When David opened his second Great Clips location, he added a Class in QuickBooks Online and figured he’d sort it out later. By the time he opened his fifth location — three in Illinois, two in Indiana — “later” had arrived in the form of a franchisor audit, a state tax nexus question, and a lending officer who wanted unit-level financials for an expansion loan. His books were a tangled mess of transfers between locations, management expenses charged to no particular unit, and a chart of accounts that treated five different businesses as one.
Untangling it took 120 hours of bookkeeping work at $85/hour — $10,200 in cleanup costs. Setting it up correctly from the start would have cost a fraction of that.
Multi-unit franchise accounting isn’t just “bookkeeping times five.” Each unit needs its own P&L for franchisor reporting, its own revenue and expense tracking for performance management, and the right legal structure to protect you from liability. At the same time, you need a consolidated view that shows total portfolio performance, shared expense allocation, and intercompany cash flows.
This guide covers entity structure options, unit-level tracking in QBO, intercompany transactions, consolidated reporting, and the benchmarking framework that separates operators who grow profitably from those who just add units.
Your entity structure determines everything downstream — how you file taxes, how liability flows between units, how you sell or transfer individual locations, and how complex your bookkeeping becomes. Choose wrong, and you’ll pay to restructure later.
Setup: One LLC holds all franchise agreements. Each unit is tracked as a separate Class (or Location) in QBO.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Simplest accounting — one QBO file, one tax return | Zero liability isolation — a lawsuit at Unit 3 can seize Unit 1’s assets |
| Lowest legal and CPA costs | Cannot sell one unit without transferring the entire entity |
| No intercompany transactions to track | All units must have the same partners/owners |
| Cash flows freely between units | Different state operations create nexus complexity in one return |
Best for: 2-3 units in the same state, same ownership, early-stage multi-unit operators.
When to abandon this structure: When you open in a second state, bring in a partner on one unit, or when any single unit’s revenue exceeds $500K (the liability risk becomes material).
Setup: Each franchise location is its own LLC with its own franchise agreement, bank accounts, and EIN. Each LLC has a separate QBO company file.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Full liability isolation — Unit 3 lawsuit can’t touch Unit 1 | Multiple tax returns ($1,500-$3,000 per entity per year) |
| Clean sale/transfer of individual units | Multiple QBO subscriptions ($90+/month each) |
| Different ownership structures per unit | Intercompany transactions for every shared expense |
| Clear franchisor reporting per location | No consolidated view without manual assembly or third-party tool |
Best for: Units in different states, units with different partners, operators who may sell individual locations.
Setup: A parent holding company (LLC or S-Corp) owns each operating LLC. The holding company employs management, owns shared assets, and charges management fees to operating entities.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Liability isolation + centralized management | Most complex structure — requires formal intercompany accounting |
| Management fee creates tax-efficient income flow | Multiple entities, multiple returns, higher CPA costs |
| Centralized payroll for shared staff | Must maintain arm’s-length management fee rates |
| Easier to add investors or sell individual units | Requires consolidated financial statements |
| Professional appearance for lenders and partners | Higher legal setup costs ($3,000-$8,000) |
Best for: 4+ units, growth-oriented operators, anyone with expansion plans, operators seeking SBA or bank financing.
Pro Tip: The holding company management fee is one of the most powerful tools in multi-unit franchise accounting. A typical management fee of 4-5% of each unit’s gross sales covers the holding company’s expenses (owner salary, accounting, legal, insurance, corporate overhead) and creates a tax-efficient way to extract income. But the fee must be documented in a formal management services agreement, and the rate must be reasonable — the IRS scrutinizes related-party fees that look like profit-shifting.
Regardless of your entity structure, you need unit-level financial tracking. Here’s how to configure it in QuickBooks Online:
If all units are in one QBO file, use Classes to separate them:
Run unit-level P&Ls using Reports → Profit and Loss → Customize → Filter by Class. This gives you a clean per-unit financial statement without maintaining separate QBO files.
