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Franchise & Licensing Advisory

A brand that is ready to franchise or license is not the same as a brand that is popular.

Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986

2,000+Clients since 1986
42 yrsCA practice
4Offices · India & UAE
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A brand that is ready to franchise or license is not the same as a brand that is popular. Franchising and IP licensing convert your trademark, know-how, and business systems into a repeatable revenue stream — but only if the underlying agreement, royalty structure, tax treatment, and IP ownership are documented correctly from day one. Franchise and licensing law in India sits at the intersection of contract law, the Trade Marks Act 1999, the Income-tax Act, GST law, and — for cross-border arrangements — FEMA. PNPC Global advises franchisors, franchisees, licensors, and licensees on structuring these relationships: royalty and franchise fee benchmarking, agreement review, GST classification, withholding tax on royalty payments, and cross-border licensing between India and the UAE. We are a practising CA firm, not a franchise brokerage — our role is to get the financial, tax, and compliance architecture right so the commercial relationship survives its first audit, its first dispute, and its first renewal.

What it costs

Govt. feesGovernment & statutory fees as applicable to your case
Professional feeFixed professional fee — confirmed in writing before we start

No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.

What Franchise & Licensing Advisory is

Franchising is a contractual arrangement in which a franchisor grants a franchisee the right to operate a business using the franchisor's trademark, business system, operating manuals, and know-how, typically in exchange for an upfront franchise fee and ongoing royalty payments calculated as a percentage of revenue. India has no standalone franchise law — unlike the United States (FTC Franchise Rule) or several other jurisdictions, there is no mandatory pre-sale disclosure document and no dedicated franchise registration authority. Franchise relationships in India are governed by general contract law (Indian Contract Act 1872), trademark licensing provisions under the Trade Marks Act 1999, competition law principles under the Competition Act 2002 where exclusivity or territorial restrictions are involved, and — where relevant — the Consumer Protection Act 2019 for franchisee grievances. This makes the franchise agreement itself the single most important legal document in the relationship, since there is no statutory floor of protections either party can fall back on.

IP licensing is the narrower, related concept: the owner of a registered trademark, patent, copyright, or design (the licensor) grants another party (the licensee) the right to use that IP, usually for a royalty or lump-sum fee, without transferring ownership. A franchise agreement is, in substance, a bundled licence — of the trademark, the business system, and often copyrighted training material — combined with an ongoing support and supervision obligation from the franchisor. A pure IP licence (for example, licensing a patented manufacturing process, or licensing a brand name for merchandise) need not include any operational system transfer at all. Recording a trademark licence with the Trade Marks Registry as a 'registered user' under Section 49 of the Trade Marks Act, while not always mandatory for validity between the parties, materially strengthens the licensee's position and the licensor's ability to control quality and enforce the mark against third parties.

The tax treatment of franchise and licensing income is central to structuring the arrangement. Royalty income is taxed under Section 9(1)(vi) of the Income-tax Act (source rule for royalty) and, for domestic payments, tax is withheld at source under Section 194J at rates and thresholds applicable to fees for technical services and royalty. From a GST standpoint, franchise fees and royalty payments for the right to use a trademark or intellectual property are treated as a supply of service and are taxable under the CGST Act 2017 — current rates apply under the rationalised GST slab structure effective September 2025 (a 5%/18%/40% framework replacing the earlier four-slab 5%/12%/18%/28% structure); royalty and franchise-fee services generally attract the standard rate applicable to licensing services, and the exact rate should always be confirmed against the current GST rate notification for the specific service classification at the time of the transaction. Cross-border royalty payments — an Indian franchisee paying a foreign franchisor, or an Indian franchisor licensing a UAE master franchisee — engage FEMA current account regulations, Reserve Bank reporting where applicable, withholding tax under Section 195 read with the applicable Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA), and correct classification of the payment as royalty versus fees for technical services for treaty-rate purposes.

Structuring franchise and licensing arrangements well means addressing four things simultaneously: an agreement that defines the IP licence scope, territory, exclusivity, term, and termination triggers with precision; a royalty and fee structure that is commercially fair and withstands tax scrutiny on arm's-length grounds (especially for related-party or cross-border licensing, where transfer pricing under Section 92 of the Income-tax Act may apply); GST and withholding tax treatment applied correctly and consistently across every payment cycle; and a registered-user or IP-assignment record that protects both parties if the relationship ends in dispute. Because there is no dedicated franchise regulator in India, disputes are resolved through ordinary civil courts, arbitration (if the agreement provides for it, which we always recommend), or — for competition-law issues such as unreasonable exclusivity or resale price maintenance — before the Competition Commission of India.

When franchise & licensing advisory is the right engagement

You have a proven, profitable business format — single or multi-location — and want to replicate it through franchisees rather than direct capital-intensive expansion

You own a registered (or registrable) trademark, patented process, or proprietary system that a third party wants to license or use under a royalty arrangement

You are evaluating becoming a franchisee of an Indian or international brand and need the franchise agreement, royalty structure, and territory terms reviewed before signing

You are structuring a master franchise arrangement to bring an international brand into India, or take an Indian brand into the UAE or GCC

Your existing franchise or licensing agreements have never been reviewed for GST classification, withholding tax treatment, or transfer-pricing exposure on royalty payments

You are negotiating royalty rates, franchise fees, or minimum guarantee clauses and want benchmarked, defensible figures rather than a number picked arbitrarily

A dispute has arisen with a franchisee or franchisor over royalty calculation, territory exclusivity, non-compete enforcement, or termination, and you need advisory before it escalates to litigation or arbitration

You are raising investment or planning an exit, and the franchise/licensing revenue stream needs to be presented with clean, auditable royalty accounting and IP ownership documentation

When another structure or service may be more appropriate

Your brand has no registered or registrable trademark yet — trademark registration should be completed (or at minimum filed) before any franchise or licensing agreement is drafted, since the entire arrangement depends on a clean, enforceable IP right

You are looking for a simple distributorship or dealership arrangement with no trademark licence, no operating system, and no ongoing royalty — a standard commercial supply or distribution agreement is the correct (and simpler) document, not a franchise agreement

You want to sell your entire business or brand outright rather than license ongoing use — a business or IP sale/assignment (with valuation and M&A advisory) is the correct structure, not a licensing arrangement

Your business model has not yet been proven profitable at even one location — franchising an unproven or loss-making format transfers your own operational risk to franchisees and typically damages the brand before it has value to protect

You need only a one-time use of a copyrighted asset (a jingle, a design, a piece of content) with no trademark or ongoing business-system component — a simple copyright licence agreement is more appropriate than a full franchise structure

Your primary need is trademark registration itself with no franchising or licensing plan yet — engage trademark registration services first; franchise/licensing advisory is the natural next step once the mark is secured

