Franchise Acquisition Lawyer • New York, New York

Franchise Acquisition Lawyer in New York

Buying a franchise is a significant investment with unique legal complexities. Our New York franchise acquisition lawyers guide buyers through FDD review, franchise agreement negotiation, and franchisor consent for franchise purchases across Finance, Technology, Healthcare, bringing 15+ years of transaction experience and Managing Partner involvement to every engagement.

Selective M&A Practice
Personal Attention
Managing Partner on Every Deal

What We Do

Our managing partner provides selective franchise acquisition law counsel to clients in New York and nationwide, including:

  • Franchise Disclosure Document (FDD) review and analysis
  • Franchise agreement negotiation with franchisors
  • Franchisor consent and transfer approval coordination
  • Asset purchase agreements for franchise resale transactions
  • SBA loan documentation and lender coordination for franchise purchases
  • Lease assignment and new lease negotiation
  • Non-compete and territory protection analysis
  • Multi-unit and area development agreement review

Who We Serve

We engage selectively with capitalized founders and investors in New York and nationwide:

  • First-time franchise buyers evaluating a franchise investment
  • Buyers purchasing an existing franchise location from a current owner
  • Multi-unit franchise operators expanding their portfolio
  • SBA-financed buyers who need lender-compliant franchise transaction documents
  • Franchise resale buyers navigating franchisor consent requirements
  • Investors acquiring franchise businesses as passive or semi-passive investments

The New York M&A Market

New York is the undisputed capital of M&A deal-making, home to the largest concentration of investment banks, private equity firms, and corporate acquirers in the world. Lower middle-market deals in the $1M-$50M range are driven by professional services consolidation, healthcare practice roll-ups, and technology company acquisitions. The city's dense business ecosystem creates fierce competition for quality targets, with PE-backed platforms actively seeking add-on acquisitions across the tri-state area.

Top M&A Sectors in New York

  • Professional Services
  • Healthcare
  • Technology
  • Financial Services
  • Media & Entertainment

Deal Environment

New York's deal flow is the highest in the nation, but competition from well-capitalized PE firms means sellers often receive multiple offers. Buyers need experienced counsel to structure competitive bids while protecting their downside.

Why Acquire in New York

The New York metro area has over 200,000 businesses with employees, creating one of the deepest acquisition target pools in the country. The region's talent density and infrastructure make post-acquisition integration smoother than most markets.

New York Legal Considerations

New York's Bulk Sales Act (UCC Article 6) has been repealed, but buyers must still conduct thorough due diligence on successor liability under state tax law, as the Department of Taxation can hold buyers liable for a seller's unpaid taxes.

Why Clients in New York Engage Acquisition Stars

Our deep experience with New York's complex regulatory environment and relationships with local SEC offices, FINRA, and NASDAQ make us the ideal partner for securities transactions in the city.

Our Process

A structured, methodical approach to franchise acquisition law

1

FDD Review & Risk Assessment

We review the Franchise Disclosure Document, identifying key risks in the franchise agreement, financial performance data, litigation history, and franchisee obligations before you commit.

2

Franchise Agreement Negotiation

While many franchise terms are standardized, certain provisions are negotiable. We identify where you have leverage and negotiate terms that protect your investment and operating flexibility.

3

Transaction Documentation

Managing Partner Alex Lubyansky handles the purchase agreement, assignment documents, and all ancillary agreements required to transfer the franchise to you.

4

Franchisor Consent & Coordination

We coordinate with the franchisor to secure transfer approval, manage training requirements, and ensure all conditions for consent are met on schedule.

5

Closing & Transition

We manage the closing process across all parties, including franchisor, seller, lender, and landlord, ensuring every consent and condition is satisfied for a clean transfer.

"Franchise acquisitions look simpler than independent business purchases, but the FDD creates a web of obligations that most buyers don't fully understand until they're locked in. The franchise agreement is not negotiable in most cases. Your leverage is in understanding exactly what you're agreeing to before you sign."