If each unit is its own LLC with its own QBO:
Whether you’re using Classes or separate QBO files, create a dedicated tracking category for corporate/shared expenses:
These expenses need to be allocated to units on a rational basis — typically pro-rata by gross sales or number of units — for accurate unit-level profitability analysis.
Once you have multiple entities, every cash movement between them must be recorded as a formal intercompany transaction. This isn’t optional — the IRS requires it, your CPA needs it, and your franchisor will flag unexplained transfers during audits.
| Transaction Type | From | To | Recording Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Management Fee | Operating LLC | Holding Company | Monthly invoice from holding co., recorded as expense in operating LLC |
| Shared Expense Allocation | Entity that paid | Entity that benefited | Due To/Due From accounts, settled monthly |
| Cash Transfer (Loan) | Profitable unit | Underfunded unit | Intercompany loan — must have written terms, interest rate |
| Cash Transfer (Distribution + Capital) | Operating LLC | Owner → new LLC | Distribution from source, capital contribution to target |
| Inventory Transfer | Unit with excess | Unit with shortage | Due To/Due From at cost basis |
| Shared Employee Time | Unit that paid payroll | Unit where work was performed | Time allocation, billed via intercompany invoice |
Every intercompany transaction creates a Due To balance in one entity and a matching Due From balance in another. These must net to zero across the portfolio at all times.
Example: Holding Company pays $3,600 for accounting services that benefit all 4 units equally.
In the Holding Company’s books:
In each Operating LLC’s books:
When the operating LLCs pay the holding company, the Due To/Due From accounts clear. If they don’t settle monthly, the balances grow and create confusion — and potential IRS scrutiny if one entity is effectively funding another without a documented loan.
Pro Tip: Settle all intercompany Due To/Due From balances monthly. Set a specific date — the 25th of each month, for example — to wire or ACH the net amount owed. Letting intercompany balances accumulate for quarters or years creates a reconciliation nightmare and can trigger IRS reclassification of what should be management fees into disguised distributions.
A consolidated P&L and balance sheet give you the total portfolio view — but they require more than just adding up the numbers from each unit.
| Line Item | Unit 1 | Unit 2 | Unit 3 | Corporate | Eliminations | Consolidated |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Sales | $92,000 | $78,000 | $105,000 | — | — | $275,000 |
| Food/Product Cost | $27,600 | $24,180 | $31,500 | — | — | $83,280 |
| Direct Labor | $23,000 | $19,890 | $26,250 | — | — | $69,140 |
| Royalty + Brand Fund | $7,360 | $6,240 | $8,400 | — | — | $22,000 |
| Occupancy | $8,280 | $7,020 | $9,450 | — | — | $24,750 |
| Other Operating | $6,440 | $5,460 | $7,350 | — | — | $19,250 |
| Management Fee to HoldCo | $4,600 | $3,900 | $5,250 | — | ($13,750) | $0 |
| Unit-Level EBITDA | $14,720 | $11,310 | $16,800 | — | — | — |
| Management Fee Income | — | — | — | $13,750 | ($13,750) | $0 |
| Corporate Expenses | — | — | — | ($10,500) | — | ($10,500) |
| Consolidated Net Income | $46,080 |
The Eliminations column is critical. Intercompany management fees appear as an expense in each operating LLC and as income in the holding company. On a consolidated basis, they cancel out — the money never left the portfolio. Without the elimination, you’d double-count the management fee as both an expense and revenue, overstating total expenses and total revenue by $13,750.
Your consolidated balance sheet must also eliminate intercompany balances:
If your consolidated balance sheet doesn’t balance after eliminations, you have a recording error in your intercompany transactions. This is the most common reason franchise owners hire a specialized bookkeeper.
