Guide

The Complete Guide to Buying a Franchise in Canada

A step-by-step roadmap from initial research to opening day. Everything you need to know before investing in a franchise.

1

Self-Assessment

Before exploring franchise opportunities, honestly evaluate your readiness:
Financial capacity — Do you have the required net worth and liquid capital? Most franchises in Canada require $50,000–$500,000+ in liquid capital, plus the ability to secure financing for the total investment.
Skills and experience — While franchises provide training, certain backgrounds are advantageous. Management experience, customer service skills, and basic financial literacy are valuable across all franchise types.
Lifestyle fit — Many franchise owners work 50–60 hours per week, especially in the first 1–2 years. Are you prepared for hands-on ownership? Does the industry excite you?
Risk tolerance — Franchising reduces risk compared to independent business, but it's still an investment. Be honest about how much financial risk you can handle.
Support system — Does your family or partner support this decision? Franchise ownership impacts your entire household.

Take our Franchise Quiz to help evaluate your readiness and find the right franchise type for you.

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2

Research Franchise Opportunities

Once you've confirmed your readiness, start exploring options:
Browse franchise directories — Use platforms like StartWithFranchise to compare opportunities side by side, filtering by industry, investment level, and location.
Attend franchise expos — Events like the Canadian Franchise Association (CFA) shows let you meet franchisors in person and ask questions.
Focus on industries you understand — Passion matters, but domain knowledge gives you a significant advantage in operations and marketing.
Consider emerging brands vs. established brands — Established brands (Tim Hortons, Subway) offer proven systems but higher costs. Emerging brands may offer lower entry costs and more territory availability.
Evaluate the franchise model — Some are owner-operated (you work in the business), others are semi-absentee (you manage managers). Know which model fits your goals.

Use our Franchise Comparison Tool to evaluate multiple franchises side by side.

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3

Review the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD)

In Canada, franchisors in Ontario, Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and British Columbia are legally required to provide a Franchise Disclosure Document. This is the most important document in your evaluation.
Key items to study carefully:
Item 2 — Business Experience of the franchisor's directors and key executives. Look for depth of experience.
Item 3 — Litigation — Any lawsuits against the franchisor, especially from franchisees. Patterns of litigation are a red flag.
Item 5 & 6 — Fees — Understand every fee: franchise fee, royalties (typically 4–8% of gross), marketing fund contribution (1–3%), technology fees, transfer fees, renewal fees.
Item 7 — Estimated Initial Investment — This range includes everything from build-out to working capital. Plan for the high end.
Item 12 — Territory — Is your territory exclusive? What are the boundaries? Can the franchisor sell online in your territory?
Item 19 — Financial Performance — Not all franchisors provide this, but if they do, study it carefully. This shows actual or projected earnings.
Item 20 — Franchisee List — Contact current and former franchisees. This is the most valuable validation step.

Use our Due Diligence Checklist to track every item you need to review.

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4

Validate with Existing Franchisees

Speaking with current and former franchisees is the single most valuable step in your due diligence. The franchisor is required to provide a list of all franchisees in Item 20 of the FDD.
Questions to ask current franchisees:
• "Knowing what you know now, would you invest in this franchise again?" • "How accurate were the franchisor's earnings projections?" • "How would you rate the quality of training and ongoing support?" • "What is the biggest challenge you've faced as a franchisee?" • "How is the relationship between franchisees and the franchisor?" • "How long did it take to reach profitability?" • "What do you wish you had known before buying?"
Questions for former franchisees:
• "Why did you leave the system?" • "Were there any issues with the franchisor that influenced your decision?" • "Would you recommend this franchise to someone else?"
Pro tip: Contact at least 5–10 franchisees from different regions and with different tenure lengths. Watch for patterns — if multiple franchisees raise the same concern, take it seriously.

If a franchisor discourages you from contacting franchisees or limits who you can speak with, consider it a major red flag.

5

Secure Financing

Most franchise investments require a combination of personal capital and financing:
Personal savings — Franchisors typically require 30–50% of the total investment in liquid capital. The rest can be financed.
Bank loans — Major Canadian banks (RBC, TD, BMO, Scotiabank) have dedicated franchise lending programs. A strong business plan and personal credit history are essential.
BDC (Business Development Bank of Canada) — Offers small business loans specifically designed for franchise purchases. More flexible than traditional banks.
CSBFP (Canada Small Business Financing Program) — Government-backed loans up to $1,000,000 for assets and $150,000 for leasehold improvements. Lower interest rates and longer terms.
Franchisor financing — Some franchisors offer direct financing, deferred franchise fees, or preferred lending partner programs.
Home equity — Some buyers leverage home equity, though this increases personal risk.
Key documents you'll need: Personal financial statement, credit report, business plan, franchise agreement, FDD, and 2–3 years of personal tax returns.

Read our Financing Options guide for a detailed breakdown of every funding source.

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6

Legal Review & Signing

Never sign a franchise agreement without professional legal review:
Hire a franchise attorney — Not just any business lawyer. Franchise law is specialized and varies by province. A franchise attorney will identify risks a general lawyer might miss.
Understand the cooling-off period — In provinces with franchise disclosure laws, you have at least 14 days after receiving the FDD to review it before signing. Use every day.
Negotiate where possible — While many franchise agreements are non-negotiable, some terms may be flexible, especially for multi-unit deals. Your attorney can advise what's negotiable.
Review key clauses carefully: - Termination — Under what conditions can the franchisor terminate your agreement? - Renewal — What are the conditions and costs for renewal? - Transfer — Can you sell the franchise? What fees and restrictions apply? - Non-compete — How long and how broad is the restriction after you leave? - Dispute resolution — Is arbitration required? In which jurisdiction?
Get everything in writing — Any verbal promises from the franchisor should be documented in the agreement. If it's not in writing, it doesn't exist.

The statutory rescission period in Ontario is 60 days from receiving the FDD (or 2 years if no FDD was provided). Know your rights.

7

Launch & Operate

After signing, your journey to opening day begins:
Complete franchisor training — Attend all training programs fully engaged. This is your foundation for running the business.
Secure your location — Work with the franchisor's real estate team (if applicable) to find and build out your location. This typically takes 3–9 months.
Hire and train your team — Start recruiting early. Look for people who align with the brand culture. Many franchisors provide employee training materials.
Pre-opening marketing — Build local awareness before you open. Social media, local partnerships, and community engagement are essential.
Grand opening — Plan a strong launch event. First impressions matter and can set the momentum for your first year.
Follow the system — The franchise model works because of consistency. Resist the temptation to reinvent the wheel in your first year. Learn the system, then innovate within the framework.
Track everything — Monitor your financial performance closely from day one. Compare actual results to your business plan projections and adjust accordingly.

Use our ROI Calculator to set financial benchmarks and track your performance.

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Ready to Start Your Franchise Search?

Browse franchise opportunities across Canada and use our tools to evaluate the best fit.