Structure Comparison

Franchise agreement vs pure IP licence vs master franchise arrangement

FeatureStandard Franchise AgreementPure IP / Trademark LicenceMaster Franchise Arrangement
What is grantedTrademark use + full business system, manuals, training, and ongoing supportRight to use the trademark, patent, design, or copyright only — no business systemRight to sub-franchise the brand within a defined territory (country/region)
Ongoing franchisor obligationsTraining, operational support, marketing, quality control, system updatesMinimal — typically limited to quality-control rights to protect the markFranchisor supports the master franchisee; master franchisee supports sub-franchisees
Typical fee structureUpfront franchise fee + ongoing royalty (% of revenue) + marketing levyLump sum, running royalty, or minimum guarantee + royaltyTerritory fee (often substantial) + royalty share between franchisor and master franchisee
Governing India statute frameworkIndian Contract Act 1872 + Trade Marks Act 1999 (licensing) + Competition Act 2002Trade Marks Act 1999 / Patents Act 1970 / Copyright Act 1957 (licensing provisions) as applicableSame as standard franchise, plus cross-border FEMA and DTAA considerations if master franchisee is overseas
Registered user recordalRecommended — Section 49 Trade Marks Act — strengthens quality-control defenceRecommended, especially where licensee's use could otherwise look like unauthorised useEssential — protects the franchisor's mark across every sub-franchisee's use in the territory
GST treatmentFranchise fee and royalty taxed as supply of service under CGST Act 2017Royalty/licence fee taxed as supply of service under CGST Act 2017Territory fee and royalty share both taxed as supply of service; cross-border legs may qualify as export of service subject to conditions
Withholding tax on royalty (domestic)Section 194J TDS on royalty/fees for technical services paid to a resident franchisorSection 194J TDS applies where licensor is residentSection 194J for the India-resident leg; Section 195 + DTAA for any cross-border leg
Cross-border withholdingSection 195 + applicable DTAA if franchisor or franchisee is overseasSection 195 + applicable DTAA where licensor/licensee is overseasSection 195 + India-UAE DTAA (or relevant treaty) typically central to the structure
Typical dispute triggersRoyalty underreporting, territory breach, non-renewal, non-compete post-terminationScope-of-use disputes, quality-control breach, non-payment of royaltySub-franchisee quality failures reflecting on the master franchisee and ultimately the original brand
Best suited forMulti-outlet retail, F&B, education, wellness, retail-service brands with a repeatable operating modelManufacturing processes, character/brand merchandising, technology licensing, single-asset IP monetisationBrand owners entering a new country/region without direct operational presence

This table gives directional guidance only. The right structure depends on the specific IP involved, the degree of operational control you want to retain, the target territory, and whether the counterparty is resident in India or overseas. A structuring consultation with a practising CA — ideally alongside IP counsel — is the appropriate first step before any agreement is drafted or signed.

How it works
#Stage & What PNPC DoesWhat Generic Templates MissTimeline
1Franchise/Licensing Readiness AssessmentBefore any agreement is drafted, PNPC assesses whether the underlying trademark is registered (or at minimum filed) and whether the operating system is documented well enough to be franchised at all. We ask what template services never ask: Is your trademark registered in the classes you actually need? Is your operating manual written down anywhere, or does it exist only in the founder's head? Have you calculated your actual unit economics per outlet? Is there a foreign counterparty, and if so, which jurisdiction and which DTAA applies?Week 1
2Royalty & Fee StructuringWe benchmark franchise fee and royalty rate against sector norms (typically 3–8% of gross revenue for F&B and retail-service brands in India, with wide variation by category and brand strength), and model the arrangement against your unit economics so the franchisee's business remains viable after paying royalty, rent, and operating costs. For related-party or cross-border licensing, we test the proposed royalty against arm's-length principles under Section 92 transfer-pricing rules to pre-empt a later transfer-pricing adjustment.Week 1–2
3IP Ownership & Registered-User PreparationWe confirm the trademark (and any patent, design, or copyright involved) is owned by the correct legal entity — not personally by a founder — and prepare the registered-user application under Section 49 of the Trade Marks Act where recordal is advisable. Unassigned or personally-held IP is one of the most common defects we find when reviewing an existing franchise arrangement.Week 2–3, run in parallel with drafting
4Franchise Agreement / Licence Agreement DraftingThe agreement defines: IP licence scope and territory, exclusivity (if any) and its Competition Act 2002 implications, franchise fee and royalty mechanics with a clear calculation base and audit right, quality-control and brand-standard obligations, term and renewal conditions, termination triggers and post-termination non-compete/de-identification obligations, and dispute resolution (we recommend arbitration given the absence of a specialised franchise forum in India). We draft for the specific relationship — not from a generic template.Week 3–5
5GST Classification & Registration ReviewFranchise fees and royalty payments are a taxable supply of service under the CGST Act 2017. We confirm the correct GST treatment and rate classification under the current rationalised rate structure, confirm whether the franchisor needs GST registration in each state where franchisees operate (place-of-supply analysis), and set up the invoicing mechanics for ongoing royalty billing.Week 4–5
6Withholding Tax (TDS) Set-UpFor domestic royalty payments, we confirm Section 194J TDS deduction obligations and thresholds for the franchisee/licensee paying royalty to an India-resident franchisor/licensor. For cross-border payments, we determine the Section 195 withholding rate under the applicable DTAA (India-UAE, or other relevant treaty), the correct classification of the payment as royalty versus fees for technical services, and the Form 15CA/15CB certification process for the remittance.Week 4–6
7FEMA & Cross-Border Structuring (if applicable)Where the franchisor or master franchisee is based outside India — including our UAE-based clients — we structure the royalty remittance under FEMA's current account regulations, confirm whether any RBI reporting or approval is required for the specific arrangement, and align the agreement's payment terms with permissible remittance mechanics.Week 5–7, only where cross-border
8Franchise Disclosure Package PreparationSince India has no mandatory franchise disclosure law, PNPC recommends franchisors voluntarily prepare a disclosure package — financial performance representations (if made, made responsibly and defensibly), outlet-level unit economics, existing franchisee references, and the full agreement — to reduce future disputes and demonstrate good faith, which materially strengthens the franchisor's position if a dispute later arises.Week 6–7
9Execution & Registered-User FilingAgreement execution, stamp duty payment (varies by state — franchise and licence agreements typically attract stamp duty as an 'agreement' or, in some states, as a specific licence instrument; the applicable state Stamp Act governs), and filing of the Section 49 registered-user application with the Trade Marks Registry where recordal has been agreed.Week 7–8
10Royalty Accounting & Compliance Calendar Set-UpWe set up the royalty invoicing and collection cycle, GST return reporting for franchise income, TDS compliance for royalty received/paid, and an ongoing compliance calendar covering renewal dates, registered-user renewal (tied to trademark renewal), and periodic royalty rate review clauses if built into the agreement.Week 8, then ongoing
11Multi-Franchisee Rollout SupportAs the franchise network grows, PNPC standardises the agreement template for new franchisees while preserving the flexibility to negotiate territory-specific or scale-specific terms, and tracks aggregate royalty income, GST liability across states, and franchisee compliance (quality audits, royalty payment discipline) as an ongoing retainer matter.Ongoing, as the network scales
12Dispute, Renewal, or Exit AdvisoryWhen disputes arise — royalty underreporting, territory breach, non-renewal disagreements — PNPC advises on the contractual remedy available, coordinates arbitration proceedings where the agreement provides for it, and supports renewal negotiations or, where the relationship is ending, the de-identification and IP-recall provisions that protect the brand post-termination.As needed through the life of the relationship

Realistic timeline from initial structuring consultation to an executed, GST- and TDS-compliant franchise or licensing agreement: 6–8 weeks for a single-agreement engagement; cross-border master franchise structuring typically takes longer given DTAA analysis and FEMA considerations. There is no government processing timeline involved (India has no franchise registration authority) — the timeline is entirely a function of negotiation and drafting between the parties.

