registered User application.

  3. 03

    Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) — Recommended

    Day 7-10

    FDD — voluntary in India but RECOMMENDED for transparency + reduced disputes: comprehensive document disclosing (a) FRANCHISOR background, financials, past lawsuits, (b) FRANCHISE SYSTEM track record, number of franchisees, average performance, (c) FRANCHISE FEES + ROYALTY structure with examples, (d) FRANCHISEE OBLIGATIONS, (e) TRAINING + ONGOING SUPPORT details, (f) TERRITORY policy, (g) TERMINATION grounds + post-termination obligations, (h) EARNINGS CLAIMS (if any — with disclaimer), (i) AUDITED FINANCIALS of franchisor. Modelled on US FTC Rule 436 / EU Franchise Directive even though not mandatory in India.

  4. 04

    Master Franchise Agreement Drafting (30-60 pages)

    Day 10-18

    COMPREHENSIVE FRANCHISE AGREEMENT (30-60 pages, 30+ clauses): (1) PARTIES + DEFINITIONS (very detailed for franchise terminology). (2) GRANT OF FRANCHISE (specific scope + territory). (3) TRADEMARK LICENSE (per S.49 TM Act + Schedule of marks). (4) TERRITORY + EXCLUSIVITY. (5) FRANCHISE FEE (one-time upfront) + ROYALTY (% of revenue or fixed). (6) TERM + RENEWAL (typically 5-10 years, renewable). (7) OPERATIONS MANUAL incorporation (compliance mandatory). (8) PROPRIETARY SYSTEMS (POS, ERP, training portals). (9) TRAINING (initial + refresher). (10) MARKETING FUND contribution (typically 1-3% of revenue). (11) QUALITY STANDARDS + AUDIT RIGHTS. (12) SUPPLY ARRANGEMENTS (mandatory products from franchisor / approved vendors). (13) STORE LOCATION + FIT-OUT specifications. (14) REPORTING + IT INTEGRATION (POS reporting, monthly P&L). (15) CONFIDENTIALITY + IP PROTECTION. (16) NON-COMPETE (during + limited post-termination). (17) NON-SOLICITATION. (18) TRANSFER + SUCCESSION (right of first refusal). (19) TERMINATION (cause + convenience). (20) POST-TERMINATION (deboardment, return of materials, transition). (21) INDEMNITY. (22) LIMITATION OF LIABILITY. (23) DISPUTE RESOLUTION (arbitration typical). (24) GOVERNING LAW + JURISDICTION.

  5. 05

    Stamping, Execution, Trademark Recordal

    Day 18-25

    STAMP DUTY: state-specific on consideration value (Maharashtra 0.1% min ₹500 max ₹25K; Karnataka 1% capped; Delhi 1%; varies). e-STAMP procurement via SHCIL or state portal. EXECUTION: physical signing by both parties + 2 witnesses + Common Seal (if company); each page initialled. REGISTERED USER RECORDAL at Trademarks Registry — Form TM-U / Form 28 — within 6 months of agreement; protects franchisee's right + franchisor under S.49 TM Act. SCHEDULE attachments — operations manual reference, fee schedule, territory map, marks list, marketing fund use, key performance indicators. RETENTION: original signed copies to each party.

Transparent cost

What you pay, broken down

Most counsel quote one number. We show you what goes where, so there is nothing to discover later.

ComponentAmountNote
Standard Single-Unit Franchise Agreement (small brand) ₹9,999 – ₹29,999 30-clause comprehensive agreement + Schedule + Trademark recordal
Multi-Unit / Area Development Franchise Agreement ₹24,999 – ₹74,999 Multiple unit obligations + area exclusivity + performance milestones
Master Franchise Agreement (for sub-franchising) ₹49,999 – ₹1,49,999 Includes sub-franchise architecture + master franchisee royalty split
International Franchise (foreign franchisor → Indian franchisee) ₹74,999 – ₹2,99,999 Includes FEMA + DTAA + TDS u/s 195 + international IP + governing law
Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) Drafting ₹29,999 – ₹99,999 Voluntary but recommended; comprehensive franchisor disclosure
Operations Manual Drafting (separate engagement) ₹49,999 – ₹2,49,999 SOP for franchisee operations — branding, processes, customer service
Trademark Registered User Recordal (Form TM-U) ₹4,999 – ₹14,999 Per franchisee at Trademarks Registry; + ₹4,500 official fee
Area Development Agreement (for area developer rights) ₹19,999 – ₹49,999 For multi-unit area exclusivity
Franchisee's side review (when receiving franchisor draft) ₹14,999 – ₹49,999 Critical for franchisee — terms often heavily franchisor-favourable
Renewal / Amendment of existing Franchise Agreement ₹9,999 – ₹29,999 For modifying existing franchise terms
Termination + Deboardment Agreement ₹14,999 – ₹49,999 Exit framework — return of materials, settlement, no-compete
Stamp Duty (state-specific on consideration) State-specific Maharashtra 0.1% min ₹500 max ₹25K; Karnataka 1%; varies
Trademark Registry recordal official fee ₹4,500 Per Form TM-U filing
For INTL franchise: TDS u/s 195 ON royalty 10% + surcharge (DTAA) / 20% no PAN Pass-through statutory
GST on franchise fee + royalty 18% Pass-through statutory

