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Franchise Audit Preparation: What Franchisors Look For

April 9, 2026

The letter arrives on a Tuesday. Professional letterhead, certified mail. Your franchisor is exercising its contractual right to audit your financial records for the prior 24 months. You have 21 days to assemble three years of POS reports, bank statements, tax returns, vendor invoices, and employee payroll records. Your bookkeeper looks at you with the expression of someone who just realized they never reconciled Q3 of last year.

This is the moment that separates franchise owners who treat bookkeeping as a compliance function from those who treat it as an afterthought. The audit is coming — the only question is whether you’ll spend $2,000 on organized preparation or $25,000+ on back-royalties, penalties, and emergency cleanup.

According to the International Franchise Association, approximately 15-20% of franchise units are audited in any given year across major systems. Some franchisors audit every unit on a rotating basis. Others audit based on red flags. Either way, preparation is not optional — it’s a contractual requirement built into your franchise agreement.

This guide covers why franchisors audit, what triggers a closer look, exactly what the auditors examine, common findings and their penalties, and the quarterly self-audit process that keeps you audit-ready year-round.

Why Franchisors Audit

Franchisor audits serve four primary purposes — and understanding the motivation helps you anticipate what they’ll focus on:

1. Royalty Verification

This is the primary driver. The franchisor needs to confirm that the gross sales you’ve reported — and the royalties you’ve paid — match your actual business activity. Even a 1% underreporting rate across a 1,000-unit system represents millions in lost royalty income. Auditors are specifically trained to detect the gap between POS data and reported gross sales.

2. Brand and Operational Compliance

Financial audits often accompany or trigger operational reviews. If your financials show you’re spending 0.5% on local advertising when the minimum is 2%, the franchisor now has two compliance issues: a financial shortfall and an operational deficiency. Similarly, if your food cost is running 38% when the system average is 30%, they’ll investigate whether you’re using unapproved suppliers or deviating from the brand’s recipes.

3. Financial Health Assessment

Franchisors have a vested interest in your financial viability. A unit that’s losing money is at risk of closure — which hurts the brand, the territory, and the other franchisees. Financial audits give the franchisor early warning of units in distress so they can intervene with operational support before the situation becomes terminal.

4. System-Wide Data Integrity

Your reported sales data feeds into the franchisor’s system-wide financial performance representations — the numbers published in Item 19 of the FDD. Inaccurate data from individual franchisees distorts these system-wide numbers, which creates legal liability for the franchisor. Audits ensure the data is reliable.

Key insight: The franchisor isn’t trying to catch you cheating. Most audit findings are errors, not fraud. But the financial consequences are the same regardless of intent — back-royalties, interest, and penalties are calculated on the underpayment amount, whether it was intentional or accidental.

What Triggers an Audit

While some franchisors audit on a random rotation, certain behaviors and patterns increase your likelihood of being selected:

Red Flags That Trigger Audits

Trigger Why It Raises Flags Risk Level
Sudden decline in reported gross sales Suggests possible underreporting or operational issues High
Gross sales significantly below system average Outlier units attract attention High
Discrepancy between POS data and reported sales Franchisors often have direct POS data access Critical
Late royalty payments (3+ instances) Financial distress or deliberate underpayment High
Late financial reports Suggests bookkeeping problems Medium
Transfer or sale of the unit Standard due diligence before approving transfer Guaranteed
Franchise agreement renewal Standard review before extending the agreement Guaranteed
Customer or employee complaints May indicate operational issues with financial roots Medium
Third-party delivery revenue discrepancies Known area of systematic underreporting High
Inconsistent average ticket vs. system benchmarks Could indicate voided transactions or cash skimming High

Guaranteed Audit Events

Two events virtually guarantee a financial review:

  1. Unit transfer/sale — The franchisor audits the selling franchisee’s books before approving any transfer. They want to verify that all royalties are current and that the financial representations made to the buyer are accurate.
  1. Agreement renewal — Before extending your franchise agreement for another 10-20 years, the franchisor will conduct a comprehensive review of your financial compliance over the current term.

If you’re planning to sell a unit or approaching a renewal year, begin your audit preparation 12 months in advance. For a complete framework on managing franchise finances during these milestones, see our franchise bookkeeping guide.

