How to Start a Food Franchise in Canada
A step-by-step guide covering everything from choosing a franchise brand and reviewing the disclosure document to incorporating your company, signing the lease, handling HST on prepared food, hiring staff and opening day. Written by a licensed Ontario CPA who helps food franchise owners every month.
What It Actually Costs to Open a Food Franchise in Canada
Before the steps, here are the real numbers. Every franchise brand publishes an estimated initial investment range in their Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD). The ranges below are typical across the most common food franchise categories in Canada.
| Cost Component | Quick-Service (QSR) | Fast Casual | Full-Service Restaurant |
|---|---|---|---|
| Franchise fee (one-time, upfront) | $25,000 to $40,000 | $30,000 to $50,000 | $35,000 to $75,000 |
| Build-out and construction | $200,000 to $500,000 | $300,000 to $700,000 | $500,000 to $1,500,000 |
| Equipment, furniture and fixtures | $80,000 to $200,000 | $100,000 to $300,000 | $150,000 to $500,000 |
| Signage (interior and exterior) | $15,000 to $40,000 | $20,000 to $60,000 | $25,000 to $80,000 |
| Initial inventory (food, beverages, packaging) | $5,000 to $15,000 | $8,000 to $20,000 | $15,000 to $40,000 |
| Working capital (first 3 to 6 months) | $20,000 to $50,000 | $30,000 to $75,000 | $50,000 to $150,000 |
| Legal, accounting, incorporation | $2,000 to $8,000 | $2,000 to $8,000 | $3,000 to $12,000 |
| Total estimated initial investment | $350,000 to $850,000 | $500,000 to $1,200,000 | $800,000 to $2,400,000 |
Incorporation Through Gondaliya CPA: $35: The "legal, accounting, incorporation" line in the table above is $2,000 to $12,000 through most providers. Through us, federal incorporation is $35 all-inclusive (government fee, NUANS, Articles, minute book, CRA registration). That saves $2,000 to $11,000 before you even open the doors. The franchise agreement requires a corporation. Incorporate for $35.
For our complete food franchise accounting, bookkeeping and tax services, visit our dedicated food franchise accounting page.
10 Steps to Open a Food Franchise in Canada
1Choose Your Franchise Brand and Concept
Research franchise brands in the food category you want: quick-service (Subway, Tim Hortons, McDonald's, Pizza Pizza, Popeyes), fast casual (Freshii, Quesada, Mucho Burrito), or full-service (Swiss Chalet, Montana's, The Keg). Each brand has different investment levels, royalty structures, territory requirements and training programs.
| Factor to Evaluate | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Total initial investment | Does the investment range fit your available capital plus financing? Most franchisors require 30% to 40% of the total investment as unencumbered liquid capital. |
| Ongoing royalties | Typically 4% to 8% of gross sales paid weekly or monthly to the franchisor. Compare across brands. |
| Advertising fund contribution | Typically 2% to 4% of gross sales. Separate from the royalty. Funds national and regional marketing campaigns. |
| Territory protection | Does the franchise agreement grant you an exclusive territory? What is the radius? Can the franchisor open another location or approve a competitor within your territory? |
| Existing franchisee satisfaction | Call 5 to 10 existing franchisees listed in the FDD. Ask about revenue, profitability, franchisor support and whether they would buy the franchise again. |
2Review the Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD)
In Ontario (and Alberta, Manitoba, New Brunswick, PEI and British Columbia), the franchisor must provide you with a Franchise Disclosure Document at least 14 days before you sign any agreement or pay any money. The FDD is the most important document in the entire process. It contains the franchisor's financial history, litigation history, franchisee list, estimated initial costs, ongoing fees, restrictions and the full franchise agreement.
| FDD Section | What to Look For |
|---|---|
| Financial statements of the franchisor | Are they profitable? Are they growing? A franchisor losing money may not survive long enough to support your location. |
| Litigation and bankruptcy history | Have franchisees sued the franchisor? Has the franchisor been bankrupt? Patterns of litigation indicate systemic problems. |
| List of current and former franchisees | Call former franchisees who left the system. Ask why they left. This is the information the franchisor does not want you to hear. |
| Estimated initial investment (Item 7) | Does the range match reality? Ask existing franchisees if they spent within the range or significantly more. |
| Restrictions on suppliers, products and pricing | Can you only buy from approved suppliers? Can you set your own menu prices? Restricted supply chains limit your ability to control food costs. |
| Renewal, transfer and termination terms | What happens when the franchise term ends (typically 10 to 20 years)? What are the renewal fees? Can you sell the franchise? Under what conditions can the franchisor terminate you? |
The Arthur Wishart Act (Ontario): In Ontario, the Arthur Wishart Act, 2000 governs franchise relationships. If the franchisor does not deliver a complete FDD at least 14 days before you sign or pay, you have the right to rescind (cancel) the franchise agreement within 60 days of receiving the FDD (or within 2 years if no FDD was provided). This is a powerful protection. Do not waive it. Have a franchise lawyer and your CPA review the FDD before the 14-day period expires. If anything is missing or deficient, the rescission right may apply.
