Accounting & Tax for UK Franchise Businesses
Specialist franchise accountants for both franchisors and franchisees — initial franchise fee tax treatment, royalty accounting, VAT on franchise fees, multi-unit franchise profitability analysis, franchisor income accounting and franchisee corporation tax. Fixed monthly fees.
Franchise Tax & Accounting — What Most Accountants Get Wrong
Franchise accounting has specific complexities around the tax treatment of initial franchise fees (capital vs revenue debate), VAT on ongoing royalties, the correct treatment of marketing fund contributions, and multi-unit consolidated reporting. Accountants without specific franchise experience frequently mischaracterise franchise fees — with significant tax consequences for both franchisors and franchisees.
Initial franchise fee tax treatment is one of the most contested areas in franchise accounting. HMRC’s position is that initial franchise fees paid by a franchisee are capital expenditure — acquiring a right to trade under the franchisor’s system. As capital, they are not immediately deductible. However, if the fee is for training, setup services and initial marketing support (i.e., specific revenue services), a portion may be revenue-deductible. The distinction depends on the franchise agreement — we review the contract and allocate the fee correctly between capital and revenue elements.
Ongoing royalties paid by the franchisee to the franchisor are revenue expenditure — fully deductible in the accounting period they’re incurred. Royalties are usually based on a percentage of gross or net turnover. The accounting treatment is straightforward, but the VAT treatment requires attention: royalties for use of intellectual property are standard-rated (20% VAT) for UK franchisors, but may be outside scope or zero-rated for overseas franchisors — creating different reclaim positions for the franchisee.
Marketing fund contributions — where franchisees pay a percentage of turnover into a central marketing fund managed by the franchisor — require specific accounting treatment. If the fund is held as a separate trust (as it should be under BFA guidance), it appears neither on the franchisor’s balance sheet nor P&L. If it’s not properly ring-fenced, HMRC may treat contributions as income to the franchisor. We review marketing fund structures and ensure correct accounting on both sides.
Multi-unit franchise accounting requires both consolidated group accounts (showing total franchise performance) and individual site P&Ls (showing which locations are profitable and which are not). We set up accounting systems that produce both views simultaneously, enabling multi-unit franchisees to identify underperforming sites early and make evidence-based expansion decisions.
✅ Key Services for Franchises
- ✓ Franchise fee tax treatment (capital/revenue)
- ✓ Royalty accounting (franchisee and franchisor)
- ✓ Marketing fund accounting
- ✓ VAT on franchise fees and royalties
- ✓ Multi-unit franchise P&L reporting
- ✓ Franchisee annual accounts and CT600
- ✓ Franchisor income accounting
- ✓ Franchise network payroll management
- ✓ Director self-assessment
- ✓ Site-by-site profitability analysis
- ✓ Xero/QuickBooks franchise configuration
- ✓ Franchise sale and acquisition tax advice
What Franchises Businesses Face — and How We Solve It
Businesses in This Sector We Regularly Serve
Food & Beverage Franchisees
Fast food, coffee shop and restaurant franchisees with high-volume, low-margin operations — requiring tight COGS tracking, payroll management and VAT compliance.
Health, Fitness & Wellbeing Franchisees
Gym, physio, dental and wellness franchisees — including complex VAT treatment of health services.
Property & Services Franchisees
Estate agency, cleaning, maintenance and home services franchisees — with variable hours payroll and VAT on services.
Franchisors (Franchise Network Operators)
Franchisor companies managing multiple franchisees — requiring franchise fee income accounting, marketing fund trust management and royalty income reporting.
2026 Outlook — Tax & Finance for Franchises
The UK franchise sector in 2026 continues to grow post-pandemic recovery. The British Franchise Association (BFA) reports 1,000+ active franchise systems in the UK, with food and beverage, health and wellbeing, and home services being the fastest-growing categories. The sector’s resilience — 93% franchisee profitability claim — makes it an increasingly popular route to business ownership.
HMRC’s franchise-specific guidance (Business Income Manual BIM57400-BIM57425) sets out the tax treatment of franchise fees and royalties. The capital/revenue distinction for initial fees continues to be litigated — the 2022 First-Tier Tribunal case of Franchise Developments Ltd v HMRC reinforced the capital treatment for core franchise rights while allowing revenue treatment for identifiable training and setup services. Keeping up with this case law is essential for correct franchise fee accounting.