Total estimate from 9999 · final fee depends on entity size, document readiness, and city-specific stamp duty (see local jurisdiction above).

Founder's watchlist

Mistakes that cost time, money, and standing

From hundreds of engagements, here are the patterns that cause founders and businesses to come back to us in distress. Avoid these and you've already won 70% of the matter.

M01

Trademark not registered or pending — fragile franchise foundation

Franchise depends on STRONG TRADEMARK. Common error: franchisor with only TM APPLICATION (not registered yet) starts franchising. RISK: (a) If TM application REJECTED, franchisee's entire brand investment at risk, (b) Limited recourse against infringers, (c) Third parties may exploit gap. SOLUTION: Verify TM registration class-wise before franchise. Wait for registration if possible. Until registered, use TM™ symbol (not ®) + include trademark indemnity in agreement.

M02

No Registered User recordal at TM Registry

SECTION 49 TRADE MARKS ACT: when franchisor permits franchisee to use registered mark, recordal as REGISTERED USER recommended (Form TM-U). BENEFITS: (a) Franchisee's use deemed franchisor's use (helps franchisor's mark protection), (b) Franchisee gets enforceable right against infringers, (c) Clear legal acknowledgment of license. WITHOUT recordal: franchisee's right unrecorded + franchisor mark vulnerable to non-use cancellation. File within 6 months of agreement signing.

M03

Territorial restrictions overly broad (S.27 + Competition Act trap)

Section 27 Indian Contract Act + Section 3 Competition Act: overly broad territorial restrictions may be challenged as restraint of trade OR anti-competitive vertical agreement. SOLUTION: TERRITORY definition must be REASONABLE — geographic radius / market segment / customer base. Avoid: nationwide non-compete, decade+ duration, no carve-outs for legitimate competition. CCI scrutiny risk for established franchisors with market power.

M04

Royalty structure problematic (under-reporting risk)

ROYALTY PAYMENT — % of revenue most common. RISKS: (a) Under-reporting by franchisee, (b) Cash transactions not reflected, (c) Inter-related party diversions. SOLUTIONS: (1) POS INTEGRATION mandatory — direct revenue feed to franchisor systems, (2) AUDIT RIGHTS (annual + surprise) at franchisee cost if under-reporting > 5%, (3) MINIMUM ROYALTY (₹X/month regardless of revenue), (4) GST returns + ITR cross-verification, (5) Bank statement access (limited). Trust + verify framework.

M05

No clear marketing fund accountability

MARKETING FUND — typically 1-3% of revenue collected from all franchisees, pooled by franchisor for national/regional marketing. ISSUES: (a) Franchisor uses for own promotion vs collective benefit, (b) No transparency on spend, (c) Smaller franchisees subsidise bigger market areas. AGREEMENT MUST specify: (i) PURPOSE (national / regional / digital), (ii) ANNUAL REPORTING to franchisees, (iii) AUDIT RIGHTS, (iv) Specific exclusions (no franchisor profit, no preferential allocation), (v) Carry-forward of unspent funds.

M06

Operations Manual not properly referenced / protected

OPERATIONS MANUAL = trade secret + key franchise IP. ERRORS: (a) Not referenced specifically in agreement (so non-compliance not breach), (b) Not marked confidential, (c) Reproductions allowed without restriction. SOLUTIONS: (1) DEFINED in agreement as "Operations Manual including amendments from time to time," (2) CONFIDENTIALITY clause covering manual contents, (3) NO REPRODUCTION clause, (4) UPDATES BINDING on franchisee (with reasonable notice), (5) RETURN ON TERMINATION mandatory.

M07

Supply chain exclusivity not balanced

COMMON: franchisor mandates SUPPLY ONLY from franchisor or approved vendors. RISK to franchisee: monopolistic pricing, supply disruptions, no negotiation. COMPETITION ACT concern: tied selling u/s 3(4)(a). BALANCE: (a) ALTERNATIVE APPROVED VENDORS option, (b) PRICE CAPS (franchisor cannot exceed market by X%), (c) QUALITY-BASED EXCLUSIVITY (only for brand-specific items), (d) Right to source generics from open market. Critical for franchisee margins.