3Incorporate Before Signing the Franchise Agreement
Every franchise agreement requires the franchisee to be a corporation, not an individual. Incorporate your company before you sign the agreement or pay the franchise fee. The corporation signs the franchise agreement, the lease, the equipment contracts and all other documents. This separates your personal assets from the franchise business.
| What Incorporation Provides | Why It Matters for Food Franchises |
|---|---|
| Liability separation | A food franchise carries significant liability: slip-and-fall claims, foodborne illness, employee injuries, equipment failures. The corporation shields your personal assets from business liabilities. |
| Small Business Deduction (12.2% tax rate) | Your franchise corporation pays 12.2% combined tax on the first $500,000 of active business income vs. personal rates up to 53.53%. On a profitable franchise netting $150,000, the annual tax deferral is $18,300+. |
| Franchise agreement requirement | The franchisor requires a corporation. You cannot sign the franchise agreement as an individual in most franchise systems. |
| Commercial lease requirement | The landlord requires a corporate tenant. The lease is signed by the corporation, not you personally (though the landlord may require a personal guarantee). |
Incorporate Your Franchise Company for $35
Government fee, NUANS, Articles, minute book, share certificates, CRA registration. All-inclusive. Done in 1 to 3 business days.
4Secure Financing
Most food franchise owners use a combination of personal savings (30% to 40%), a business loan (50% to 60%) and, in some cases, franchisor financing or investor capital. Canadian lenders who finance food franchises include BDC (Business Development Bank of Canada), major banks (TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC) and credit unions.
| Financing Source | Typical Terms | What They Require |
|---|---|---|
| BDC (Business Development Bank of Canada) | Up to 90% financing on eligible franchise purchases. Terms up to 15 years. Rates: prime + 2% to 4%. | Business plan, franchise agreement, FDD, personal net worth statement, credit report, 10% to 15% down payment. |
| Major bank (TD, RBC, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC) | 50% to 70% financing. Terms 5 to 10 years. Rates: prime + 1% to 3%. May require CSBFP (Canada Small Business Financing Program) guarantee. | Business plan, franchise agreement, FDD, 2 years of personal tax returns, credit report, collateral (personal residence or other assets). |
| Canada Small Business Financing Program (CSBFP) | Government-backed loan up to $1,000,000 ($350,000 for equipment and leasehold improvements). The lender has 85% of the loan guaranteed by the government. | Must be a for-profit business with gross revenue under $10M. 2% registration fee on the loan amount. Applied through your bank, not directly. |
| Franchisor financing (some brands) | Select franchisors offer financing on the franchise fee, equipment or build-out. Terms vary by brand. | Approved by the franchisor during the application process. Available only from specific franchise systems. |
Your CPA Prepares the Financial Projections: Every lender requires a business plan with financial projections: revenue forecast, COGS, labour costs, rent, royalties, advertising fund, equipment depreciation, loan payments and net profit. We prepare franchise financial projections for our clients as part of the onboarding process. The projections are formatted to meet bank and BDC requirements. Book a free consultation to discuss your franchise financing strategy.
5Sign the Franchise Agreement and Secure Your Location
After the 14-day FDD review period, you sign the franchise agreement and pay the franchise fee. The franchisor then works with you on site selection (some brands have dedicated real estate teams). The location is critical for food franchises: traffic count, visibility, parking, proximity to complementary businesses and competition density all affect revenue.
The lease is typically signed by your corporation. Expect the landlord to require a personal guarantee, especially for new franchisees. Lease terms for food franchises are usually 10 to 15 years with renewal options to match the franchise term. Common additional charges: CAM (common area maintenance), property tax, insurance and HVAC maintenance.