What Auditors Examine

Franchise auditors follow a structured examination process. Here’s exactly what they look at, in the order they typically review it:

1. POS Data vs. Reported Gross Sales

This is the auditor’s first and most important comparison. They’ll pull raw POS data — either directly from the franchise system’s centralized POS platform or from data you’re required to transmit — and compare it to the gross sales figures on your royalty reports.

What they’re checking:

  • Does total POS revenue match what you reported?
  • Are all revenue sources included (in-store, online, delivery, catering)?
  • Are exclusions (refunds, employee meals, taxes) documented and within policy limits?
  • Are voided transactions reasonable in frequency and amount?

The void trap: Excessive voided transactions are the #1 indicator of either cash theft or deliberate underreporting. If your void rate exceeds 1-2% of gross sales, expect detailed scrutiny of every voided transaction. Each void should have a manager override code and a documented reason.

2. Royalty Calculations

Once gross sales are verified, auditors recalculate every royalty payment for the audit period:

  • Gross sales per the agreement’s definition
  • Less: allowable exclusions (with documentation)
  • Equals: royalty base
  • Times: royalty percentage and brand fund percentage
  • Equals: amount owed
  • Compared to: amount actually paid

Any variance — positive or negative — is noted. Underpayments result in back-royalty assessments. Overpayments are typically credited to future royalty obligations (don’t expect a refund check).

3. Bank Statements and Deposits

Auditors compare your bank deposit totals to your POS sales totals to identify unrecorded revenue. In a cash-heavy business, daily deposits should closely track daily POS sales. A pattern where bank deposits consistently exceed POS reports suggests cash revenue that wasn’t run through the register.

They also look for:

  • Large cash deposits not explained by POS activity
  • Deposits to accounts not disclosed in the franchise agreement
  • Deposits that don’t match the timing pattern of daily operations

4. Financial Statements

The auditor reviews your P&L and balance sheet for:

  • Food/product cost percentages — abnormally low COGS may suggest unrecorded revenue (you’re buying enough food for $100K in sales but only reporting $80K)
  • Labor percentages — same logic as COGS
  • Cash balances — sudden increases without corresponding revenue may indicate off-books activity
  • Loan balances — undisclosed loans may violate the franchise agreement

5. Tax Returns

Your tax returns provide an independent verification of revenue. If your franchisor royalty reports show $900,000 in annual gross sales but your Schedule C or 1120S shows $1,100,000 in revenue, someone is getting the wrong number — and the auditor will determine which one.

6. Advertising Compliance

If your agreement requires minimum local advertising spend, the auditor will:

  • Request copies of all local advertising invoices and receipts
  • Verify total spend meets or exceeds the required percentage
  • Confirm that spending meets the franchisor’s definition of “approved local advertising” (billboards count; buying your cousin’s band t-shirts doesn’t)
  • Calculate the shortfall, if any, which may be assessed as additional brand fund contributions

7. Vendor Compliance

Many franchise systems require purchasing from approved vendors. Auditors will:

  • Review your vendor list against the approved vendor directory
  • Check for unapproved supplier invoices
  • Verify that any supply chain deviations were pre-approved in writing

Using unapproved vendors isn’t just a compliance issue — it can void your warranty coverage, expose you to food safety liability, and result in fines.

Pro Tip: Before the auditors arrive, run every comparison they’ll run: POS vs. bank deposits, POS vs. royalty reports, reported revenue vs. tax returns, advertising spend vs. required minimum. If any comparison shows a variance greater than 1%, investigate and resolve it before the audit team does. Finding your own errors first doesn’t eliminate the liability, but it demonstrates good faith and may reduce penalties.

The Audit Process: Step by Step

Step 1: Notification (Day 1)

You receive formal written notice — typically certified mail or email — stating:

  • The audit period (usually 24-36 months)
  • The date of the audit (typically 21-30 days from notification)
  • The documents you must prepare and make available
  • Whether the audit is on-site or remote (remote has become more common post-2020)

Step 2: Document Request (Days 1-21)

You must assemble and organize:

Document Period Covered Format
POS daily sales reports Full audit period Electronic (CSV or PDF)
Bank statements — all accounts Full audit period PDF from bank
Royalty reports submitted to franchisor Full audit period Copies of submitted reports
Federal and state tax returns All years in audit period Complete returns with schedules
Monthly/quarterly P&L statements Full audit period From QBO or accounting system
Balance sheets Full audit period From QBO or accounting system
Vendor invoices (if requested) Specific periods or vendors Originals or scans
Local advertising documentation Full audit period Invoices, receipts, proof of placement
Employee payroll records Full audit period From payroll provider
Insurance certificates Current + audit period From insurance agent

Step 3: On-Site or Remote Review (1-3 Days)

The auditor reviews all documents, runs their comparisons, and may request additional information. Cooperate fully — obstruction or delay gives the franchisor grounds for additional penalties and may trigger a more adversarial review.