Alex Lubyansky, Managing Partner On franchise acquisition legal considerations

New York Legal Considerations for Franchise Acquisition Law

Non-Compete Laws

Enforceable with three-pronged reasonableness test

Filing Requirements

Entity mergers and conversions require filing with the New York Department of State. Tax clearance certificates are required for asset purchases (Form AU-196.10). New York City requires separate business filings for city-level taxes. Foreign entities must obtain authority to do business.

Key New York Considerations

  • New York City imposes its own General Corporation Tax (8.85%) and Unincorporated Business Tax (4%), effectively doubling the state-level tax burden for NYC-based businesses
  • Commercial rent tax applies to certain tenants in Manhattan below 96th Street, which can affect the valuation of acquired businesses with Manhattan leases
  • New York's Department of Financial Services (DFS) regulates financial services, insurance, and banking acquisitions with extensive review requirements

Discuss Your Franchise Acquisition Law Needs in New York

Submit your transaction details for a preliminary assessment by our managing partner.

Your information is kept strictly confidential and will never be shared. Privacy Policy

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions from New York clients

Why do I need a lawyer to buy a franchise?
Franchise transactions involve unique legal documents that general business attorneys rarely encounter. The FDD alone can be 200+ pages of complex obligations, restrictions, and financial data. A franchise acquisition lawyer identifies the risks hidden in those documents and negotiates protections that a standard business attorney would miss.
What should I look for in a Franchise Disclosure Document?
Key areas include Item 3 (litigation history), Item 7 (total investment costs), Item 19 (financial performance representations), Item 17 (renewal and termination provisions), and the franchise agreement itself. We review every section and provide you with a clear summary of what you are agreeing to and where the risks are.
Can I negotiate a franchise agreement?
Many franchisors present their agreement as non-negotiable, but certain terms can often be modified, especially for experienced operators or multi-unit buyers. We know which provisions are commonly negotiable and how to approach the franchisor to secure better terms without jeopardizing the deal.
How does buying an existing franchise differ from buying a new one?
Purchasing an existing franchise involves a business acquisition plus a franchise transfer. You need the franchisor's consent, must meet their buyer qualifications, and often face additional transfer fees and training requirements. The transaction requires both M&A expertise and franchise-specific knowledge.
How long does a franchise acquisition take?
Franchise acquisitions typically take 60 to 90 days from signed LOI to closing, though franchisor consent timelines can extend this. Acquisition Stars moves quickly through document review and negotiation so the franchisor approval process, which is outside your control, becomes the only variable.
How do New York non-compete laws affect franchise acquisition law transactions?
Enforceable if reasonable in scope, duration (typically 1-2 years), and geographic area. Courts apply a three-pronged reasonableness test from the BDO Seidman line of cases. Non-competes must protect a legitimate business interest such as trade secrets or client relationships, must not impose an undue hardship, and must not be harmful to the public. Courts will partially enforce (blue-pencil) overbroad covenants.
What can I expect during an initial consultation in New York?
During your confidential initial consultation in New York, we'll discuss your franchise acquisition law needs, review your current situation, assess potential challenges specific to New York, and outline a clear path forward. We'll explain our process, answer your questions, and determine if we're the right fit for your needs.
Do you work with companies outside of New York?
Yes, we represent clients nationwide while maintaining a strong presence in New York. Our managing partner handles franchise acquisition law matters across all 50 states, coordinating with local counsel where state-specific requirements apply.

Need Specific Guidance?

Submit your transaction details for a preliminary assessment by our managing partner

Submit Transaction Details

Franchise Acquisition Law Counsel in New York

Our managing partner provides selective franchise acquisition law counsel for transactions nationwide. Submit your transaction details for a preliminary assessment.

Request Engagement Assessment

Submit transaction details for review. We engage selectively with capitalized buyers and sellers.

Your information is kept strictly confidential and will never be shared. Privacy Policy

Selective M&A practice - Nationwide reach - Managing partner on every deal