Minimum wage compliance is a significant risk for franchisees in labour-intensive sectors. HMRC has increased its National Minimum Wage compliance activity in franchise networks — particularly in food service, where franchisees sometimes incorrectly deduct uniform or equipment costs from wages. We ensure all franchise payroll clients are NMW-compliant and document the position correctly.
Franchise acquisition and exit — buying a second unit or selling the franchise on — triggers capital gains and STAMP DUTY considerations that differ from ordinary business sales. Business Asset Disposal Relief (BADR) may be available on franchise sale, but the qualifying conditions (2-year ownership of qualifying business assets, meeting the trading company test) must be met. We advise on pre-sale structuring to ensure BADR qualification where possible.
Frequently Asked Questions — Franchises
The initial franchise fee paid to a franchisor is generally treated as capital expenditure by HMRC — as it acquires a right to trade under the franchise system. Capital expenditure is not immediately deductible against income. However, if a portion of the fee specifically relates to identifiable revenue services (training, initial marketing), that portion may be revenue-deductible. The allocation depends on the specific terms of your franchise agreement — we review each agreement individually.
Yes — ongoing royalties paid by a franchisee to a UK franchisor are subject to 20% VAT. If both parties are VAT-registered, the franchisee reclaims the input VAT on their VAT return — making it cash-flow neutral. For overseas franchisors (non-UK), the reverse charge may apply, requiring the franchisee to account for VAT on royalties under the domestic reverse charge for services.
BFA guidance recommends that franchisors hold marketing fund contributions in a separate trust account, not as the franchisor’s income. If the fund is properly ring-fenced, contributions are not taxable income for the franchisor. Franchisees can generally deduct contributions as a revenue expense in the period they are paid. We review marketing fund structures and ensure the accounting reflects the true legal character of the arrangement.
Business Asset Disposal Relief (formerly Entrepreneurs’ Relief) reduces the CGT rate to 10% on qualifying gains on disposal of a trading business. To qualify, the franchisee must have owned the franchise for at least 2 years and it must qualify as their personal company. The trading company test (less than 20% investment activity) must be met. Pre-sale planning — ensuring the structure qualifies — is essential.
Standard business records (bank statements, sales and purchase invoices, payroll records) plus franchise-specific documents: the franchise agreement, royalty statements, marketing fund statements, initial fee documentation and any related-party transactions with the franchisor or other franchisees. HMRC’s franchise compliance team is experienced — records must be complete and consistent with the agreement.
4 Costly Mistakes — and How to Avoid Them
This is the most common franchise accounting error. If the initial fee is capital, incorrectly claiming it as a revenue deduction reduces taxable profits and understates CT. HMRC may assess back-years with interest and penalties. Always have initial fees reviewed by a specialist.
Franchisors who commingle marketing fund contributions with operating income create a VAT and income tax exposure — HMRC may treat all contributions as taxable income. A separate trust account with its own bank account and annual statement is the BFA-recommended approach and the correct accounting treatment.
If a UK franchisee pays royalties to an overseas franchisor (e.g., a US-based chain), the domestic reverse charge for services applies. The franchisee must account for output VAT (Box 1) and reclaim input VAT (Box 4) on the royalty amount — it’s cash-flow neutral if the franchisee is fully VAT-taxable, but failing to account for it creates a VAT under-declaration.
Operating multiple franchise units without site-specific P&Ls means you can’t identify which unit is profitable and which is loss-making. A consolidated P&L may show overall profitability while one site drains cash from three profitable sites. Site-level management accounts are essential for multi-unit decisions.
Transparent Monthly Fees — No Surprises
Fixed monthly pricing. All-inclusive within your tier. Cancel with 30 days notice. No setup fees. All plans include a free onboarding call.
Complete Your Accounting & Tax Setup
Franchise Accountants — Franchisors & Franchisees
Book a free franchise accounting review. We assess your franchise fee tax treatment, royalty accounting and VAT position — and correct any errors before HMRC does.