As we enjoy the midpoint of 2025, franchising in the U.S. continues to be a powerful economic engine—one that is growing even more rapidly in business-friendly states like Georgia. Here’s what franchisors, franchisees, and legal counsel should have on their radar this year, and for the foreseeable future.
🌱 1. Franchise Expansion Booms in Georgia & the American Southeast
- According to the IFA’s 2025 Franchising Economic Outlook, the national franchise sector is projected to grow by 2.5% this year, adding over 20,000 franchise units and 210,000 jobs, with output rising to $936 billion.
- The American Southeast is the largest franchise market, housing nearly ⅓ of all expected franchise growth.
- Georgia tops the nation in projected franchise growth—+6.7% in 2025, adding more than 34,000 new businesses and contributing approximately $37 billion in economic activity.
- Georgia’s pro-business policies, favorable taxes, and infrastructure, especially around Atlanta, are key drivers to this growth.
The top 10 fastest-growing states for franchise growth are: Georgia, North Carolina, Virginia, Arizona, South Carolina, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Florida, Colorado, and Maryland.
🧩Legal perspective: Attorneys should gear up for more FDDs, franchise agreements, and regulatory compliance work in Georgia and other fast-growing Southeast states.
🍔 2. Industry-Specific Growth Forecasts
From quick-service restaurants and boutique fitness studios to salons, pet care, and wellness brands, franchises in these industries are rapidly multiplying—especially in suburban and midsize markets across the Southeast.
“Personal services and retail food, products, and services are expected to be the fastest-growing industries in 2025, increasing by 4.3% and 3.5%, respectively.”
IFA 2025 Economic Outlook
These impressive franchise projections are driven by shifting consumer preferences and post-pandemic lifestyle changes.
Georgia is already a top destination for service-based and food franchises due to:
- Rapid population growth and suburban sprawl,
- High consumer demand for convenience-based services, and
- Affordable commercial real estate outside major metros.
🔑 For franchisors, this means 2025 is a key year to explore multi-unit opportunities and regional development agreements, particularly in counties surrounding Atlanta, Savannah, and Augusta.
🧩 Legal perspective: Attorneys should pay close attention to:
- Franchise territory clauses to ensure exclusivity is clearly defined, especially in overlapping metro-suburban zones.
- Item 19 Financial Performance Representations (FPRs), which are critical in high-growth, high-volume sectors like food and personal services.
- Vendor and supply chain agreements, which may require tailoring based on the industry (e.g., health/safety standards in food or licensing in personal care).
Counsel should also prepare clients for tighter scrutiny from regulators and lenders in industries where claims around profitability or scalability may be overly optimistic.
🔮 3. Tech Adoption & AI
- Franchisors are investing in AI, automation, chatbots, and operational efficiencies to improve candidate support, streamline onboarding, and scale training across their systems atwork.com. These tools and automations are partially responsible for the extensive franchise growth we’re seeing.
- Financing structures are also evolving, with more flexible prototypes, smaller footprints, and franchise conversions are now part of growth strategies atwork.com.
🧩 Legal perspective: Your attorney should review technology use clauses, data-sharing protocols, and support services in FDDs. Ensure transparent financing disclosures and clear rights/responsibilities for franchisees who adopt these new models.
📜 4. Georgia Franchise Regulations: State Law + Federal Rule
- Though Georgia is not a franchise registration state—thus requiring no mandatory state-level filing—Georgia’s Fair Business Practices Act does define franchise relationships, establishing rules around fees, termination, and renewal.
- Still, the FTC Franchise Rule and associated disclosure obligations (like the 14-day pre-sale FDD rule) remain fundamental.
🧩 Legal perspective: Franchise transactions in Georgia hinge on federal disclosures and contract terms. Attorneys must ensure both FDD-form accuracy and careful drafting of agreement provisions to protect clients on both sides of the transaction.
5. Georgia’s Legislative Push & SB 81
SB 81, signed into law in April 2025 and effective July 1, 2025, amends the Georgia Motor Vehicle Franchise Practices Act. These note the first updates to GA’s franchise law since 2019, and emphasize concepts like the importance of franchise competition and innovative technology within the state. Key updates include:
- Strengthened data protection for dealers—restricting unauthorized access to Dealer Management Systems.
- Disclosures and compensation for Over-the-Air (OTA) recall/updates.
- Transparent, equitable vehicle allocation.
- Clarified licensing requirements for direct-sale showrooms—addressing loopholes.
SB 81 specifically addresses dealership control over consumer data:
- Dealers may audit and back up DMS data.
- Manufacturers cannot monopolize access or impose fees beyond cost recovery
- Click here for more information on SB 81. https://the-generator.thenewslinkgroup.org/headlights-on-the-law-senate-bill-81-a-win-for-georgias-franchise-dealers/?utm_source=chatgpt.com
🧩 Legal perspective: Your attorney should update disclosure and data-sharing clauses in agreements to reflect these new protections and guardrails. Counsel must update franchise agreements in the auto sector to address data handling, OTA involvement, and allocation protocols.
📌 Register Your Georgia Franchise
Franchising in 2025 holds immense promise—driven by strong national growth and standout opportunities in states like Georgia. However, with expansion comes legal complexity: federal and state compliance, IP risk, technological advancement, and data privacy. Proactive legal planning is essential to help clients capitalize on these trends—and stay out of trouble.
For expert legal guidance on franchise agreements, compliance, or data/privacy protocols in Georgia and beyond, LPJ Legal is ready to assist. Reach out today to ensure you’re solidly positioned in the 2025 franchise landscape.
New to LPJ Legal? We’re a dedicated group of experienced and highly credible legal professionals, proudly representing clients both locally and internationally with domestic offices in D.C., Maryland, Virginia, and Georgia. At LPJ Legal, we believe that a law firm should be more than a legal resource; it should be a trusted partner. Our team is committed to safeguarding our clients’ businesses, properties, and futures, providing powerful legal insights to help ensure their success. To become a franchise client, visit the LPJ Legal website, or call us directly at 202-643-6211.
📋 Strategic Legal Checklist for 2025
| Area | Why It Matters | Recommended Action |
| SB 81 Integration | New protections and obligations for auto franchises | Revise dealership/data clauses, integrate OTA terms |
| FTC Rule Compliance | Legal mandate for timing and content of disclosures | Confirm FDD delivery timelines, maintain annual updates |
| Data Governance | Dealers gain greater data autonomy and oversight | Update data access, audit, and backup provisions |
| AI & Cyber Terms | Tech adoption demands strong legal guardrails | Include AI-use disclosures, security obligations |
| IP & Covenants | Rising enforcement on FPRs and non-compete clauses | Annual review and tightening of IP and covenant clauses |



