Article Friday 27th March 2026

Franchising Redefined: Entering a New Golden Era

Franchising is entering a new phase of accelerated growth and structural change. Global franchising revenues are forecast to grow at around 10% annually over the next five years, significantly outpacing wider consumer spending. By 2029, the global market is expected to reach approximately $1.4 trillion. Increased investment – particularly from private equity backing franchisee platforms – is reshaping the industry and elevating franchising to a more institutionalised model. However, this growth brings new expectations and challenges for both franchisors and franchisees.

At the heart of successful systems will be strong unit economics

Franchising remains a margin-sharing model, meaning profitability at the individual outlet level is critical. Rising operating costs, technology investments and royalty structures have taken some franchisees to breaking point. Brands must ensure central investments support the profitability of the entire system rather than simply increasing corporate revenue.

The traditional “mom and pop” franchise operator is also becoming obsolete

Across the US, UK and Europe, franchise ownership is consolidating as larger, better-capitalised operators acquire smaller businesses. Many of these platforms are backed by private equity or family offices and bring greater operational sophistication, data capability and growth capital. As a result, franchisors increasingly prefer fewer, larger partners capable of scaling the brand.

Operational superiority is now a key differentiator

Franchisees can no longer rely on capital alone to secure opportunities, particularly as some brands prioritise company-owned growth. Franchise partners must demonstrate expertise in areas such as property strategy, supply chains, labour management and technology adoption.

International expansion through franchising is mostly a mirage

While often perceived as a low-capital route to rapid growth, overseas markets frequently present weaker site economics and operational complexity. Strong home-market performance remains a prerequisite for sustainable expansion. The few successes often mask a landscape of quiet failures.

Ultimately, the most successful franchise systems will balance global consistency with local flexibility

Brands must define clear non-negotiables that protect the core proposition while allowing franchisees the freedom to adapt to local market conditions.

Franchising’s future is promising, but success will depend on rigorous economics, stronger partnerships and a more deliberate approach to growth.

Key Contacts

David Sinclair

David Sinclair

Partner

Mohsin Saleh

Mohsin Saleh

Associate Partner

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