Document Checklist
For the Franchisor / Licensor

Certificate of Incorporation / LLP Certificate / proprietorship registration of the entity that owns the brand and will act as franchisor or licensor

Trademark Registration Certificate (or, at minimum, the filed TM-A application acknowledgement) confirming ownership of the mark to be licensed — PNPC verifies the registered owner matches the contracting entity exactly

Operating manual, SOPs, training material, and any other documented business system that forms part of the franchise package — undocumented 'tribal knowledge' cannot be effectively transferred or protected

Historical financial performance data for existing outlets, if any franchise disclosure or financial performance representation is intended to be shared with prospective franchisees

PAN and GST registration details of the franchisor entity

Details of any existing franchise or licensing agreements already in force, for consistency review before new agreements are signed

Board resolution (for companies/LLPs) authorising the franchise/licensing programme and the signatory empowered to execute agreements

For the Franchisee / Licensee

PAN and, where applicable, GST registration of the franchisee entity or individual

Proposed outlet location(s) and territory being requested — determines exclusivity discussion and territorial scope drafting

Financial capability documentation — the franchisor's due diligence typically requires proof of ability to fund the franchise fee, fit-out costs, and working capital

Business registration documents (Certificate of Incorporation, partnership deed, or proprietorship proof) of the entity that will hold the franchise

Prior business experience details, particularly for sectors (F&B, healthcare-adjacent, education) where the franchisor may require operator qualifications

For NRI or foreign franchisees investing in an Indian franchise — FEMA-compliant investment structure documentation if equity investment (not just franchise fee payment) is involved

IP & Trademark Documentation

Trademark Registration Certificate(s) for all marks to be licensed — word mark, logo mark, and any composite marks used in the franchise system

List of Nice Classification classes covered by the registration, cross-checked against the actual goods/services the franchisee will offer — a franchise operating outside the registered classes has a coverage gap

Any patent, design registration, or copyright (training manuals, marketing collateral, proprietary recipes/formulas where protectable) forming part of the licensed IP bundle

Confirmation of current trademark ownership — PNPC checks the mark is registered to the franchisor entity itself, not personally to a founder or a different group company, before any licence is granted

Draft registered-user application (Form TM-U) for recordal with the Trade Marks Registry under Section 49 of the Trade Marks Act, where the parties agree to record the licence

Financial & Tax Documentation

Proposed royalty rate, franchise fee, and any minimum guarantee or marketing levy structure — PNPC benchmarks these against sector norms and unit economics before finalisation

GST registration certificate(s) of the franchisor, and franchisee GST details for invoicing and input tax credit purposes

TAN of the entity responsible for withholding tax on royalty payments — mandatory for TDS deduction and filing

For cross-border arrangements — Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) of the overseas party and Form 10F, required to claim DTAA benefits on withholding tax for royalty remittance

Form 15CA/15CB documentation for any cross-border royalty remittance, prepared by a practising Chartered Accountant certifying the tax treatment applied

For Cross-Border (India-UAE and Other) Arrangements

Certificate of Incorporation of the overseas franchisor/master franchisee entity, apostilled or notarised as required for use in India

Tax Residency Certificate from the relevant overseas tax authority to support DTAA benefit claims on royalty withholding

FEMA declaration confirming the nature of the payment (royalty for trademark/technology licence) and its consistency with current account transaction rules

Master Franchise Agreement or International Licensing Agreement draft, reviewed for consistency with both India's Trade Marks Act licensing provisions and the counterparty jurisdiction's requirements

Details of any prior international registrations (Madrid Protocol designations, direct national filings) covering the licensed mark in the relevant territory

Execution & Post-Signing Documents (PNPC Prepares)

Final executed Franchise Agreement or IP Licence Agreement, stamped per the applicable state Stamp Act

Registered-user application (Form TM-U) filed with the Trade Marks Registry, where recordal has been agreed

Royalty invoice template and GST-compliant billing format for the ongoing relationship

Compliance calendar covering agreement renewal date, registered-user renewal, TDS return filing dates, and periodic royalty audit rights under the agreement

Franchise disclosure package (financial performance representations, outlet economics, existing franchisee references) where the franchisor has chosen to prepare one voluntarily

Ongoing obligations
PhaseTriggered ByPNPC CA GuidanceRisk If Ignored
Pre-Franchise Readiness (Before First Agreement)Decision to franchise or license the brandConfirm trademark ownership and registration status; document the operating system; calculate real unit economics; benchmark royalty rate against sector norms and franchisee viability.Franchising an unregistered or personally-held trademark creates an unenforceable or disputed IP right at the exact moment it matters most — when a franchisee's use needs to be controlled or terminated.
Agreement Structuring & DraftingFirst franchisee or licensee identifiedDraft the agreement's IP scope, territory, exclusivity, royalty mechanics, quality-control rights, term, and termination/de-identification clauses; confirm GST and TDS treatment; set up registered-user recordal.A generic or template agreement without clear royalty calculation base, audit rights, or termination mechanics becomes the source of every future dispute — and India's courts, not a specialised franchise regulator, will decide the outcome strictly on what the agreement says.
First Year of OperationFranchisee/licensee begins operatingMonthly or quarterly royalty invoicing with correct GST treatment; TDS deduction and deposit on royalty payments; quality-control audits per the agreement; tracking of any territory or exclusivity commitments.GST misclassification on royalty income leads to demand notices and interest. Missed TDS deduction leads to disallowance of the royalty expense under Section 40(a)(ia) for the payer and interest/penalty exposure.
Multi-Franchisee ScalingNetwork grows beyond first locationStandardise agreement templates while preserving negotiation flexibility; consolidate GST reporting across states where franchisees operate; monitor aggregate royalty income against original unit-economics assumptions; periodic brand-standard audits across outlets.Inconsistent agreements across franchisees create legal exposure and make enforcement of brand standards difficult. Untracked state-wise GST obligations from multi-location royalty income create compliance gaps.
Cross-Border Master Franchise / LicensingExpansion to UAE, GCC, or other overseas market (or an overseas brand entering India)Structure the master franchise or international licence with DTAA-optimised withholding tax treatment; FEMA-compliant remittance structuring; Form 15CA/15CB certification for each royalty remittance; coordination with PNPC's Dubai office for the UAE-side entity, trade licence, and tax registration.Incorrect withholding tax classification (royalty vs fees for technical services) under the DTAA leads to under- or over-withholding, both of which create compliance exposure. Unstructured remittances can trigger FEMA scrutiny.
Renewal or RenegotiationAgreement term nearing expiryReview actual royalty performance against original projections; renegotiate rates or territory if commercially warranted; confirm registered-user recordal is renewed alongside the underlying trademark renewal; update the agreement for any regulatory changes since original execution.Automatic renewal on outdated terms perpetuates a royalty structure or territory arrangement that no longer reflects the brand's actual value or the franchisee's actual performance.
Dispute or Non-ComplianceRoyalty underreporting, territory breach, quality-standard failure, non-paymentAdvise on the contractual remedy specified in the agreement (cure period, termination right, liquidated damages); coordinate arbitration if the agreement provides for it; support evidence gathering for royalty audit rights exercised under the agreement.Without a functioning dispute-resolution clause, disputes default to ordinary civil litigation — slow, costly, and public — in the absence of any specialised franchise tribunal in India.
Termination / Exit / Brand SaleFranchise relationship ends, or the brand itself is sold or restructuredEnforce de-identification and IP-recall provisions on termination; confirm registered-user cancellation is filed with the Trade Marks Registry; support IP valuation and formal assignment (Form TM-P) if the brand itself is being sold or transferred as part of an M&A transaction.A terminated franchisee who continues using the trademark and business system without enforcement of de-identification clauses causes ongoing brand dilution and weakens the mark's distinctiveness for all other franchisees.
Frequently asked
Is there a specific 'Franchise Law' in India that governs franchise agreements?

