Whether your franchise territory is actually protected
A protected territory is worth real money. An unprotected one can be quietly eroded by the franchisor selling next door, or online into your area. Item 12 tells you which one you are buying, if you read the carve-outs.
This chapter runs from the few things every buyer must know, at the surface, down to the detail only some will need, in the trench. It darkens as you go deeper. Scroll to begin.
A protected territory is worth real money. An unprotected one can be quietly eroded. Item 12 tells you which one you are buying, if you read the fine print.
- A defined, exclusive territory
- Boundaries in writing: a map, radius, or ZIP codes
- A promise not to open or grant inside it
- Limits on the franchisor's own sales in
- Non-exclusive, or no territory at all
- Kept only if you hit a quota
- Online and alternate channels reserved
- The franchisor can redraw it
What Item 12 actually is
Item 12 says whether you get a protected territory at all, how that territory is defined, and what the franchisor promises not to do inside it. Many franchises grant you a territory and then, a few sentences later, make it explicitly non-exclusive, or reserve so many rights that the protection is mostly symbolic. The grant of a territory is the headline that makes you feel safe. The reserved rights underneath it are the actual story, and they are where almost all of the value is won or lost.
The risk is rarely the sentence that grants the territory. It is the reserved-rights and alternate-channel clauses beneath it: the franchisor keeping the right to sell online, through grocery or national accounts, or with company-owned units, into the very area you thought was yours. An exclusive territory can be hollowed out one reserved right at a time while the word "exclusive" stays right there on the page. Read every reserved right before you trust the grant.
An exclusive territory with broad carve-outs can be weaker, in practice, than an honest non-exclusive one, because the word makes you feel protected while the brand competes with you anyway through channels you did not think to read about. Count the exceptions before you trust the adjective.
Everything below is what they hope you skim.
The surface is the territory grant. The depth is the reserved rights underneath it. From here on it is more detail, and a little less essential, the deeper you go.
Paste a clip of your Item 12. We point out what matters.
Paste a clip or section of Item 12, even the territory grant or a few reserved-rights lines, and we check that snippet: the biggest issue, what the text does not say, and the exact questions for your franchise attorney and current and former owners. Evidence only. No score, no verdict, no guessing.
Reading the text…
Issues found
What the text actually says
What is missing
Questions for your attorney
Questions for current and former franchisees
Read literally from the text you pasted. This is not legal, financial, or accounting advice, and it is not a verdict on the franchise. These are starting points for your own diligence.
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Read the free guideFive questions tell a real territory from a symbolic one.
Is it exclusive?
Good A protected, exclusive area.
Watch Non-exclusive, or no territory.
Is it conditional?
Good Yours for the term.
Watch Kept only if you hit a quota.
Is online reserved?
Good Online sales stay with you, or are limited.
Watch The brand can sell online into your area.
Other channels carved out?
Good No alternate-channel exceptions.
Watch Grocery, national accounts, kiosks.
Can it be redrawn?
Good Boundaries are fixed.
Watch The franchisor can modify or relocate it.
Two things to pin down before anything else: whether it is exclusive, and whether it is even precisely drawn.
Exclusive or non-exclusive
Item 12 states whether you get a protected territory, how it is defined, by radius, population, or ZIP codes, and what the franchisor promises not to do inside it. Many franchises grant a territory but make it explicitly non-exclusive, which means another franchisee or a company unit can open near you. The whole chapter turns on one sentence, the one that uses the word "exclusive" or "non-exclusive," so find it first and read everything else in its light. A non-exclusive territory is not automatically a bad deal, but it is a very different deal, and you should price it as one.
Is it even drawn?
A territory described in words alone, with no map, no radius, no ZIP codes, and no population figure, is hard to enforce, because a vague boundary is one the franchisor can interpret in its own favor later. Ask for the territory as a written exhibit attached to the agreement, and confirm the boundaries are fixed and specific. If the only definition is a paragraph of prose, treat the protection as soft until you see it drawn.