M08

Exit / Termination heavily franchisor-favourable

STANDARD PROBLEM: franchisor can terminate easily; franchisee cannot exit without penalty. RISK to franchisee: ₹L investment + locked in. FAIR EXIT FRAMEWORK: (1) CURE PERIODS for breaches (30-90 days), (2) TERMINATION FOR CONVENIENCE — both parties (with notice + transition), (3) BUYBACK MECHANISM — franchisor buys back franchisee's investments at depreciated value, (4) THIRD-PARTY TRANSFER — franchisee's right with franchisor consent (not unreasonably withheld), (5) POST-TERMINATION REASONABLE — narrow non-compete (specific area, 6-12 months max).

M09

For International Franchise: FEMA + Royalty TDS missed

International franchise (foreign franchisor → Indian franchisee): (a) ROYALTY PAYMENT under FEMA NDI Rules — AUTOMATIC ROUTE post-2009 (no RBI approval for technology transfer), (b) TDS u/s 195 IT Act on royalty — 10% + surcharge (basic rate) OR 20% if no PAN, (c) DTAA application — reduced rates (India-US 10%, India-UK 10%, India-Singapore 10%), (d) FORM 15CA + 15CB (CA-certified) for repatriation, (e) GST on royalty 18% (RCM for some scenarios). Generic Indian agreement INADEQUATE — needs international taxation overlay.

M10

No comprehensive Schedule attachments

Franchise agreement BODY references multiple SCHEDULES: (1) TRADEMARK LIST (registration numbers, classes, certificates), (2) TERRITORY MAP (geographic boundaries), (3) FEE SCHEDULE (initial + royalty + marketing + renewal), (4) OPERATIONS MANUAL TOC, (5) KEY PERFORMANCE INDICATORS (KPIs), (6) APPROVED VENDOR LIST, (7) TRAINING SCHEDULE, (8) STORE FIT-OUT SPECS, (9) UNIT P&L PROJECTION. WITHOUT Schedules = vague obligations + disputes. Schedules can be updated easier than main agreement.

M11

Franchisee due diligence on franchisor skipped

BEFORE signing as FRANCHISEE: verify FRANCHISOR'S — (a) Audited financial track record (3+ years), (b) Existing franchisee references (visit + interview), (c) Trademark registration status, (d) Past lawsuits + regulatory notices, (e) Marketing fund track record + accountability, (f) Operations Manual quality, (g) Training quality (visit existing training centre), (h) Average franchisee profitability data, (i) Franchisor's exit + transition history. Franchise = LONG-TERM relationship; due diligence critical.

M12

GST on franchise fee + royalty mishandled

CGST: Franchise fee (one-time) + Ongoing royalty = SUPPLY OF SERVICES = 18% GST. FRANCHISEE pays GST. ITC available if franchisee is GST-registered + uses for taxable supplies. For INTERNATIONAL franchise: IMPORT OF SERVICES = Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) — Indian franchisee pays GST under RCM, claims ITC. Place of supply, recipient address matter. Errors lead to GST notices.

Counsel red flags

How to spot the wrong advisor before signing

These are the signals — observed across the profession — that your money and matter are about to be handled poorly. We list them so you can vet anyone, including us.

Deep FAQ

The questions founders actually ask

Not the polished 5 — the 15 that come up in real consultations. Click any to expand.