No. India does not have a standalone franchise statute, a mandatory pre-sale disclosure requirement, or a dedicated franchise registration authority — unlike the United States (FTC Franchise Rule) or a number of other jurisdictions. Franchise relationships in India are governed by general contract law under the Indian Contract Act 1872, trademark licensing provisions under the Trade Marks Act 1999, competition-law principles under the Competition Act 2002 (particularly around exclusivity and territorial restrictions), and consumer protection principles where relevant. This means the franchise agreement itself — not a statutory floor of protections — is the primary source of both parties' rights.

Practitioner noteBecause there is no regulator to fall back on, we treat every franchise agreement as if it has to work perfectly on its own terms. Vague or missing clauses are not filled in by any statute the way they might be in a jurisdiction with dedicated franchise regulation.
What is the typical royalty rate for a franchise in India?

There is no fixed statutory royalty rate. Market practice for franchised businesses in India — particularly food and beverage, retail, education, and wellness — commonly ranges from approximately 3% to 8% of gross outlet revenue, with wide variation depending on brand strength, the level of ongoing franchisor support, marketing contribution requirements, and sector. Some agreements use a flat monthly or annual fee instead of a percentage-of-revenue royalty, particularly for smaller or newer brands. The right rate depends on your specific unit economics — a royalty that looks reasonable on paper can make the franchisee's outlet unviable once rent, staffing, and input costs are factored in.

Practitioner noteWe model the franchisee's full P&L, not just the royalty line, before finalising a rate. A franchise network built on royalty rates the average franchisee cannot sustain fails outlet by outlet — usually within the first two years.
Do I need to register my franchise agreement with any government authority?

No, franchise agreements as such are not registered with any government authority in India — there is no franchise-specific registration or disclosure filing requirement. However, two related registrations are relevant: the trademark itself must be registered with the Trade Marks Registry (ipindia.gov.in) for the underlying IP right to be enforceable, and the licence/franchise arrangement can optionally be recorded as a 'registered user' entry against that trademark under Section 49 of the Trade Marks Act, which strengthens the licensor's quality-control position and the licensee's standing. Stamp duty on the agreement itself is payable under the applicable state Stamp Act, which does function as a form of registration for stamp/evidentiary purposes.

Practitioner noteRegistered-user recordal is often skipped because it is optional, not mandatory. We recommend it in most cases — it materially strengthens the franchisor's position if the arrangement is later challenged or if quality-control enforcement becomes necessary.
What GST rate applies to franchise fees and royalty payments?

Franchise fees and royalty payments for the right to use a trademark or other intellectual property are treated as a taxable supply of service under the CGST Act 2017. GST rates were rationalised with effect from September 2025 into a simplified 5%/18%/40% slab structure, replacing the earlier four-slab 5%/12%/18%/28% framework. Licensing and franchise-fee services generally fall under the standard applicable rate for licensing/IP-related services under the current structure. Because rate classifications for specific service codes are periodically clarified by notification, PNPC confirms the exact applicable rate against the current GST rate schedule at the time each agreement or invoicing cycle is finalised, rather than relying on a rate that may have since changed.

Practitioner noteGST rate structures for services have moved more than once in recent years. We do not quote a fixed percentage from memory in engagement letters — we confirm the live rate notification before every significant royalty invoicing cycle, particularly for long-running franchise relationships spanning a rate-change year.
Is TDS applicable on royalty payments made to a franchisor or licensor in India?

Yes. Domestic royalty payments — including franchise royalty paid to an India-resident franchisor — are subject to TDS under Section 194J of the Income-tax Act, which covers royalty and fees for technical services. The franchisee (payer) is responsible for deducting TDS at the time of credit or payment, whichever is earlier, and depositing it with the government within the prescribed timeline. Threshold and rate details under Section 194J were revised in Budget 2025 (with the applicable annual threshold set at ₹50,000), so PNPC confirms the current threshold and rate applicable to the specific payment category before setting up the TDS mechanics for any franchise arrangement.

Practitioner noteWe set up TDS deduction as a standing monthly control in the franchisee's accounting system from the very first royalty invoice — not as something reconciled at year-end. Missed TDS deduction on royalty payments is one of the most common defects we find when reviewing an existing franchise relationship's books.
What withholding tax applies if I am paying royalty to a franchisor based overseas — for example, in the UAE?

Cross-border royalty payments made by an Indian franchisee to an overseas franchisor are subject to withholding tax under Section 195 of the Income-tax Act, at the rate prescribed under the Act or the beneficial rate under the applicable Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) — whichever is more favourable to the payee, provided the overseas party furnishes a valid Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) and Form 10F. The India-UAE DTAA provides a specific concessional rate for royalty and fees for technical services, subject to conditions. Form 15CA (and Form 15CB, a CA certificate) must be filed for the remittance. Correctly classifying the payment — pure royalty versus fees for technical services versus reimbursement of costs — materially affects the applicable rate.

Practitioner noteOur Dubai office coordinates directly with the India team on cross-border royalty structuring — obtaining the UAE-side Tax Residency Certificate, confirming DTAA eligibility, and preparing the Form 15CB certification, so the remittance is not held up at the bank's compliance check.
Can I franchise my business if my trademark is not yet registered — only applied for?

You can enter into a franchise or licensing agreement based on a pending trademark application, and the ™ symbol can be used from the filing date. However, this carries meaningful risk: a pending application can still be refused (First Examination Report objections) or opposed by a third party after publication, and until registration is granted, your enforcement remedies are weaker (limited largely to common-law passing-off protection rather than statutory infringement rights). We generally recommend franchising only once the trademark is registered, or at minimum, proceeding cautiously with clear risk disclosure to franchisees if the application is still pending.

Practitioner noteWe have seen franchisors sign multiple franchisees while their trademark application was still pending, only to face an opposition that took years to resolve — by which point several franchisees had built goodwill around a mark whose registration was still uncertain. Filing early and registering before scaling the franchise network is the safer sequence.
What is a 'registered user' under the Trade Marks Act, and should every franchise agreement include one?