The real power of multi-unit franchise accounting is the ability to compare units against each other — and against the franchise system’s benchmarks.
| Metric | Unit 1 (Naperville) | Unit 2 (Schaumburg) | Unit 3 (Aurora) | System Avg |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Sales | $92,000 | $78,000 | $105,000 | $88,000 |
| Food Cost % | 30.0% | 31.0% | 30.0% | 29.5% |
| Labor % | 25.0% | 25.5% | 25.0% | 26.0% |
| Occupancy % | 9.0% | 9.0% | 9.0% | 9.5% |
| Four-Wall EBITDA % | 16.0% | 14.5% | 16.0% | 14.0% |
| Sales per Labor Hour | $42 | $36 | $45 | $40 |
| Average Ticket | $12.40 | $11.80 | $13.10 | $12.00 |
| Transaction Count | 7,419 | 6,610 | 8,015 | 7,333 |
This view immediately reveals that Unit 2 is the weakest performer — lower gross sales, higher food cost percentage, lower sales per labor hour, and lower average ticket. The diagnosis: Unit 2 likely has a scheduling efficiency problem (lower sales per labor hour suggests overstaffing during slow periods) and a potential waste or theft issue (higher food cost on lower volume).
Without unit-level tracking, this diagnosis is invisible. The consolidated numbers look fine — total portfolio EBITDA is healthy. But Unit 2 is dragging down the portfolio, and without benchmarking you’d never know.
Key insight: Franchisors provide system-wide benchmarks through franchise business consultants and annual FDD updates (Item 19, Financial Performance Representations). Use these benchmarks as the standard — not your own average. If all three of your units run 32% food cost but the system average is 29%, all three units have a problem.
Most franchise systems require per-unit financial reporting — they want to see each location’s performance independently, not a consolidated number. Here’s what to prepare:
Your franchisor wants P&Ls formatted their way — with their line items, in their order, with percentages of gross sales. Your CPA wants P&Ls formatted for tax returns. Your lender wants P&Ls formatted per GAAP. Your management team wants a dashboard.
The solution: maintain one set of books per unit with a detailed chart of accounts, then use reporting filters and custom report formats to produce each view. Never maintain separate sets of books for different audiences — that’s how numbers start diverging and trust erodes.
Here’s the decision framework:
| Scenario | Recommendation | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 2-3 units, same state, same owners | Single LLC with Classes | Simplicity outweighs liability risk at this scale |
| Units in different states | Separate LLCs (one per state minimum) | State tax nexus and registration requirements |
| Different partners on different units | Separate LLCs per partnership group | Clean ownership, clean distributions, clean exits |
| 4+ units, growth plans | Holding Company + Operating LLCs | Professional structure, liability isolation, financing readiness |
| Planning to sell 1-2 units | Separate LLCs (must be in place before listing) | Buyers want a clean entity with its own financials |
| SBA or bank loan for new unit | Separate LLC for new unit | Lenders want to underwrite the specific unit, not your whole portfolio |
The restructuring trap: Moving from a single LLC to separate entities after years of operation is expensive — $5,000-$15,000 in legal fees, potential franchise transfer fees, new EINs, new bank accounts, and a full reallocation of historical financials. Make the right structure decision before you sign the lease on Unit 2.
For operators with 5+ units, the management company model creates operational efficiency and tax advantages:
The management fee structure creates a tax-efficient income flow because:
Caution: The management fee rate must be arm’s-length — meaning comparable to what a third-party management company would charge. The IRS scrutinizes related-party management fees that appear inflated. Document the rate with a formal management services agreement reviewed by your CPA and attorney.
Ready to structure your multi-unit franchise accounting correctly? At Steph’s Books, we help multi-unit franchise operators set up entity structures, unit-level tracking, intercompany accounting, and consolidated reporting. Whether you’re opening Unit 2 or managing Unit 10, we’ll make sure your books support growth — not slow it down. Get an instant quote or see how we serve franchise owners.
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