Delayed Updates = Sales Risk
A delayed annual update can mean your FDD is out of compliance, putting franchise sales at risk of interruption while updates and filings are completed.
When an FDD is late, outdated, or internally inconsistent, the problem is bigger than editing copy. It can slow approvals, create disclosure risk, and delay franchise sales.
Deadline 120 days after fiscal year-end
14 calendar days minimum
Quarterly revisions may be required
Require reasonable basis & written support
Your Franchise Disclosure Document is not a static file. It is a working compliance document that must stay current as your franchise system grows.
Franchisors can run into problems when annual updates are delayed, material changes are not documented correctly, or agreements and exhibits no longer align with the disclosures being provided to prospects.
These issues can trigger review delays, increase legal exposure, and create friction in the sales process — turning a process problem into a revenue problem.
FTC Franchise Rule
Franchisors must update the FDD within 120 days after the close of the fiscal year. Prospects must receive the disclosure document at least 14 calendar days before signing or paying. After the deadline passes, only the revised document may be distributed.
A delayed annual update can mean your FDD is out of compliance, putting franchise sales at risk of interruption while updates and filings are completed.
In registration states, approvals and regulator comments can extend timelines — creating tension between filing deadlines and active sales activity.
Even when issues start as drafting or process errors, they become compliance and sales problems quickly if not corrected. The longer they persist, the harder remediation becomes.
Common Issues
Many franchisors don’t come to us because they need a brand-new FDD. They come to us because they need to fix how their current FDD is being maintained, updated, or filed.
A delayed annual update can mean your FDD is out of compliance, and in many situations, put franchise sales at risk of interruption while updates and filings are completed. The FTC rule sets a firm 120-day annual update deadline after fiscal year-end.
In registration states, approvals, renewals, and regulator comments can extend timelines. If planning starts too late, franchisors can find themselves scrambling to reconcile state filing timing with active sales activity. Tension between annual update deadlines and state registration processing can occur if you’re not diligent about filing timing or have errors within documents that delay approvals.
Changes to fees, litigation, management, franchise agreements, territory policies, supplier requirements, or Item 19 disclosures may require amendments, addendums, or quarterly revisions, so prospects receive current disclosures. The FTC rule addresses quarterly revisions for material changes and requires the most recent revisions to be provided with the FDD.
Franchisors often tell us, “our FDD needs to be fixed.” A common root cause is using advisors who may be experienced in general legal or consulting work, but who are not immersed in franchise compliance on a daily basis, where FTC timing rules, disclosure controls, and state filing nuances can materially affect the sales process. Some of most common substantive document quality issues we typically see:
Even when these issues start as drafting or process errors, they can become compliance and sales problems if not corrected quickly.
Visit our FDD Development service page for full drafting and setup support.
We use a practical process designed to stabilize the document first, then improve the compliance workflow going forward.
We review what is currently in use, what has been filed, what is outdated, and where inconsistencies may exist across FDD versions, exhibits, and state-specific materials.
We identify gaps, mismatches, and risk points by section so the work is prioritized and key updates are addressed in the right sequence.
We determine what belongs in the annual update, what may require interim amendment treatment, and what should be escalated to franchise counsel for legal review.
We help organize timing across internal teams and outside partners so financial statements, legal revisions, and registration-state filings move on a coordinated timeline.
We cross-check fees, agreements, exhibits, receipts, and delivery controls before final release — so what goes out is clean and consistent across the entire package.
We build a repeatable schedule for annual renewals, quarterly review checkpoints, and material-change triggers so your team is not rebuilding the process every year.
Each page below is built around a specific compliance challenge — so your team can go straight to what’s most relevant.
Timeline, audit coordination, filing prep and transition controls. A 90–120 day planning workback built for franchisor teams.
When to update your FDD between annual renewals. Covers quarterly revisions, amendment triggers, and Item 19-specific handling.
How state registration timing affects renewals, what comment letters mean, and how to manage version control across jurisdictions.
Got Questions?
Yes, if you plan to franchise your business in the U.S., you are legally required to have a Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD). This document, mandated by the FTC, must be provided at least 14 days before any agreement or payment and includes key information about your franchise to help prospective franchisees make informed decisions.
If there is a material change to required disclosures, franchisors may need quarterly revisions to documents and must provide the most recent revisions with the FDD. The exact handling should be coordinated with franchise counsel, especially in registration states.
Yes. If your FDD update or required state renewal is late, you may need to pause franchise sales activities in some or all jurisdictions until you have a current FDD and any required approvals in place. The FTC Franchise Rule requires the FDD to be revised within 120 days after fiscal year-end, and after that point only the revised document may be used. Limited registration-state exceptions may apply, but they are narrow and do not eliminate the need for timely compliance.
Registration states can require filings, renewals, and regulatory review before the updated FDD can be used there. Approval timing and comment cycles can affect launch or sales timing if not planned early.
The FDD must be delivered at least 14 calendar days before the prospect signs a binding agreement or makes any payment to the franchisor or an affiliate in connection with the proposed franchise sale.
If your team is dealing with a late update, a material change, or a document package that no longer matches your agreements, Accurate Franchising can help you map the issues and build a workable path forward.