A registered user is a licensee whose permitted use of a registered trademark is formally recorded with the Trade Marks Registry under Section 49 of the Trade Marks Act 1999, via an application typically made jointly by the licensor and licensee. Recordal is not mandatory for the licence itself to be valid as a contract between the parties, but it provides several practical benefits: it creates a public record of the licensing relationship, it can strengthen the licensor's position in demonstrating exercised quality control (relevant to defending the mark's validity), and it clarifies the licensee's standing to take certain enforcement actions. For any franchise arrangement expected to run for several years or involve multiple outlets, PNPC generally recommends registered-user recordal as good practice, though it should be assessed case by case.

Practitioner noteRegistered-user recordal is one of the most commonly skipped steps in Indian franchise structuring, purely because it is optional rather than mandatory. We raise it explicitly in every franchise engagement rather than leaving it as a silent gap.
What happens if a franchisee continues using my trademark and business system after the agreement is terminated?

This is a trademark infringement (if the mark is registered) and a breach of contract simultaneously. The franchise agreement should include explicit de-identification obligations — requiring the former franchisee to remove all branding, signage, and marked materials within a specified period post-termination — and a post-termination non-compete clause (enforceable in India only to a reasonable extent, both in duration and geography, per Section 27 of the Indian Contract Act, which generally voids unreasonable restraints of trade). Remedies available include an injunction, damages, and — if the mark is registered — a trademark infringement claim under the Trade Marks Act, which carries stronger and faster remedies than relying on breach-of-contract claims alone.

Practitioner noteWe draft de-identification clauses with specific, short timelines (typically 15–30 days) and pre-agreed liquidated damages for non-compliance, because pursuing an injunction through the courts after termination can take months — by which point brand damage from continued unauthorised use has already occurred.
Are non-compete clauses in franchise agreements enforceable in India?

Partially, and with important limits. Under Section 27 of the Indian Contract Act 1872, any agreement that restrains a person from carrying on a lawful trade or business is void, subject to narrow statutory exceptions (such as a seller of goodwill agreeing not to compete). Indian courts have generally upheld non-compete clauses that operate during the term of a franchise agreement (as reasonable protection of the franchisor's business interest during the relationship), but have been far more reluctant to enforce post-termination non-compete restrictions, treating them with the same skepticism applied to employment non-competes. Post-termination restrictions on using the franchisor's confidential information, trade secrets, and trademark, however, are enforceable on separate legal grounds (confidentiality and IP infringement) even where a broader non-compete might not be.

Practitioner noteWe draft franchise agreements to rely primarily on IP-infringement and confidentiality-based protections for the post-termination period, rather than leaning entirely on a non-compete clause that Indian courts may not fully enforce.
What is the difference between a franchise agreement and a distributorship or dealership agreement?

A distributorship or dealership agreement grants a party the right to buy and resell products under the manufacturer's trademark, typically without transferring an operating system, training, or ongoing brand-standard supervision — the dealer generally operates under its own business identity, selling branded products. A franchise agreement goes further: the franchisee typically operates under the franchisor's brand identity itself (the outlet looks and feels like the franchisor's own), follows a prescribed operating system and manuals, and pays an ongoing royalty tied to that full brand and system licence — not just a product margin. Getting this classification wrong at the drafting stage can lead to disputes over which party bears which obligations, and can also affect the GST and tax characterisation of the payments involved.

Practitioner noteWe see businesses use a franchise agreement template for what is, in substance, a simple product distributorship — creating unnecessary royalty and brand-standard obligations that do not match the actual commercial relationship. Matching the document to the real relationship avoids both over-engineering and under-protection.
Can foreign investors or NRIs invest in an Indian franchise business?

Yes. A foreign entity or NRI can invest as a franchisee (through equity in the Indian franchisee entity) or act as a master franchisee bringing an international brand into India, subject to the sector's applicable FDI policy under FEMA — most retail, F&B, and service-sector franchising falls under the automatic route, though certain retail formats (particularly multi-brand retail trading) carry specific FDI conditions that should be checked for the exact business model. Where the franchisor is the overseas party licensing an Indian entity, the royalty payment structure and withholding tax treatment (Section 195 plus applicable DTAA) becomes the central compliance point, rather than an FDI approval issue.

Practitioner noteWe distinguish carefully between 'foreign equity investment in the franchisee company' (an FDI/FEMA equity question) and 'royalty payment to a foreign franchisor' (a withholding tax and remittance question) — the two are often confused, and they are governed by completely different provisions.
How does PNPC benchmark a fair royalty rate for my specific franchise model?

We model the actual unit economics of a representative outlet — revenue, cost of goods/services, rent, staffing, marketing spend, and other fixed costs — and test the proposed royalty rate against what remains for the franchisee as a viable return. We also review comparable rates in your specific sector (F&B, retail, education, wellness, and services each have different norms) and factor in the level of ongoing support, training, and marketing investment the franchisor is committing to provide, since a higher royalty is more defensible when it is matched by real, ongoing franchisor value delivery rather than a one-time brand licence.

Practitioner noteA royalty rate that looks attractive to the franchisor on a spreadsheet but leaves the franchisee's outlet barely breakeven produces a network of financially stressed franchisees — which shows up eventually as royalty underreporting, disputes, and non-renewals. We push back on unrealistic rates during structuring, not after the network is already struggling.
What is 'transfer pricing' risk in a related-party or group franchise/licensing arrangement, and does it apply to us?

Transfer pricing rules under Section 92 of the Income-tax Act require that transactions between 'associated enterprises' — including a franchisor and franchisee that are related parties (common ownership or control, including certain cross-border group structures) — be priced at arm's length, as if the parties were unrelated. If a group company licenses its trademark to a related franchisee (for example, an India entity licensing to its own UAE subsidiary, or vice versa) at a royalty rate that is not defensible as arm's length, the tax authority can make a transfer-pricing adjustment, adding back income and levying interest and penalty. This applies specifically to cross-border related-party transactions and, under specified domestic transaction rules, to certain large domestic related-party arrangements as well.

Practitioner noteWe prepare a benchmarking analysis and, where the transaction size warrants it, formal transfer-pricing documentation for any related-party or cross-border franchise/licensing royalty — this is a materially different (and more rigorous) exercise than benchmarking royalty for an unrelated third-party franchisee.
Can a franchise agreement include exclusivity for a territory — and are there any legal limits on this?

Yes, franchise agreements commonly grant exclusive or protected territories to franchisees. However, exclusivity and territorial restrictions can, in certain circumstances, raise concerns under the Competition Act 2002 — particularly if the arrangement amounts to an anti-competitive vertical restraint that appreciably harms competition in the relevant market (for example, resale price maintenance combined with rigid territorial exclusivity across a dominant brand). Most ordinary franchise territorial exclusivity for small and mid-sized brands does not raise Competition Act concerns, but the drafting should avoid provisions that fix resale prices rigidly or foreclose competitors unreasonably, particularly as the franchise network and brand's market position scale up.

Practitioner noteFor smaller franchise networks, competition-law risk from territorial exclusivity is generally low. We flag it as a consideration specifically for franchisors approaching significant market share in their category, where a more careful competition-law review becomes worthwhile.
What is a master franchise agreement, and when should I use one instead of direct franchising?