Step 4: Findings Letter (2-6 Weeks After Review)

You receive a written report detailing:

  • Findings (discrepancies, underpayments, compliance issues)
  • Back-royalty assessment (if applicable)
  • Interest calculation
  • Penalties (if applicable)
  • Required corrective actions
  • Deadline for remediation (typically 30 days)

Step 5: Remediation

You must:

  • Pay all back-royalties, interest, and penalties by the deadline
  • Implement corrective actions (new POS procedures, bookkeeping changes, etc.)
  • Provide written confirmation that corrective actions are in place
  • In some cases, submit to a follow-up audit within 6-12 months

Common Audit Findings and Penalties

Finding Typical Penalty Frequency
Underreported gross sales (third-party delivery revenue excluded) Back-royalties + 1.5%/month interest + $500-$2,000 penalty Very common
Incorrect gross sales exclusions (undocumented refunds/meals) Back-royalties + interest on each undocumented exclusion Very common
Late royalty payments (3+ occurrences) $250-$500 per late payment + interest Common
Insufficient local advertising spend Difference owed to brand fund + interest Common
Unapproved vendors Warning + required switch to approved vendor within 30 days Moderate
Commingled funds (personal + business in same account) Warning + required separation within 30 days Moderate
Missing or incomplete financial reports $100-$500 per missing report Common
Insurance lapse (even 1 day) Default notice + potential franchisor-placed coverage at your cost Occasional
Unreconciled POS-to-bank discrepancies Auditors assume highest revenue figure for royalty calculation Common
Gift card revenue misclassification Reclassification + back-royalties on incorrectly excluded amounts Moderate

The Cost of Audit Failure

The direct costs are bad enough — a typical audit finding of 2-3% gross sales underreporting over 24 months on $1M annual revenue:

  • Back-royalties: $1,200-$1,800/year x 2 years = $2,400-$3,600
  • Interest (1.5%/month): $500-$1,200 depending on timing
  • Penalties: $500-$2,000
  • Total direct cost: $3,400-$6,800

But the indirect costs are worse:

  • Legal review of findings: $1,500-$3,000
  • Bookkeeping cleanup: $2,000-$5,000
  • Follow-up audit costs: your time and bookkeeper’s time preparing again within 6-12 months
  • Damaged relationship with franchisor: harder to get approvals for transfers, expansions, or favorable terms
  • Potential termination risk: repeated findings or material underreporting can trigger agreement termination

Important: If you receive an audit findings letter with a material back-royalty assessment, engage a franchise attorney before responding. The findings are negotiable in some cases — particularly the penalty and interest components. But you need someone who understands franchise law, not just a business attorney. The SBA’s franchise resources include guidance on franchisee rights during disputes.

The Quarterly Self-Audit Checklist

The best franchise audit preparation happens 90 days at a time — not in a 21-day panic when the notification arrives. Run this self-audit checklist every quarter:

Revenue Verification

  • POS total sales match bank deposit totals (within 1%)
  • Third-party delivery revenue recorded at full customer price
  • Gift card sales recorded as liability, redemptions as revenue
  • All revenue sources included (catering, online, marketplace)
  • Voided transactions below 1.5% of gross sales with documentation

Royalty Accuracy

  • Gross sales calculated per franchise agreement definition
  • All exclusions (refunds, meals, tips, taxes) documented per policy
  • Calculated royalties match actual ACH debits (within $50/quarter)
  • Brand fund payments calculated and paid separately
  • No late royalty payments in the quarter

Advertising Compliance

  • Local advertising spend meets or exceeds required minimum
  • All advertising invoices and receipts filed chronologically
  • Advertising spend is for franchisor-approved marketing activities
  • Running total of YTD advertising spend tracked against requirement

Financial Reporting

  • Monthly or quarterly P&L submitted to franchisor on time
  • P&L format matches franchisor requirements
  • Year-to-date figures reconcile to prior period reports
  • Balance sheet prepared and available if required

