How do franchise royalty and marketing fees work in 2027?
Royalty and marketing fees are the price you pay for the brand every single day you operate, and over a ten-year agreement they often add up to more than your entire initial investment. This guide explains how these ongoing fees work in 2027, what counts as normal, and how to model their true impact on your profit.
Direct Answer
Most franchises charge an ongoing royalty of 4% to 8% of gross sales plus a brand or advertising fund contribution of 1% to 4% of gross sales, for a combined 9% to 12% in many restaurant and service systems (source: FDD Item 6, 2025–2026 filings; IFA). These fees are almost always calculated on gross sales, not profit, so you pay them whether or not the unit is making money.
Some systems use flat monthly fees instead of percentages, and many add separate technology fees and local advertising minimums. Read Item 6 line by line and model the combined percentage into your pro forma before you sign.
Where the Fees Live in the FDD
All ongoing fees are disclosed in Item 6 of the Franchise Disclosure Document. Item 6 is a table listing every recurring charge, how it is calculated, when it is due, and any conditions. The initial franchise fee sits in Item 5; Item 6 is everything you pay afterward.
The Royalty: Paying for the System
The royalty is the core ongoing fee, your payment for using the brand, the operating system, ongoing support, and the right to keep operating. The dominant structure is a percentage of gross sales, most commonly 4% to 8% (source: FDD Item 6, 2025–2026). A few low-cost or service systems use a flat monthly fee (for example, a fixed dollar amount per month regardless of sales), which benefits high-volume operators because the effective percentage falls as sales rise.
The critical detail: royalties are charged on gross sales, before any of your expenses. A 7% royalty on $1,000,000 in sales is $70,000 per year that comes off the top, independent of whether your bottom line is healthy.
The Advertising / Brand Fund
The brand or national advertising fund pays for system-wide marketing: national campaigns, brand creative, and shared assets. It is typically 1% to 4% of gross sales (source: FDD Item 6, 2025–2026). Important nuances:
- The fund is usually not spent in your specific market; it is pooled nationally, so a brand-new market may contribute without seeing local advertising for a while.
- The franchisor generally is not obligated to spend the fund proportionally in your territory. Item 6 and Item 11 describe how the fund is administered.
- Many systems also require a separate local marketing spend (for example, a minimum percentage of sales you must spend in your own market), which is on top of the national fund.
Technology and Other Recurring Fees
Modern FDDs increasingly list separate technology fees covering POS, loyalty apps, online ordering, and data platforms. These may be a flat monthly charge or a small percentage. Other recurring fees can include software licenses, transfer fees if you sell, renewal fees, and audit fees. None are large individually, but they stack.
Modeling the True Cost Over Ten Years
Consider a unit doing $800,000 in annual gross sales with a combined 10% in royalty and ad fund. That is $80,000 per year, or roughly $800,000 over a 10-year term before any sales growth, which can exceed the entire Item 7 initial investment. This is why the headline franchise fee is the wrong number to anchor on; the ongoing percentage is what compounds.
Are the Fees Worth It?
Fees buy real things: brand recognition that fills the funnel, a proven operating playbook, supply-chain purchasing power, and support. A strong brand's fees can be a bargain if they drive volume you could never generate independently. A weak or fading brand's fees are pure drag.
Use Item 19 (earnings) and franchisee validation calls to judge whether the brand's pull justifies its take.
FAQ
Are franchise royalties based on profit or sales? Almost always gross sales, not profit. You pay the royalty even in a money-losing month, which is why thin-margin concepts must watch the combined fee percentage closely.
What is a normal combined royalty and ad-fund percentage? For many restaurant and service systems, a combined 9% to 12% of gross sales is typical. Above that range, scrutinize whether the brand's volume justifies the take.
Does my ad-fund contribution get spent in my market? Usually not directly. National ad funds are pooled and spent system-wide, and franchisors generally are not required to spend proportionally in your territory. Many systems also require a separate local marketing minimum.
Can royalty fees increase during my agreement? The franchise agreement (Items 6 and 17) defines whether and how fees can change. Some are fixed for the term; others allow adjustments to the ad fund or technology fees. Have an attorney confirm before signing.
Related on PULSE
- How much does it really cost to open a franchise in 2027?
- What does Item 19 of an FDD really tell you about franchise earnings in 2027?
- How do I read a Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) before buying a franchise in 2027?
- Pulse Tools: franchise investment and payback calculator
Sources
- U.S. Federal Trade Commission, FTC Franchise Rule, 16 CFR Part 436 (Item 6 ongoing fees and Item 11 advertising fund disclosure).
- Representative Franchise Disclosure Documents, Items 5, 6, 11, 17, and 19, 2025–2026 annual filings.
- International Franchise Association (IFA), royalty and advertising-fee benchmarks, 2025–2026.
- U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA), franchise cost and cash-flow guidance.
- North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA), state franchise disclosure guidelines.