A master franchise agreement grants a party (the master franchisee) the right to sub-franchise the brand within a defined territory — typically a country or region — rather than the franchisor directly managing individual franchisees in that territory. This is the standard structure for bringing an international brand into India, or taking an Indian brand into the UAE or another overseas market, because it lets the brand owner delegate local market knowledge, regulatory navigation, and day-to-day franchisee relationship management to a party with an established local presence, in exchange for a territory fee and a share of ongoing royalty. It is generally the right structure when the franchisor lacks operational presence or regulatory familiarity in the target market.

Practitioner noteFor clients using master franchising to enter the UAE, or bringing a UAE/international brand into India, PNPC's presence in both Chennai/Bangalore/Hyderabad and Dubai lets us structure the master franchise agreement, the royalty flow, and the DTAA-based withholding tax treatment as one coordinated engagement rather than splitting advisory between two disconnected firms.
Do I need a lawyer as well as a CA firm for franchise and licensing structuring?

For most engagements, yes — franchise and licensing work sits across both tax/compliance (where a CA firm's expertise is central) and contract drafting/dispute strategy (where a qualified advocate's input strengthens the agreement, particularly around dispute-resolution clauses, non-compete enforceability, and litigation/arbitration strategy). PNPC coordinates franchise and licensing structuring including royalty benchmarking, GST and TDS treatment, FEMA/DTAA structuring for cross-border arrangements, and trademark registered-user recordal, and works alongside legal counsel for the underlying agreement drafting and any contentious dispute matters, so the tax and legal workstreams are aligned rather than handled by two disconnected advisors.

Practitioner noteWe routinely see franchise agreements drafted by a lawyer with no CA input on royalty tax treatment, and separately, royalty structures set up by an accountant with no legal review of the enforceability of the underlying agreement. Coordinating both from the outset avoids a document that is legally sound but tax-inefficient, or vice versa.
What stamp duty applies to a franchise or IP licensing agreement?

Stamp duty on franchise and licensing agreements is governed by the Stamp Act applicable in the state where the agreement is executed (or, in some states, where the property/business is situated), and rates vary meaningfully by state — some states specifically address licence agreements, while in others a franchise agreement may be stamped under a general 'agreement' or 'instrument' category. There is no uniform pan-India stamp duty rate for franchise agreements. Under-stamping can affect the agreement's admissibility as evidence in court proceedings if a dispute arises, so PNPC confirms the applicable state stamp duty treatment before execution rather than after a dispute exposes the gap.

Practitioner noteBecause stamp duty treatment genuinely varies by state and can change, we confirm the current applicable rate and instrument classification with the relevant state authority (or through local counsel) before finalising execution — this is not something to standardise across states from memory.
How does PNPC structure royalty payments for tax efficiency without creating compliance risk?

Tax efficiency in franchise/licensing structuring should never come from aggressive positions that create audit risk — it comes from getting the basics right: ensuring the trademark is owned by the correct entity so royalty income and deductions land where they are legally supposed to, applying the correct GST and TDS treatment consistently so no interest or penalty accrues, using DTAA benefits properly (with valid TRC and Form 10F documentation) for cross-border payments rather than under- or over-withholding, and benchmarking related-party royalty rates defensibly under transfer-pricing principles so no future adjustment arises. This disciplined, documented approach is what actually protects the arrangement's tax position over its full multi-year life.

Practitioner noteWe are explicit with clients that our role is defensible, well-documented structuring — not aggressive tax positions that create a larger liability (interest, penalty, reassessment) than the tax saved if challenged in a later assessment.
What happens to the franchise agreement if the franchisor's business is sold or the brand changes ownership?

This depends entirely on the assignment clause in the original franchise agreement. Most well-drafted franchise agreements are assignable by the franchisor (since the franchisor's identity matters less to the ongoing relationship than the brand and system itself) but restrict assignment by the franchisee without the franchisor's consent (since franchisee identity, quality, and operational capability matter significantly to brand consistency). If the franchisor's business is sold via a share sale, the franchise agreements typically continue unaffected since the contracting entity is unchanged. If it is an asset/brand sale, the franchise agreements and the underlying trademark should be formally assigned to the acquiring entity, and franchisees should be notified per the agreement's assignment provisions.

Practitioner noteWe review the assignment clause specifically whenever a franchisor client is contemplating a sale or fundraise — an ambiguous or missing assignment clause can complicate the transaction's structuring and should be identified during diligence, not after a term sheet is signed.
Is there a franchise disclosure document requirement in India like the FTC Franchise Rule in the US?

No. India has no statutory equivalent of the US FTC Franchise Rule's mandatory Franchise Disclosure Document. Franchisors are not legally required to provide prospective franchisees with standardised pre-sale financial disclosures, litigation history, or outlet performance data. However, PNPC recommends that franchisors voluntarily prepare a disclosure package — covering financial performance representations (made responsibly, with a clear basis, since misleading financial representations can expose the franchisor to misrepresentation or fraud claims under the Indian Contract Act and Consumer Protection Act 2019), existing franchisee references, and full agreement terms — because it reduces future disputes and strengthens the franchisor's credibility and legal position.

Practitioner noteFranchisors sometimes assume the absence of a mandatory disclosure law means no disclosure discipline is needed. In our experience, voluntary, well-prepared disclosure materially reduces the volume and severity of franchisee disputes later, and provides a documented defence if a franchisee later alleges they were misled about likely outlet performance.
Can I license my trademark for merchandise without setting up a full franchise structure?

Yes. A pure trademark or brand licence — for example, licensing your brand name and logo for use on merchandise, packaging, or a co-branded product — does not require the operational system, training, and ongoing supervision structure of a full franchise. This is a simpler licensing agreement covering the scope of licensed use, quality-control rights (to protect the mark's distinctiveness and prevent it being used in a way that damages the brand), royalty or lump-sum fee structure, term, and territory. It is governed by the same Trade Marks Act licensing provisions but is materially less complex to draft and manage than a full franchise relationship.

Practitioner noteWe frequently draft standalone merchandise or co-branding licences for clients who want brand monetisation without the operational commitment of supporting a franchise network — it is a lighter-weight structure appropriate for many brand owners.
What documentation should I maintain to prove the royalty rate charged is at arm's length, in case of a tax audit?

For any related-party or cross-border royalty arrangement, maintain: a benchmarking analysis comparing your royalty rate to comparable unrelated third-party arrangements in the same or similar industry, the underlying unit-economics model used to set the rate, board or management approval records showing the rate was set through a considered process rather than arbitrarily, and — for transactions crossing the specified thresholds — formal transfer-pricing documentation and an accountant's report (Form 3CEB) as required under Section 92E of the Income-tax Act. For arm's-length third-party franchise arrangements (unrelated parties negotiating at market terms), the negotiated agreement itself, supported by the fact that the counterparty was genuinely unrelated and negotiated independently, is generally the strongest evidence of arm's-length pricing.

Practitioner noteWe prepare and retain the benchmarking file at the time the royalty rate is set — not reconstructed years later when a tax assessment is opened. Contemporaneous documentation carries significantly more weight with tax authorities than retrospective justification.
How does PNPC support clients who are considering becoming a franchisee of an established brand?