Q01What is a Franchise Agreement and how is it different from licensing?
FRANCHISE AGREEMENT — comprehensive contract where FRANCHISOR licenses to FRANCHISEE: (1) TRADEMARK + BRAND identity, (2) OPERATIONS MANUAL + business format, (3) TRAINING + ongoing support, (4) TERRITORY + exclusivity, (5) SUPPLY CHAIN (often), in exchange for FRANCHISE FEE + ONGOING ROYALTY. Franchisee operates under franchisor's brand + system. LICENSING — narrower: only TRADEMARK or IP rights licensed for fee. No operational system, training, ongoing support necessarily. Franchise = "Business in a Box" / Full ecosystem. Licensing = single IP element use. INDIA has NO single franchise law (unlike US FTC Rule / EU Franchise Directive) — governed by Contract Act + Trade Marks Act + Competition Act overlay.
Q02What are the types of Franchise Agreements?
STRUCTURES: (1) SINGLE-UNIT FRANCHISE — franchisee operates ONE OUTLET; most common entry-level. (2) MULTI-UNIT FRANCHISE — same franchisee operates multiple outlets in defined area; performance milestones for adding units. (3) AREA DEVELOPMENT — franchisee gets EXCLUSIVE area + commitment to open X units in Y years; non-performance = loss of exclusivity. (4) MASTER FRANCHISE — franchisor (often foreign) appoints MASTER FRANCHISEE (e.g., for India) who then sub-franchises within country; master franchisee gets sub-franchising rights + royalty split. (5) PRODUCT DISTRIBUTION FRANCHISE — focus on selling franchisor products with trademark use (e.g., car dealerships, soft drink bottlers). (6) BUSINESS FORMAT FRANCHISE — full operational system replication (e.g., McDonald's, Subway, fitness chains, education brands). Each structure requires DIFFERENT contract complexity + investment + governance.
Q03How is Trademark licensing handled in Franchise?
SECTION 49 TRADE MARKS ACT 1999: when franchisor permits franchisee to use registered mark, this is a "PERMITTED USE." RECORDAL as "REGISTERED USER" recommended (Form TM-U / Form 28 at Trademarks Registry) — strengthens both parties' positions: (a) FRANCHISEE'S use deemed FRANCHISOR'S use (protects mark from non-use cancellation u/s 47), (b) FRANCHISEE gets right to sue infringers (with franchisor's consent), (c) Clear legal acknowledgment in TM records. BEFORE FRANCHISE: Verify franchisor's TM registration on ipindia.gov.in — class-wise (different classes for goods vs services). For multi-class franchise: registration in all relevant classes (e.g., restaurant chain: Class 43 services + Class 30 food). RECORDAL FEE: ₹4,500 per form. RECORDAL TIME: 6-12 months currently.
Q04What's the typical fee structure in Franchise Agreement?
STANDARD FEE STRUCTURE: (1) ONE-TIME UPFRONT FEE: ₹5L – ₹1 Crore (depending on brand strength + investment + territory) — covers initial training, setup support, marketing kit. Non-refundable typically. (2) ONGOING ROYALTY: % of GROSS REVENUE — typically 5-15%. Sometimes FIXED MINIMUM (₹X/month) + % of revenue over threshold. (3) MARKETING FUND CONTRIBUTION: 1-3% of gross revenue — pooled for national/regional brand marketing. (4) RENEWAL FEE: at term-end (typically 25-50% of original upfront). (5) TRAINING FEES: initial included; ongoing/refresher billable. (6) Technology / POS / ERP licensing: monthly subscription. (7) Audit fees: if under-reporting detected. ADDITIONALLY: GST 18% on all fees; TDS implications for franchisor. STRUCTURE varies HUGELY by industry — food typically 5-8% royalty, services 7-12%, education 10-15%.
Q05What rights does the franchisee have?
CORE FRANCHISEE RIGHTS in well-drafted agreement: (1) USE OF TRADEMARK for stated business in stated territory for term. (2) EXCLUSIVE TERRITORY (typically — area within X km radius / specified pincodes). (3) OPERATIONS MANUAL access + use. (4) TRAINING — initial + ongoing. (5) NATIONAL MARKETING benefit (from marketing fund). (6) BRAND SUPPORT — collateral, PR. (7) SUPPLY CHAIN access at franchisor-negotiated terms. (8) AUDIT TRAIL transparency (mutual audit rights). (9) RIGHT TO RENEW (subject to performance). (10) TRANSFER rights (with franchisor consent). LIMITATIONS: cannot exceed territory, cannot sub-franchise (unless master franchise), must follow operations manual, must pay royalty. FRANCHISEE'S NEGOTIATION POINTS: (a) FEE STRUCTURE (lower upfront + lower royalty %), (b) TERRITORY EXCLUSIVITY, (c) RENEWAL terms, (d) TRANSFER flexibility, (e) EXIT mechanism.
Q06What about International Franchise (foreign franchisor)?
