· 4 min read · Published Oct 25, 2025 ·
What does “protected territory” mean for a franchise?
A protected franchise territory is a defined geographic area where the franchisor agrees not to award a second franchise to anyone else. Polar Tint defines territories as a 2-mile radius around the shop OR the area containing 50,000 people — whichever is smaller. The boundary is mapped, written into the franchise agreement, and immutable for the term. No other Polar Tint operator can open inside your protected area.
Quick answer
A protected franchise territory is a defined geographic area where the franchisor agrees not to award a second franchise to anyone else. Polar Tint defines territories as a 2-mile radius around the shop OR the area containing 50,000 people — whichever is smaller. The boundary is mapped, written into the franchise agreement, and immutable for the term. No other Polar Tint operator can open inside your protected area.
Why territory definition is the most-fought clause
In franchise law, the territory is a contractual promise — the franchisor will not sell another unit to anyone else inside your defined area. How that area is defined determines whether the promise is meaningful.
Three common patterns: (1) <strong>pure radius</strong> (e.g., "5 miles around your shop") — fuzzy edges and meaningless in dense urban metros where 5 miles can cover a million people; (2) <strong>metro statistical area</strong> — broad and ambiguous, often shared between multiple operators with vague "primary" assignments; (3) <strong>pure zip-code list</strong> — precise but rigid, and can leave gaps. Polar Tint uses a hybrid: a 2-mile radius around the shop OR the area containing 50,000 people, whichever is smaller. The geography-plus-demographics combo gives every operator a right-sized protected area regardless of market density.
How Polar Tint maps a territory
When you apply with a target city, the Polar Tint development team pulls population, household density, vehicle registrations, and competitor density for the surrounding area. We draw a 2-mile radius around your candidate shop location. If that 2-mile circle contains more than 50,000 people (common in dense urban markets), the boundary contracts inward to whatever shape contains exactly 50,000 people. If it contains fewer than 50,000 (common in suburban and rural markets), you keep the full 2-mile circle.
The boundary goes into Schedule 1 of your franchise agreement. It is immutable for the initial 5-year term. At renewal, both parties can agree to adjust (typically expanding into an adjacent protected area as the operator scales toward a second shop).
What protected does not protect against
Protected territory does NOT mean exclusive customer rights — a customer who lives outside your 2-mile / 50k area can still drive into your shop, and you welcome them. It also doesn't protect against the franchisor opening company-owned shops outside your protected area (Polar Tint does not currently operate company shops, but the right is preserved). And it doesn't protect against changes in distribution — if a national fleet contract goes through Polar Tint corporate, that's separate revenue from your retail territory.
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