We review the franchisor's proposed agreement clause by clause — royalty and fee mechanics, territory and exclusivity terms, franchisor's support and training commitments, termination and renewal conditions, non-compete scope, and any financial performance representations made during the sales process. We model the unit economics using your actual projected costs (rent, staffing, local market pricing) against the franchisor's revenue assumptions to test whether the specific royalty and fee structure leaves a viable return in your market, since franchisor projections are not always calibrated to every local market. We also confirm the franchisor's trademark is validly registered and actually owned by the contracting entity before you commit any franchise fee.

Practitioner noteWe have reviewed franchise agreements presented to prospective franchisees where the trademark was not registered to the entity signing the agreement, or was not registered at all — only 'applied for' years earlier with no active prosecution. This is discoverable with a simple IP India search before signing, and we do this check as a standing first step for every prospective franchisee client.
What is the tax treatment of the upfront franchise fee versus the ongoing royalty?

The upfront (one-time) franchise fee and the ongoing royalty are generally both treated as taxable business income in the hands of the franchisor, though their character can differ slightly — an upfront fee for granting the right to use the system may be treated as royalty income under Section 9(1)(vi) or as business income depending on the specific facts and how the agreement characterises the payment, while the ongoing royalty tied to revenue is more straightforwardly characterised as royalty income. For the franchisee, both the franchise fee (if it represents an enduring benefit) and ongoing royalty are typically deductible business expenditure, though a large upfront fee conferring a long-term benefit may, in some fact patterns, be treated as capital in nature and require amortisation rather than immediate deduction — this characterisation should be assessed for each specific agreement rather than assumed.

Practitioner noteWe review the agreement's own characterisation of the upfront fee (is it explicitly for IP licence access, for training delivery, for territory rights, or a bundle of all three) because the tax characterisation and deductibility treatment can differ based on what the fee is actually paying for, not just its label.
Can PNPC help if I already have franchise agreements in place that were never reviewed for tax or GST compliance?

Yes — this is one of our most common franchise/licensing engagements. We conduct a health-check review of existing agreements: confirming GST classification and rate applied to historical royalty invoices, checking whether TDS was correctly deducted (domestic Section 194J or cross-border Section 195 plus DTAA) on every royalty payment made or received, verifying the trademark is registered to the correct contracting entity, and identifying any related-party transfer-pricing exposure that was never benchmarked. Where gaps are found, we advise on regularisation — including voluntary disclosure or correction filings where appropriate — before an assessment or audit surfaces the issue instead.

Practitioner noteWe consistently find at least one of the following in an unreviewed, multi-year franchise arrangement: inconsistent GST rate application across a rate-change period, missed TDS on at least some royalty payments, or a trademark still registered in a founder's personal name rather than the operating company. Catching these proactively is materially cheaper than a tax department finding them first.
How much does PNPC charge for franchise and licensing advisory?

Fees depend on the complexity and scope of the engagement — a straightforward single franchise agreement review and royalty/GST/TDS structuring for a domestic arrangement costs meaningfully less than a cross-border master franchise structuring involving DTAA analysis, FEMA remittance structuring, and coordination across our India and Dubai offices. We provide a written, fixed-fee scope after an initial consultation to understand your specific franchise model, counterparties, and jurisdictions involved, before any engagement begins.

Practitioner noteWe do not publish a single flat fee because the genuine driver of scope is whether the arrangement is domestic or cross-border, single-agreement or multi-franchisee network, and whether related-party transfer-pricing benchmarking is required. A written scope and fee letter before engagement is standard practice for every client.
Why should I engage a CA firm rather than a franchise brokerage or a generic legal document service for this?

A franchise brokerage typically earns its fee by closing franchise sales — its incentive is volume of signed franchisees, not necessarily the long-term tax and compliance soundness of each agreement. A generic legal document service produces a template agreement without reviewing your trademark ownership, modelling your specific unit economics, or structuring the GST, TDS, and cross-border tax treatment correctly. PNPC has no incentive to push volume — our engagement is to get the structure, tax treatment, and IP protection right for the specific relationship, whether that means recommending you slow down and register your trademark first, renegotiate an unrealistic royalty rate, or restructure a cross-border arrangement that would otherwise create withholding tax exposure.

Practitioner noteClients most often come to us after a franchise brokerage or template service has already produced a signed agreement with GST misclassification, missing TDS provisions, or a royalty structure the franchisee network cannot sustain. Engaging a CA firm at the structuring stage — before agreements are signed — avoids this pattern entirely.
Can a franchisee claim input tax credit (ITC) on the GST charged on franchise fees and royalty?

Yes, provided the franchisee is GST-registered and the franchise/licence is used in the course of furthering a taxable business. The GST charged by the franchisor on the franchise fee and ongoing royalty is available as input tax credit to the franchisee, subject to the standard ITC conditions under the CGST Act 2017 — a valid tax invoice, the supply being actually received, the franchisor having filed the corresponding GST return, and payment made within the prescribed period. A common practical issue arises when the franchisor's GST registration or invoicing is inconsistent across states, which can create ITC mismatches for franchisees operating in multiple locations.

Practitioner noteWe specifically check that the franchisor's GST invoicing correctly reflects the place of supply and the franchisee's GSTIN, since ITC denial due to invoicing errors on the franchisor's side is a recurring, avoidable dispute between franchise networks and their franchisees.
What happens to franchise royalty obligations if a franchisee becomes insolvent or is admitted into insolvency proceedings under the IBC?

If a franchisee entity is admitted into Corporate Insolvency Resolution Process (CIRP) under the Insolvency and Bankruptcy Code 2016, a moratorium under Section 14 of the IBC generally suspends the institution or continuation of suits and the enforcement of most claims against the corporate debtor, which can affect the franchisor's ability to immediately terminate the agreement or recover past royalty dues through ordinary legal action — franchisors typically need to file a claim with the Resolution Professional instead. Franchise agreements should include clear provisions addressing insolvency as a termination trigger (subject to IBC overrides) and should clarify treatment of the licensed trademark and any franchisor-owned equipment or signage during the moratorium period.

Practitioner noteWe advise franchisor clients to file a formal claim with the Resolution Professional promptly once a franchisee enters CIRP, rather than assuming the debt can be recovered through ordinary civil recovery — the IBC moratorium overrides ordinary contractual termination and recovery rights during the resolution process.
Is a franchise arrangement different from a joint venture, and when should I use a JV instead?

Yes, fundamentally different. In a franchise, the franchisor licenses its brand and system for a fee/royalty but does not typically share in the franchisee's equity, profits, or losses beyond the agreed royalty — the franchisee bears the outlet's business risk independently. In a joint venture, the parties typically hold equity in a shared entity and share profits, losses, and control according to their shareholding and the JV agreement. A JV is more appropriate when the counterparty is bringing significant capital, local market access, or complementary capability that justifies shared ownership and control, rather than simply operating under a licensed brand for a fee. Some cross-border market entries use a hybrid — a JV entity that itself holds the master franchise rights.

Practitioner noteWe are often asked to structure 'a bit of both' — an investor wants equity plus a franchise fee. This is achievable but needs very precise drafting to avoid the arrangement collapsing into an ambiguous hybrid that neither functions cleanly as a franchise nor as a clean JV. We push clients to decide primarily which model they want and structure the equity/royalty split accordingly.
Do online or digital-only franchise and licensing models (e-commerce brand licensing, app-based service franchises) raise different considerations?