For FOREIGN FRANCHISOR → INDIAN FRANCHISEE: additional considerations beyond domestic: (1) FEMA — Royalty payments under AUTOMATIC ROUTE since 2009 (no RBI approval needed for technology transfer / brand use); maximum limits removed. (2) TDS u/s 195 IT Act — Indian franchisee MUST deduct TDS on royalty: BASE RATE 10% + surcharge + cess (~12-13%) for residents; for non-residents 20% if no PAN. DTAA REDUCED RATES: India-US 10%, India-UK 10%, India-Singapore 10%, India-Mauritius 7.5%. (3) FORM 15CA + 15CB (CA-certified) for each royalty remittance. (4) GST under REVERSE CHARGE MECHANISM (RCM) — Indian franchisee pays GST 18% on import of services. (5) TRADEMARK REGISTRATION in India must be obtained (Madrid Protocol filing OR direct application). (6) GOVERNING LAW — typically franchisor's country (Singapore / English law common), but India for India-only operations. (7) DISPUTE RESOLUTION — international arbitration (SIAC Singapore, LCIA London, ICC Paris). (8) PERMANENT ESTABLISHMENT risk for franchisor in India (avoid creating tax presence).
Q07What is the term and renewal pattern?
TYPICAL FRANCHISE TERM: 5-10 YEARS initial (industry-specific — F&B often 5 years, education 10 years, automotive 10+ years). RENEWAL OPTIONS: (1) AUTOMATIC RENEWAL — agreement self-renews unless either party gives notice (90-180 days before expiry). (2) RIGHT OF RENEWAL — franchisee has right to renew subject to: performance milestones met, no material breach, payment of renewal fee, signing updated franchise agreement (which may have updated terms). (3) NEGOTIATED RENEWAL — fresh terms negotiated at end of term. CONSIDERATIONS: brand strength evolves; technology + operations change over time; franchisee's investment recovery; market dynamics. SOPHISTICATED franchise has renewal pricing model — franchisee's long-term loyalty rewarded with reduced renewal fees. RENEWAL FAILURE: post-termination clauses kick in (deboardment, non-compete period, return of materials).
Q08What happens when Franchise terminates?
TERMINATION SCENARIOS: (1) END OF TERM (natural expiry without renewal). (2) FOR CAUSE — material breach, non-payment, brand damage, criminal acts. (3) FOR CONVENIENCE — either party with notice (less common; usually only franchisor right). (4) BANKRUPTCY/insolvency of either party. POST-TERMINATION OBLIGATIONS: (a) IMMEDIATE CESSATION of trademark use, signage removal within 30-60 days, (b) RETURN of operations manual + confidential materials, (c) De-identification of premises (paint over branding, remove logos), (d) FINAL FINANCIAL SETTLEMENT (last royalty, audit, security deposit refund), (e) NON-COMPETE (limited — geographic + time bounded per Section 27), (f) CUSTOMER LIST / database treatment (often returned to franchisor for "system" customers; franchisee retains for "personal" customers), (g) SUPPLIER NOTICE (cease franchise-specific orders), (h) ONGOING liabilities (warranty for already-served customers). DISPUTE on settlement → arbitration per agreement.
Q09How is Operations Manual structured and protected?
OPERATIONS MANUAL = KEY FRANCHISE IP — detailed SOP for franchisee operations. TYPICAL CONTENTS: (1) BRAND STANDARDS — logo usage, colours, signage, uniforms. (2) STORE LAYOUT + SPECIFICATIONS — fit-out, equipment, layout, signage. (3) CUSTOMER SERVICE PROTOCOLS — greeting, complaint handling, service standards. (4) PRODUCT PREPARATION (for F&B) — recipes, processes, quality controls, food safety. (5) HR + STAFFING — recruitment, training, uniforms, salary bands, leave policy. (6) MARKETING — local marketing rules, social media guidelines, promotions. (7) FINANCIAL — POS operations, daily reconciliation, royalty reporting. (8) AUDIT + COMPLIANCE — quality audits, mystery shoppers, customer feedback. PROTECTION: (a) Marked CONFIDENTIAL + PROPRIETARY, (b) Trade Secret protection, (c) Copyright registration recommended, (d) Distributed to franchisee under STRICT non-disclosure, (e) NO REPRODUCTION or sharing clause, (f) RETURNED ON TERMINATION mandatorily, (g) UPDATES BINDING with reasonable notice.
Q10How long does franchise agreement drafting take?
TYPICAL TIMELINE: 3-6 WEEKS end-to-end for COMPREHENSIVE franchise agreement. (1) BRIEFING + STRATEGY 3-5 days. (2) TRADEMARK + IP DD 5-7 days. (3) FDD drafting (if pursued) 5-7 days. (4) MASTER AGREEMENT DRAFTING (30-60 pages) 7-10 days. (5) NEGOTIATION + ITERATION (2-4 rounds) 7-14 days. (6) STAMPING + EXECUTION 2-3 days. (7) TRADEMARK RECORDAL filing 3-5 days (recordal approval takes 6-12 months separately). FOR INTERNATIONAL: add 2-4 weeks for international counsel coordination + FEMA + tax + DTAA review + foreign IP integration. RUSH option (24-48 hours for single-unit standard franchise) available with premium fee. RECOMMENDATION: allocate sufficient time for negotiation — terms negotiated NOW define 5-10 years of relationship.
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