6Register with CRA: HST, Payroll and Corporate Tax
Before your first transaction, your corporation must be registered with CRA for all applicable program accounts.
| CRA Account | Why You Need It | When to Register |
|---|---|---|
| HST (RT account) | All prepared food and beverages sold by restaurants are taxable at 13% in Ontario. You must charge HST on every transaction from day one. | At incorporation, before the first sale. |
| Payroll (RP account) | You will have employees from day one: managers, cooks, cashiers, servers. CPP, EI and income tax must be deducted from every paycheque. | At incorporation, before the first hire. |
| Corporate Tax (RC account) | Your corporation files a T2 return annually. Corporate income is taxed at 12.2% (SBD rate) on the first $500,000 of active business income. | At incorporation. |
| Import/Export (RM account, if applicable) | If your franchise imports ingredients, packaging or equipment from outside Canada, you need an import account for customs clearance. | Before the first import shipment. |
We register all CRA program accounts as part of our $35 incorporation service. HST, payroll and corporate tax accounts are ready before your build-out begins.
7Complete the Build-Out and Franchisor Training
The franchisor provides detailed specifications for the restaurant build-out: layout, kitchen equipment, signage, decor, furniture, POS system and technology. You hire a contractor (approved by the franchisor or selected from their approved list) and manage the construction. Build-out timelines for food franchises typically range from 8 to 16 weeks depending on the concept and the condition of the space.
During the build-out, you and your management team attend the franchisor's mandatory training program. Training typically lasts 2 to 6 weeks at the franchisor's head office or a certified training location. Topics include food preparation, food safety (including provincial food handler certification), operations, customer service, POS system, inventory management and financial reporting.
Claim ITCs on Every Build-Out Expense: HST paid on construction, equipment, furniture, signage, technology, professional fees and every other build-out cost is fully recoverable as an Input Tax Credit. On a $400,000 build-out, the recoverable HST is $52,000. Register for HST before the build-out starts so you can claim ITCs on every invoice from day one. If you register after the build-out is complete, the ITCs on pre-registration expenses are permanently lost.
8Hire and Train Your Team
A typical quick-service food franchise requires 10 to 20 employees (mostly part-time). A fast casual or full-service concept may require 15 to 40. Hire your core team (general manager, shift supervisors, lead cook) 2 to 4 weeks before opening so they can complete franchisor training and participate in the soft launch.
| Compliance Requirement | What You Must Do |
|---|---|
| Employment Standards Act (Ontario) | Minimum wage ($17.20/hour as of October 2024, subject to annual increases), overtime after 44 hours, public holiday pay, vacation pay (4% minimum), ESA posting displayed. |
| Food handler certification | At least one certified food handler must be on-site at all times during food preparation. Certification through a provincial approved program (e.g., Ontario Food Handler Certificate). Most franchisors require all food prep staff to be certified. |
| WSIB registration | Mandatory for restaurant employees in Ontario. Register before the first employee starts. WSIB premiums based on insurable earnings and rate group. |
| Payroll deductions from day one | CPP, EI and income tax deducted from every paycheque. T4 slips issued annually. ROEs issued on termination. Tips reported on T4s. |
| Health and safety training | WHMIS training, workplace violence and harassment training (Bill 132), and any industry-specific safety training required by the franchisor. |
We process payroll for food franchise clients from $125/month. CPP, EI, income tax, tip reporting, ROEs, T4s and WSIB all included. Visit our food franchise services or our restaurant accounting services for details.
9Set Up Your Bookkeeping and Financial Systems
Your franchisor will provide a chart of accounts and reporting requirements. Most food franchises require weekly or monthly financial reporting to the franchisor: sales by category, food cost percentage, labour cost percentage and net profit. Your bookkeeping system must produce these reports accurately and on time.
| System | What to Set Up |
|---|---|
| POS system | Specified by the franchisor (Toast, Square, Clover, Lightspeed, TouchBistro or a proprietary system). Integrated with your accounting software for daily sales sync. |
| Accounting software | QBO or Xero configured with the franchisor's chart of accounts. Revenue categories: dine-in, takeout, delivery, catering. Expense categories: food cost by type, labour, rent, royalties, advertising fund, equipment, utilities. |
| Delivery platform accounts | UberEats, DoorDash, SkipTheDishes. Each platform configured and reconciled separately: gross sales, commissions, marketing fees, HST and net deposits. |
| Payroll system | Integrated with your accounting software. Bi-weekly or semi-monthly processing. Tip tracking from POS linked to payroll. |
We Configure Everything at Onboarding: When you incorporate through us and sign up for bookkeeping, we configure QBO or Xero with your franchisor's chart of accounts, connect your POS, set up delivery platform reconciliation, configure payroll and establish the food cost tracking categories. Your financial systems are ready before opening day. T2 filed FREE for every bookkeeping client.