The core legal and tax framework — trademark licensing under the Trade Marks Act, GST on the franchise/royalty fee, TDS under Section 194J or Section 195 for cross-border arrangements — applies the same way regardless of whether the franchised or licensed business operates from a physical outlet or entirely online. What differs practically is territory definition (geographic exclusivity is harder to define meaningfully for a digital-only service available nationwide or globally), the nature of the 'operating system' being licensed (software, app access, and digital marketing playbooks rather than physical outlet standards), and GST place-of-supply analysis, which can be more complex for digital services than for a fixed physical outlet.

Practitioner noteFor digital-first franchise and licensing clients, we spend more time on GST place-of-supply classification and less on physical-outlet quality-control clauses — the drafting priorities shift, even though the underlying statutory framework is identical.
Should a franchise agreement specify arbitration, and where should disputes be resolved?

Yes — PNPC recommends every franchise and licensing agreement include a clear dispute-resolution clause, given that India has no specialised franchise tribunal and ordinary civil litigation can be slow. Arbitration under the Arbitration and Conciliation Act 1996 is commonly preferred for franchise disputes because it is generally faster, more confidential, and allows the parties to select an arbitrator with relevant commercial experience. The clause should specify the seat and venue of arbitration, the number of arbitrators, the governing law, and — for cross-border arrangements — whether an institutional framework (such as ICC, SIAC, or a domestic institution) applies, since this affects enforceability of the eventual award, particularly for cross-border counterparties.

Practitioner noteWe have seen agreements that name arbitration but omit the seat, venue, or institutional rules — leaving the clause practically unworkable when a dispute actually arises, since the parties then have to separately agree on procedural basics that should have been fixed at drafting.
What minimum notice period is typically required for non-renewal or termination of a franchise agreement?

There is no statutory minimum notice period prescribed by law for franchise non-renewal or termination in India — this is entirely a matter of contract. Well-drafted agreements typically specify a notice period (commonly 90 to 180 days before the term's natural expiry) for either party to indicate non-renewal, and separate, shorter cure-period provisions for termination due to breach (commonly 15 to 30 days to remedy a curable default before termination rights arise). Because there is no statutory floor, a franchisee relying on an agreement silent on notice periods has materially weaker protection against abrupt non-renewal than in jurisdictions with mandatory franchise notice requirements.

Practitioner noteWe treat notice-period drafting as one of the highest-value, most frequently under-negotiated clauses in Indian franchise agreements — franchisees in particular should not accept an agreement that allows non-renewal with minimal or no advance notice, given the capital typically sunk into outlet fit-out and working capital.
Does PNPC advise on insurance requirements typically built into franchise agreements?

While insurance itself is arranged through a licensed insurer or broker, PNPC reviews and advises on the insurance obligations typically written into franchise agreements — commonly public liability insurance, property/fit-out insurance, and sometimes business interruption cover, with the franchisor named as an additional insured or loss payee in some structures. We assess whether the insurance requirements in a proposed agreement are proportionate to the actual outlet risk and flag gaps (for example, agreements requiring insurance types disproportionate to a small-format outlet, or agreements silent on insurance entirely, leaving the franchisor exposed if an incident at a franchisee's outlet is associated with the brand).

Practitioner noteWe do not place insurance policies ourselves, but we routinely flag inadequate or missing insurance clauses during franchise agreement review — an uninsured incident at a franchised outlet can create reputational and, in some cases, vicarious liability exposure for the franchisor even though the franchisee is a legally separate business.
If franchisee employees are involved, does the franchisor have any liability for their employment terms?

Generally, no — franchisee employees are employed by the franchisee entity, not the franchisor, and ordinary employment law liability (wages, PF, ESI, termination) rests with the franchisee as the employer. However, courts in some jurisdictions have found 'joint employer' liability where the franchisor exercises an unusually high degree of day-to-day operational control over franchisee staffing and employment decisions (beyond standard brand-standard and training requirements) — this is a developing and fact-specific area rather than a settled bright-line rule in India. Franchise agreements should clearly state that franchisee employees are solely the franchisee's responsibility and that the franchisor's role is limited to brand-standard training, not employment control.

Practitioner noteWe advise franchisor clients to keep training and brand-standard requirements clearly distinct from anything that could be read as day-to-day employment direction over franchisee staff, precisely to avoid blurring the line that keeps employment liability correctly with the franchisee.
Why PNPC Global
FeatureGeneric Legal Template / DIYFranchise BrokeragePNPC Global (CA Firm Coordination)
Royalty & fee benchmarking against unit economicsNot provided — a number is filled into a templateSet to maximise franchisor's fee, not franchisee viabilityModelled against actual outlet P&L and sector benchmarks before finalisation
Trademark ownership verification before licensingNot checkedNot checkedVerified against IP India records before any agreement is drafted
GST classification and rate treatmentGeneric or absentNot addressed — outside brokerage scopeConfirmed against current GST rate structure at drafting and at each rate-change event
Withholding tax (TDS/195/DTAA) structuringGeneric or absentNot addressedDomestic Section 194J and cross-border Section 195/DTAA structured with Form 15CA/15CB support
Cross-border / FEMA coordinationNot addressedNot addressedCoordinated through PNPC's India and Dubai offices as one engagement
Related-party / transfer-pricing benchmarkingNot addressedNot addressedBenchmarking analysis and, where required, formal TP documentation prepared
Registered-user (Trade Marks Act) recordalRarely raisedNot addressedRaised and filed as standard practice where advisable
Ongoing compliance calendar (royalty, renewal, TDS)NoneEnds at franchise saleSet up at execution and maintained through the life of the relationship

What the PNPC package includes

  1. 01

    Franchise/licensing readiness assessment — trademark ownership, operating system documentation, and unit-economics review

  2. 02

    Royalty and franchise-fee benchmarking against sector norms and franchisee-level P&L viability

  3. 03

    Franchise Agreement / IP Licence Agreement structuring input, coordinated with legal counsel for final drafting

  4. 04

    GST classification and registration review for franchise fee and royalty income across all relevant states

  5. 05

    Domestic TDS (Section 194J) and cross-border withholding tax (Section 195 + DTAA) structuring

  6. 06

    Form 15CA/15CB certification for cross-border royalty remittances

  7. 07

    FEMA-compliant structuring for cross-border master franchise and licensing arrangements

  8. 08

    Registered-user application (Form TM-U) preparation and filing under Section 49 of the Trade Marks Act

  9. 09

    Related-party and cross-border royalty benchmarking for transfer-pricing defensibility

  10. 10

    Franchise disclosure package advisory — financial performance representations and franchisee reference material

  11. 11

    Ongoing royalty invoicing, GST, and TDS compliance calendar management

  12. 12

    Dispute, renewal, and termination advisory — including de-identification enforcement and registered-user cancellation

  13. 13

    Coordinated India-UAE structuring through PNPC's Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai offices

Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant before your next franchise agreement is signed, renewed, or renegotiated. We will review your trademark position, benchmark your royalty structure against real unit economics, and confirm the GST, TDS, and cross-border tax treatment — so the agreement holds up long after the ink is dry.

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