South Dakota Franchise Law
South Dakota is a franchise filing state. Before offering or selling a franchise in South Dakota, a franchisor generally must file a notice with the Division of Insurance, Securities Regulation, or qualify for an exemption from filing.
South Dakota does not operate like a full merit review registration state, but franchisors still must file the required materials before sales activity. The state requires a clean FDD copy, a notice filing application, and careful renewal timing.
South Dakota is sometimes described as a notice filing state rather than a traditional registration review state. That distinction matters, but it does not make South Dakota optional. Franchisors must still file before offers or sales unless an exemption applies, maintain annual renewal discipline, and continue complying with the FTC Franchise Rule.
Overview of South Dakota Franchise Filing Requirements
South Dakota regulates franchise offers and sales under its Franchise Investment Law. The filing process is administered by the Division of Insurance, Securities Regulation. The state requires franchise notice filing before offers or sales, but the process is different from states that assign an examiner for full FDD review.
Filing Before Sales Activity
A franchisor generally must file or qualify for an exemption before offering or selling franchises in South Dakota.
Notice Filing State
South Dakota requires a notice filing and copy of the FDD, but does not operate as a full substantive FDD review state in the same way as California, Maryland, or Washington.
Annual Renewal Required
The filing must be renewed annually. Renewal timing should be tracked because filings submitted too early may be returned.
South Dakota Franchise Filing Fees
South Dakota has a relatively simple filing fee structure compared with many registration states. Franchisors should still account for filing fees, FRED processing costs, renewal timing, and internal legal review.
| Filing Type | South Dakota Filing Fee | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| Initial franchise notice filing | $250 | Required before offering or selling franchises in South Dakota unless an exemption applies. |
| Annual renewal | $150 | Must be renewed annually to continue franchise sales activity in South Dakota. |
| Amendment filing | Not required by statute | South Dakota states that SDCL 37 5B 7 does not include the need to file an amendment with the Division. |
| FRED or electronic processing fee | Separate processing fee | South Dakota accepts filings through Franchise Electronic Depository or by searchable PDF flash drive. |
Prepare the FDD
The franchisor prepares a Franchise Disclosure Document that complies with the FTC Franchise Rule. South Dakota requires one clean copy of the FDD for the notice filing.
Complete the Notice Filing Application
The franchisor completes South Dakota’s notice filing application and submits the required filing fee with the filing materials.
Submit Through FRED or Searchable PDF
South Dakota requires the FDD to be filed through Franchise Electronic Depository or by flash drive in text searchable Adobe PDF format.
Confirm Filing Status Before Sales
Because all franchises must file or be exempt before offers or sales, franchisors should confirm filing status before permitting franchise development activity in South Dakota.
Track Annual Renewal
The filing must be renewed annually. South Dakota cautions franchisors not to submit renewals more than 90 days before the current expiration date.
South Dakota Notice Filing Packet
South Dakota’s filing materials are more limited than many registration states, but the requirements should still be followed carefully.
One Clean FDD Copy
South Dakota requires one clean copy of the FDD prepared under the FTC Franchise Rule.
Searchable Electronic Format
The FDD must be submitted through FRED or as a text searchable Adobe PDF on a flash drive.
No Additional State Disclosure Requirements
South Dakota states that there are no other state disclosure requirements for the notice filing beyond the required filing materials.
South Dakota Renewal Strategy
South Dakota renewal timing creates a practical compliance issue. Franchisors should not assume they can file extremely early just to align South Dakota with a national renewal calendar.
No More Than 90 Days Early
South Dakota states that renewals submitted more than 90 days before the current expiration date will be returned.
Renew On or Before Expiration
South Dakota provides that franchisors have until on or before the expiration date to renew.
Late Filing Risk
If a filing is not renewed properly, the franchisor may need to stop South Dakota sales activity until a compliant filing is in place.
Going Concern and Financial Statement Issues
South Dakota has a specific notice issue when a franchisor’s audit contains a going concern qualification or substantial doubt language.
Separate Letter Requirement
If the auditor concludes there is substantial doubt about the franchisor’s ability to continue as a going concern for a reasonable period of time, the director must be notified by separate letter with the notice filing application.
Filing Readiness Issue
Franchisors should review audit language before filing so any required going concern notice can be prepared at the same time as the notice filing application.
Sales Practice Issue
Financial condition concerns should be coordinated with FDD risk factors, Item 21, fee collection practices, and franchise sales messaging.