10Open, Operate and Stay CRA-Compliant
Opening day is the beginning, not the end. A food franchise requires ongoing financial management: weekly food cost monitoring, monthly labour cost analysis, quarterly HST filing, annual T2, ongoing payroll processing and franchisor financial reporting. The franchisees who fail are not the ones with bad locations. They are the ones who do not monitor their numbers.
| Ongoing Financial Metric | Target Range | How We Track It |
|---|---|---|
| Food cost % | 25% to 35% (varies by concept) | Weekly food purchases vs. POS food sales. By category: proteins, produce, dairy, dry goods, beverages. |
| Labour cost % | 25% to 35% | Total labour (wages + CPP + EI + WSIB + benefits) vs. total revenue. Tracked per pay period. |
| Prime cost % | 55% to 65% | Food cost + labour cost. The single most important profitability indicator for food franchises. |
| Royalty and ad fund cost % | 6% to 12% of gross sales | Tracked monthly. Verified against franchisor invoices. |
| Net profit margin | 8% to 15% | Net income after all costs (COGS, labour, rent, royalties, ad fund, utilities, equipment, loan payments) as % of revenue. |
Ongoing Franchise Fees: What You Pay the Franchisor Every Month
| Fee | Typical Rate | How It Is Calculated | Tax Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|
| Royalty fee | 4% to 8% of gross sales | Calculated on gross revenue (before expenses). Paid weekly or monthly to the franchisor. | Fully deductible business expense. HST on the royalty is an ITC. |
| Advertising/marketing fund | 2% to 4% of gross sales | Funds national TV, digital, social media and regional marketing campaigns managed by the franchisor. | Fully deductible. HST on the ad fund is an ITC. |
| Technology fee | $200 to $800/month | Covers the franchisor's POS system, loyalty app, online ordering platform and data analytics. | Fully deductible. HST is an ITC. |
| Local marketing (your own spend) | 1% to 3% of gross sales (franchisor may mandate a minimum) | You spend this on local advertising: Google Ads, social media, community sponsorships, local print. | Fully deductible. HST is an ITC on advertising purchased from Canadian vendors. |
| Renewal fee (at end of term) | $5,000 to $25,000 or 25% to 50% of the original franchise fee | Paid when the franchise agreement term expires and you renew for another term (typically 10 to 20 years). | May be deductible or amortized depending on treatment. CPA review recommended. |
Royalties Are on Gross, Not Net: This is the most important financial reality of franchising. A 6% royalty on $800,000 in annual gross sales is $48,000, regardless of whether you are profitable. In a year where your food costs spike and your labour costs are high, you still owe the full $48,000 in royalties. Budget for royalties and ad fund as fixed obligations, not variable costs. They come off the top before you calculate your own profit.
We Handle Franchise Accounting from Day One
Incorporation ($35), bookkeeping ($150/month), payroll ($125/month), HST filing, food cost tracking and T2 (FREE). All included.
Food Franchise Startup Checklist
- Research franchise brands: investment level, royalty structure, territory, franchisee satisfaction
- Receive and review the Franchise Disclosure Document (14-day minimum cooling-off period in Ontario)
- Have a franchise lawyer review the FDD and franchise agreement before signing
- Incorporate your company before signing the franchise agreement ($35 through Gondaliya CPA)
- Register with CRA: HST, payroll, corporate tax, import/export (if applicable)
- Secure financing: personal capital (30% to 40%), bank loan, BDC, CSBFP
- Sign the franchise agreement and pay the franchise fee
- Secure the location: lease signed by the corporation, personal guarantee negotiated
- Register for HST before the build-out begins (to claim ITCs on construction and equipment)
- Complete the build-out per franchisor specifications
- Attend franchisor training (2 to 6 weeks)
- Hire and train your team: food handler certification, WSIB, payroll setup
- Set up QBO or Xero with franchisor chart of accounts, POS integration and delivery platform reconciliation
- Obtain business insurance: CGL ($2M minimum), property, business interruption, employer's liability
- Obtain all municipal permits: business licence, health inspection (public health unit), building permit, fire inspection, signage permit
- Soft launch (1 to 2 weeks), then grand opening
Frequently Asked Questions: Starting a Food Franchise in Canada
Starting a Food Franchise? We Handle the Numbers from Day One.
Gondaliya CPA incorporates food franchise companies for $35, sets up QBO or Xero with your franchisor's chart of accounts, processes payroll, files HST and delivers monthly financials with food cost tracking. T2 filed FREE. 900+ five-star reviews.
