# This Franchise Has No Item 19 — Walk Away or Dig Deeper?

> 29.6% of FDDs have no Item 19. Learn why franchisors skip it, which omissions are red flags, and how to estimate earnings from Items 5-7, 20, and 21.

**Last updated**: 2026-06-15
**URL**: https://vetmyfranchise.com/blog/franchise-no-item-19-what-it-means?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md

## Item 19 Is Optional — Here's the Actual Rule

The FTC Franchise Rule requires franchisors to disclose 23 items before selling you a franchise. Twenty-two of them are mandatory. Item 19 — the financial performance representation, the only section that tells you what units actually earn — is the lone exception. A franchisor may include it, or may state that it "does not make any representations about a franchisee's future financial performance" and move on.

That one sentence of boilerplate carries legal teeth in both directions. If a franchisor skips Item 19, every person selling on its behalf is prohibited from giving you earnings information of any kind — no revenue ranges, no "most owners clear six figures," no napkin math at Discovery Day. A development rep who hints at numbers outside the FDD is committing a violation you can later use against the franchisor. So when a salesperson for a no-Item-19 brand says "I can't discuss earnings," they're not being cagey. They're complying with federal law. The cageyness happened earlier, when the company decided not to publish anything.

If you need a refresher on what a full disclosure looks like when it exists, start with our breakdown of [Item 19 explained](/blog/item-19-financial-performance-representations?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md). The rest of this post assumes you're staring at an FDD without one.

## How Many FDDs Actually Skip It

Across the 2,000+ FDDs in the VetMyFranchise database, 70.4% include an Item 19 financial performance representation. That means 29.6% — roughly 3 in 10 — do not. A missing Item 19 is common enough that it can't be treated as disqualifying on its own.

But the overall average hides the number that actually matters: the disclosure rate in *your* category.

| Industry | % Disclosing Item 19 |
|---|---:|
| Senior Care | 89% |
| Child Services & Education | 88% |
| Health & Beauty | 87% |
| Home Services | 85% |
| Cleaning & Maintenance | 83% |
| Retail | 82% |
| Business Services | 82% |
| Food & Beverage | 78% |
| Fitness & Wellness | 76% |
| Hospitality & Travel | 73% |
| Real Estate | 62% |

Read this table as a context machine. A Senior Care brand with no Item 19 is in the bottom 11% of its category for transparency — nearly nine of every ten competitors are showing their numbers, and this one isn't. That demands an explanation. A Real Estate brand with no Item 19 is keeping company with 38% of its peers, in a category where commission-split models genuinely make "average unit revenue" hard to define.

Same omission, very different signal. Always benchmark the silence against the category before deciding what it means.

[See which brands disclose the most: Item 19 Transparency Leaderboard →](/reports/item19-transparency-leaderboard?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md)

## The Legitimate Reasons It's Missing

Four explanations hold up under scrutiny.

**The system is young.** A franchisor with eight units, half open less than a year, has no statistically honest story to tell. Publishing an "average" from three mature units would be closer to marketing than disclosure. Many emerging brands add Item 19 around year three or four, once a real cohort exists.

**Ownership recently changed.** Private equity acquisitions and rebrands often break the historical dataset. The new owner can't substantiate the old owner's numbers and hasn't accumulated its own. A one-or-two-year gap after a transaction is forgivable — if the FDD's Item 1 history actually shows a transaction.

**Unit economics vary wildly.** Territory-based service brands where one franchisee runs a solo van and another runs twelve crews produce averages that describe nobody. Some franchisors conclude, reasonably, that any single number would mislead more than inform.

**Legal conservatism.** Every figure in Item 19 must have a "reasonable basis" and written substantiation the franchisor can produce on demand. Some legal teams simply refuse the liability. Overcautious, but not sinister.

Ask the franchisor directly which of these applies. A good answer is specific and checkable against Items 1 and 20. A bad answer is a shrug.

## The Bad Reasons

Then there are the omissions that exist because publication would hurt sales.

The clearest tell is maturity plus category mismatch. A brand that's been franchising for 12 years, has 150 units, and operates in a category where 85% of competitors disclose has had every opportunity to build a defensible Item 19. If it hasn't, the most parsimonious explanation is that the numbers don't sell franchises.