No South Dakota Amendment Filing Requirement
South Dakota specifically notes that its franchise renewal statute does not include the need to file an amendment with the Division. That does not mean franchisors can ignore FDD updates.
No State Amendment Filing
South Dakota does not require a separate state amendment filing with the Division under SDCL 37 5B 7.
FTC Rule Still Controls Disclosure Accuracy
If a material change occurs, the franchisor must still consider federal disclosure obligations and provide a current and accurate FDD to prospects.
Use Current FDD for Prospects
Even without a state amendment filing, franchise development teams should use the most current FDD and avoid circulating outdated disclosure documents.
Coordinating South Dakota With the FTC Franchise Rule
South Dakota notice filing does not replace federal franchise compliance. Franchisors must satisfy both South Dakota filing requirements and the FTC Franchise Rule before completing franchise sales.
Confirm Filing or Exemption
Before South Dakota sales activity begins, confirm that the franchisor has filed or qualifies for an exemption.
Deliver the FDD on Time
The franchisor must still deliver the FDD within the timing required by the FTC Franchise Rule before signing or accepting payment.
Use the Correct FDD Version
The FDD delivered to South Dakota prospects should be current, accurate, and consistent with the version used in the notice filing and any later updates required by federal law.
Control Earnings Claims
Sales representatives should not make financial performance statements unless properly supported and included in Item 19.
Maintain a Filing Calendar
Track South Dakota renewal deadlines, annual FDD updates, federal material change analysis, and franchise sales permissions in one compliance system.
Common South Dakota Franchise Compliance Issues
South Dakota compliance problems often arise when franchisors confuse notice filing with no filing, overlook renewal timing, or treat the state as an afterthought in the annual FDD update process.
Selling Before Filing
Franchisors should not offer or sell franchises in South Dakota before filing or confirming a valid exemption.
Assuming No Review Means No Compliance
South Dakota may not review like a full registration state, but the filing requirement still matters.
Renewing Too Early
Renewals filed more than 90 days before the current expiration date may be returned.
Missing Renewal Deadline
A missed renewal can require the franchisor to pause South Dakota sales activity until the filing is corrected.
Ignoring Going Concern Language
Auditor going concern language may require a separate letter to the director with the notice filing application.
Wrong FDD Version
Prospects should receive the current FDD, even if South Dakota does not require amendment filings during the year.
Improper Earnings Claims
Financial performance representations must be properly supported and included in Item 19.
No Compliance Calendar
South Dakota filing, renewal, FDD update, and sales permissions should be tracked with the franchisor’s broader state compliance calendar.
South Dakota Franchise Filing Support
Waldrop & Colvin helps franchisors prepare South Dakota franchise notice filings, renewals, FDD updates, exemption analysis, and sales compliance procedures tied to the FTC Franchise Rule.
South Dakota is a good example of why franchise compliance is not limited to traditional review states. Even a streamlined notice filing state requires diligence, timing controls, and a clear process before franchise development activity begins.
South Dakota Franchise Law FAQ
Common questions about South Dakota franchise notice filings, renewal fees, FDD submission, amendments, exemptions, and FTC Franchise Rule coordination.
Is South Dakota a franchise registration state?
South Dakota is best described as a franchise notice filing state. Franchisors generally must file or qualify for an exemption before offering or selling franchises in South Dakota.
What is the South Dakota franchise filing fee?
The initial South Dakota franchise notice filing fee is $250. The annual renewal fee is $150.
Does South Dakota require a copy of the FDD?
Yes. South Dakota requires one clean copy of the Franchise Disclosure Document prepared under the FTC Franchise Rule.
Does South Dakota review the FDD like a full registration state?
No. South Dakota is a notice filing state and does not operate like a full substantive FDD review state. However, filing is still required before offers or sales unless an exemption applies.
When can South Dakota renewals be filed?
South Dakota states that renewals should not be submitted more than 90 days before the current expiration date and that filings submitted too early will be returned.
Does South Dakota require amendment filings?
South Dakota states that SDCL 37 5B 7 does not include the need to file an amendment with the Division. Franchisors must still keep their FDD accurate and comply with federal disclosure obligations.
Does South Dakota notice filing replace FTC Franchise Rule compliance?
No. South Dakota notice filing does not replace federal disclosure requirements. Franchisors must still comply with the FTC Franchise Rule, including FDD delivery timing and restrictions on financial performance representations.