Vendor and Insurance Compliance

  • All vendors are on the franchisor’s approved list
  • Any vendor exceptions have written pre-approval
  • All insurance policies current — no coverage lapses
  • Insurance certificates on file with franchisor (updated annually)

Document Retention

  • POS daily reports saved electronically (minimum 5 years)
  • Bank statements saved (minimum 5 years)
  • Vendor invoices filed and accessible (minimum 3 years)
  • Payroll records retained per state law (typically 4-7 years)
  • Tax returns and supporting documents retained (minimum 7 years)
  • All royalty reports and correspondence with franchisor saved indefinitely

Document Retention Requirements

Franchise agreements typically require you to retain financial records for 5-7 years from the date of the transaction. But different records have different retention periods:

Document Type Minimum Retention Recommended Retention Notes
POS daily sales reports Per franchise agreement (typically 5 years) Full agreement term + 3 years Primary evidence for royalty verification
Bank statements 5 years Full agreement term + 3 years Corroborates POS data
Tax returns 7 years (IRS statute of limitations) Indefinite Never discard tax returns
Royalty reports Per franchise agreement Full agreement term + 3 years Proof of what you reported
Vendor invoices 3-5 years 5 years Verify COGS and vendor compliance
Payroll records Per state law (4-7 years) 7 years Verify labor cost accuracy
Insurance certificates Per franchise agreement Full agreement term Prove continuous coverage
Franchise agreement + amendments Indefinite Indefinite The master document for all obligations
Correspondence with franchisor Indefinite Indefinite Documents approvals, exceptions, disputes
Local advertising proof Per franchise agreement (typically 3-5 years) 5 years Proves compliance with local ad minimum

Digital is fine — but accessible. Most franchisors accept electronic records. Store POS reports, bank statements, and invoices in a structured cloud folder system (by year and month) that you can access and produce within 48 hours of a request. A shoebox of paper receipts in the back office is not audit-ready.

Staying Audit-Ready Year-Round

The franchise owners who breeze through audits don’t do anything special during audit preparation. They do the basics consistently, all year long:

Monthly (30 minutes)

  1. Reconcile POS to bank deposits — run the comparison, investigate any variance above $100
  2. Verify royalty ACH matches your calculation — takes 5 minutes if you maintain a royalty reconciliation spreadsheet
  3. File advertising receipts — scan or save invoices for all local marketing spend
  4. Submit required reports on time — set calendar reminders 5 days before every deadline

Quarterly (2 hours)

  1. Run the full self-audit checklist above
  2. Calculate YTD advertising spend vs. required minimum — if you’re behind, accelerate spending in the next quarter
  3. Review vendor list against approved vendor directory — flag any new vendors for franchisor approval
  4. Verify insurance coverage — check policy dates, update certificates if needed

Annually (1 day)

  1. Full royalty reconciliation — POS total, reported total, royalties paid, bank debits — for the entire year
  2. Year-end financial package preparation — P&L, balance sheet, in franchisor format
  3. Tax return coordination — ensure CPA-prepared revenue matches franchisor-reported revenue
  4. Document retention cleanup — archive completed years, verify all records are accessible

Before a Transfer or Renewal (3-6 months)

  1. Full-term royalty reconciliation — every royalty payment for the entire agreement term
  2. Self-audit of all compliance areas — advertising, insurance, vendors, reporting
  3. Identify and fix any discrepancies — pay any shortfalls before the franchisor finds them
  4. Engage a franchise attorney — review renewal terms or transfer agreement
  5. Budget for associated costs — renewal fee, remodel requirements, any back-amounts owed

For detailed guidance on royalty calculation methodology, see our franchise royalty accounting guide. For multi-unit operators, our multi-unit franchise consolidation guide covers the additional complexity of per-unit audits and consolidated reporting.

Don’t wait for the audit letter. At Steph’s Books, we keep franchise owners audit-ready year-round. We reconcile POS to bank deposits monthly, verify royalty accuracy weekly, track advertising spend against minimums, and maintain the document trail that makes audits a formality — not a crisis. Get an instant quote or see how we serve franchise owners.


Related Reading

  • Franchise Bookkeeping: Royalties, Compliance & Multi-Unit Accounting
  • Franchise Royalty Accounting: Calculating and Recording Fees
  • Multi-Unit Franchise Financial Consolidation
  • Our Bookkeeping Services

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