The second tell is selective history. Pull the brand's FDDs from prior years (state portals like Wisconsin's archive them). A franchisor that published Item 19 for years and then quietly dropped it almost certainly watched its cohorts deteriorate. Declining cohorts are exactly the dynamic that turned [Crumbl's Item 19 cohort analysis](/blog/crumbl-item-19-cohort-analysis?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md) into required reading — and Crumbl, to its credit, kept disclosing. Brands with worse trajectories sometimes just stop.

Third: watch Item 20. High franchisee turnover — terminations, non-renewals, "ceased operations" rows stacking up — combined with no Item 19 is the worst pairing in franchising. The units are failing and the franchisor has chosen not to discuss what they earn.

## How to Estimate Unit Economics Anyway

A missing Item 19 doesn't make the FDD useless. Three other items leak financial information.

**Items 5-7 give you the cost floor.** Initial fees, ongoing royalties and ad fund contributions, and the full initial investment table. You can't compute profit without revenue, but you can compute the revenue *required*. If Item 7 says you'll invest $400K and Item 6 takes 8% off the top, you know roughly what break-even demands before anyone tells you a thing.

**Item 20 turnover is your survival proxy.** Franchisees don't abandon units that print money. A system losing 10%+ of units annually to terminations and closures is telling you about profitability without using the word.

**Item 21 lets you reverse-engineer revenue.** The franchisor's audited financial statements are mandatory, and they usually break out royalty revenue. Divide by the royalty rate, then by the unit count, and you get an approximate average unit volume.

Worked example: suppose Item 21 shows $4.2 million in royalty revenue, Item 6 sets the royalty at 6% of gross sales, and Item 20 shows 120 units operating through the year.

- $4,200,000 ÷ 0.06 = **$70,000,000** in estimated systemwide franchisee sales
- $70,000,000 ÷ 120 units = **~$583,000** average unit revenue

Treat that figure as a rough triangulation, not gospel. Mid-year openings drag the average down, minimum-royalty clauses and flat-fee structures distort it, and royalty revenue sometimes bundles other fees — read the footnotes. But $583K is an enormously better starting point than nothing, and you can sanity-check it against the category benchmarks in our guide to [how much franchise owners make](/blog/how-much-do-franchise-owners-make?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md).

## The Validation-Call Workaround

Here's the asymmetry most buyers miss: the FTC's earnings-claim prohibition binds the franchisor and its agents. It does not bind franchisees. Every owner listed in Item 20 is legally free to tell you their revenue, their labor costs, their take-home pay, and whether they'd buy again.

Call 10 to 15 of them — current owners across different tenures, plus several from the "former franchisees" list, who have no incentive to perform. Ask for specifics: gross revenue last year, months to break even, what the FDD's Item 7 estimate missed. Compare their break-even answers against the timelines in [how long until profitable](/blog/how-long-until-franchise-profitable?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md) to see whether this system runs ahead of or behind the norm.

When no Item 19 exists, validation calls stop being a nice-to-have. They are your Item 19 — assembled by hand, one conversation at a time. If franchisees broadly refuse to discuss numbers, or the franchisor discourages contact outside a curated list, you've learned what the missing item would have said.

## When Missing Item 19 Is Disqualifying — and When It's Survivable

Walk away when three conditions stack: the system is mature (7+ years, 75+ units), the category discloses heavily (check the table — anything above ~80%), and validation calls come back evasive or grim. At that point the omission isn't a documentation gap; it's the franchisor's honest opinion of its own economics, expressed through silence.

Keep digging when the brand is young or recently restructured, the Item 21 reverse-engineering produces revenue that plausibly supports the disclosed investment, outlet turnover is low, and franchisees volunteer real numbers cheerfully. Plenty of solid emerging brands fall in this bucket — some of today's best disclosers (see the [Item 19 glossary entry](/glossary/item-19?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md) for what good disclosure looks like) published nothing in their early years.

Either way, don't do the triangulation blind. Every $4.99 VetMyFranchise research report at [/pricing](/pricing?utm_source=claude&utm_medium=ai_referral&utm_campaign=vmf_agent_md) flags whether Item 19 exists and how the brand's disclosure compares to its category — before you spend a dime on the brand itself.
