Franchisel.com — FDD Diligence Memo
Wag N Wash
Generated 2026-04-06 · 2026 FDD · Government-filed source
Wag N Wash
2026 FDD Diligence Memo
Composite score based on six FDD-derived dimensions.
Fin Strength
5
Contract
6
Red Flags & Key Signals
You waive the right to sue in court. Arbitration typically favors the franchisor. Review the venue and arbitrator selection process.
After leaving the franchise, you cannot operate a competing business in this radius. Evaluate the real-world impact on your exit options.
Avg $1,301,435 from government-filed FDD. Transparent disclosure is a positive signal.
Franchisor financial statements are audited by ey with no going concern warning.
Investment Overview
Items 5, 6, 7Total investment range: Not disclosed. Initial fee: $0. Royalty: —. Marketing fund: —.
Item 19 — Revenue
Item 19 — 2026 FDD (government-filed)Item 19 discloses avg revenue of $1,301,435 (Annual).
Sample: WeakThe FDD does not specify how many units were included in this figure.
Item 20 — System Health
Item 20 — 2026 FDDSystem flat — net 0 units in reporting period.
→ StableUnit count essentially unchanged.
Total Units
0
Net Growth
+0
Turnover
0%
Key Contract Terms
Item 17Item 19 Data Quality Flags
Item 19Gross sales
Figure represents gross sales — standard basis for cross-brand comparison.
Profit not disclosed
Item 19 reports revenue only. No expense breakdown is provided. Profit cannot be determined from this disclosure alone.
All units included
Revenue figure includes all reporting units — broadest, most conservative sample basis.
Sample size not specified
The FDD does not state how many units contributed to this figure.
Data from 2024
Revenue covers 2024 — 2 years old. Reasonably current but worth confirming recent trends with existing franchisees.
Medium extraction confidence
Revenue figure extracted with medium confidence. Cross-check with source FDD before relying on this number.
Franchisee Interview Questions
Item 20 contactsUse Item 20 to get current franchisee contact info. Call at least 3-5. Ask these questions:
The agreement requires mandatory arbitration. Ask: have you ever had a dispute with the franchisor — how was it handled? Did you feel you had recourse?
Look for: Franchisees who've been through disputes. Understand if the arbitration process felt fair or heavily stacked toward the franchisor.
The agreement includes a 2-year, 5-mile post-termination non-compete. Ask franchisees: did you fully understand this when you signed — and do you feel it's fair?
Look for: Whether franchisees feel trapped. High non-compete terms reduce exit flexibility.
How responsive is your franchisor rep — do they actually help when you have a problem, or are they just checking boxes?
Look for: Specific stories (not just vague positives). Ask about a time they needed help urgently — response time matters.
If you decided to sell your franchise tomorrow, how easy would that be? Has the franchisor ever blocked or delayed a transfer you wanted?
Look for: Transfer fee surprises, right-of-first-refusal complications, or franchisor demanding upgrades before approving a sale.
What did your revenue look like in year 1 vs. year 2 vs. now? When did you reach breakeven?
Look for: Year 1 revenue is typically well below Item 19 averages (which often exclude ramp-up units). Expect 12-24 months to reach average.
What did the training actually cover vs. what you needed on day 1? What do you wish you'd learned before opening?
Look for: Gap between training content and operational reality. New franchisees often report the training covered theory but not real-world situations.
Data sources: 2026 Franchise Disclosure Document filed with a state franchise regulator (government record). Source: Extracted from 2026 FDD filed with MN CARDS (file #11611). Source: 11611-2026.pdf. · Payback estimates and margin assumptions are editorial — not from the FDD. This memo does not constitute legal or financial advice. Consult a franchise attorney and accountant before signing. Generated 2026-04-06 by Franchisel.com.