Watch for protection you keep only if you hit minimum sales quotas. That ties your territory to a slow year, which is exactly when new competition next door would hurt the most. Read the targets, judge whether they are realistic for a new unit, and ask precisely what happens to your territory if you miss them: does it shrink, open up to others, or convert to non-exclusive?
“You receive an exclusive territory defined by the ZIP codes in Exhibit C. We will not open or grant another franchise within it during the term.”
Exclusive, drawn in writing, with a clear promise not to open inside it.
“Your territory is exclusive. We reserve the right to sell through the internet, national accounts, and other channels anywhere, including within your territory.”
The word “exclusive” stays on the page while a broad reserved-rights clause hollows it out.
Illustrative wording, not a real franchise.
This is where territories are really lost, in the exceptions most buyers skim past.
Online and alternate channels
The most common erosion is a clause where the franchisor reserves the right to sell to customers in your territory through websites and e-commerce, national accounts, grocery or retail, kiosks, airports, stadiums, schools, or other channels. Your "exclusive" territory can still have the brand's own website shipping orders into it and its national accounts served around you, and in most of these clauses you receive no revenue and no credit for any of it. A single broadly worded reserved-rights sentence can quietly undo the entire protection you thought you were buying.
Who keeps the customer
For each reserved channel, ask the same two questions: can it reach customers physically inside my area, and do I get any revenue or credit when it does? Delivery and mobile models add one more wrinkle, because another operator can serve customers inside your territory without ever opening a location in it. Weak protection here, combined with the heavy required purchases you may have found in Item 9, is a tight box: you carry the costs of being the local owner while the brand keeps the right to compete with you.
Three more reserved rights worth finding before you sign.
- Company-owned and affiliate competition: can the franchisor or its affiliates open units, or run sister brands selling similar products, near you? Competition from inside the same company counts just as much as competition from another franchisee, and company units are often exempted from the very restrictions that protect you from other owners. A franchisor that owns a second brand in the same category can compete with you under a different name.
- Territory modification: a reserved right to redraw, reduce, or relocate your territory means the area you buy today is not necessarily the area you will keep. Read the exact conditions under which it can change, and whether your consent is required or merely your notice.
- Minimum performance: if the territory shrinks or opens to others when you miss a quota, treat that quota as a core term of the deal, not a footnote, and confirm the number is one a healthy new unit can actually reach.
If you have read this far, you have read the whole franchise. Turn the territory into a few precise questions.
Territory is the value of being the brand in your area, and the reserved rights decide how real that value is. Weak protection undercuts the earnings logic of Item 19, because the sales the brand keeps for itself are sales you will never make, and owners squeezed by encroachment show up later in Item 20. Read the carve-outs, then call the owners who live next to them.
What to ask
- "Can you sell to customers in my territory online or through national accounts, and do I receive any revenue or credit?"
- "Under what conditions can my territory shrink, be redrawn, or be relocated, and is my consent required?"
- "Can I have the territory as a written exhibit, with fixed, specific boundaries?"
- "Can the franchisor or an affiliate operate a company unit or a similar brand near me?"
That is the eighth and final chapter. You have now read the parts of the FDD that decide whether you get hurt. Go back to the full guide to revisit any of them, run a clip through any chapter's free check, and then read the complete document with a franchise attorney and an accountant before you sign.
Common questions about Item 12
What is FDD Item 12?
Item 12 states whether you receive a protected territory, how it is defined, and what the franchisor reserves the right to do inside it. The reserved rights, not the headline grant, are where most of the territory's value is won or lost.
What is the difference between an exclusive and a non exclusive territory?
An exclusive territory means the franchisor will not open or grant another unit inside it. A non exclusive territory means it can, so the protection is mostly on paper. Many franchises grant a territory and then make it explicitly non exclusive a few sentences later.
Can a franchisor sell online into my territory?
Often yes. Many Item 12 clauses reserve the right to sell through the internet, national accounts, or other channels anywhere, including inside your territory, usually with no revenue or credit to you. Read every reserved right before trusting the word exclusive.
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