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American Restaurant for Sale in Minnesota

Nationally, similar businesses sell at 1.1x to 4.0x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Restaurant and Commercial Property for sale overlooking Lake  photo
American Restaurants

Restaurant and Commercial Property for sale overlooking Lake

Chisago County, MN, US

Restaurant for Sale – MN Lakeside Location with Craft Cocktails & Laid-Back Vibe Discover the perfect blend of relaxation and opportunity with this turnkey lakeside restaurant known for its craft cocktails, casual charm, and stunning waterfront views. This well-established business has built a loyal following of locals and visitors who come to unwind, enjoy signature drinks, and savor delicious food in a comfortable, laid-back atmosphere. The restaurant features indoor dining area, outdoor patio overlooking the lake, and a fully equipped bar designed for high-volume service and creative mixology. With strong seasonal traffic and year-round appeal, this business is ideal for an owner-operator or hospitality group looking to expand their portfolio. Highlights include: Prime location with excellent Lake front visibility and foot traffic Established reputation for craft cocktails and relaxed dining Fully furnished and equipped kitchen and bar Ample parking and easy access for boaters and drive-up guests Proven profitability with growth potential through events, catering, or extended hours If you’re looking to own a destination restaurant where guests come for the view and stay for the vibe, this is the one. The sale excludes the following assets 1. JBT Fresh 'N' Squeeze Citrus Juicer Machine 2. CookShack SM160 Smoker: 3. 2 Igloo/Domes Owner has added approximately $75k - $100K of capital improvements since beginning of 2024

$1,100,000
$1,511,307Revenue
-Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for american restaurant businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$518k
Median cash flow$86k
Median sale price$135k
Multiple range1.1x - 2.4x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.68m
Median cash flow$305k
Median sale price$750k
Multiple range2.0x - 3.2x

Over $2M

Median revenue$4.60m
Median cash flow$1.03m
Median sale price$3.20m
Multiple range2.3x - 4.0x

A variety of factors can cause businesses to trade outside this range, including earnings quality, operational transferability, key-person risk, growth trajectory, and geography, so a listing priced above or below the typical multiple usually reflects real differences in the underlying business.

What to know about American restaurant acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating American restaurant acquisitions.

Setting Yourself Up for a Strong Acquisition

Restaurant acquisitions reward buyers who go in with clear eyes on what drives the business's earnings. The most common post-acquisition surprises are not operational; they stem from financials that include the seller's labor at zero cost, lease terms negotiated years ago that may not renew at the same rate, and supplier relationships tied to the seller personally. Your due diligence process should stress-test each of these assumptions before you make an offer because earnings that depend on seller-specific factors require a thoughtful transition plan to protect.

How Restaurants Are Valued

Independent, owner-operated American restaurants in the SMB range are valued primarily on SDE multiples, which nationally run between 1.1x and 4.0x SDE. Well-positioned, profitable operations with consistent performance, favorable leases, and management depth in place can reach the upper end of this range. Franchised concepts or restaurants with diversified revenue (catering, delivery, private events) command premiums over pure dine-in operations. The key distinction: buyers and SBA lenders both underwrite the business assuming the seller is replaced by a working owner or a paid general manager; so add-backs for excessive owner compensation require careful scrutiny. In 2025, approximately 70% of restaurant deals over $150,000 involve SBA financing, making third-party valuations a critical step in every transaction.

The Lease Is Often the Deal

A restaurant with a favorable, long-term lease in a high-traffic location is a fundamentally different business than the same concept in a lease expiring in 18 months at above-market rent. Request and review the full lease, not a summary, including all amendments, side letters, personal guaranty requirements, co-tenancy clauses, and assignability language. Buyers in 2025 are particularly cautious about leases given elevated commercial real estate costs. A lease with 5+ years remaining and favorable renewal options is a significant valuation driver; a month-to-month lease or one expiring within 24 months represents material risk that should reduce your offer price or extend your due diligence timeline.

Labor, Food Costs, and the 30-30-30 Reality

The restaurant industry rule of thumb holds that food costs, labor costs, and other operating expenses should each run approximately 30% of revenue, leaving roughly 10% for profit. In practice, rising food costs driven by post-pandemic inflation and labor costs pressured by minimum wage increases have compressed this model significantly. Review monthly P&Ls for at least two full years, and specifically look for how the business performed during input cost spikes in 2022–2023. Restaurants that maintained margins through this period demonstrated genuine operational discipline. Those that saw margins collapse and only recovered when costs normalized are more fragile than their current financials suggest. Labor as a percentage of revenue and food cost as a percentage of revenue are the two operational metrics most predictive of sustainable profitability.

Revenue Verification in Cash-Heavy Operations

Restaurants generate significant cash revenue, which creates both opportunity and risk in due diligence. Cross-reference reported sales against POS system records, sales tax filings, credit card processing statements, and bank deposits. Discrepancies between these sources are a red flag that requires resolution before closing. Sellers who present "owner benefit" figures that rely heavily on verbal representations about unreported cash transactions should be treated with extreme caution. SBA lenders will not finance a business based on claimed cash income, and buyers who accept these claims without verification inherit the tax liability.

Technology, Delivery Platforms, and What Transfers

Restaurants that have built meaningful delivery and online ordering revenue streams through platforms like DoorDash, Uber Eats, or their own systems are generally more valuable than pure dine-in operations — but buyers need to understand the economics. Third-party delivery platforms typically charge 20–30% commission, which means delivery revenue often generates lower margin than in-house dine-in sales despite higher gross revenue numbers. Review the mix of delivery vs. dine-in revenue carefully, and model the true margin contribution of each channel. Ask whether the business's Google and Yelp presence, social following, and online reputation are tied to the seller personally or to the business itself — and whether they will transfer fully at closing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

POS data is the most underused source in restaurant due diligence. Most buyers look at the P&L and stop there. Request a full export for the last two years. Analyze average check size by daypart, table turn rate, top 20 items by revenue and margin, void and refund rates, and year-over-year weekly trends. High void and refund rates flag either a management problem or a cash handling issue. Either one is worth understanding before you close. Discrepancies between POS sales and bank deposits are a red flag. Full stop. Get both sets of records and reconcile them yourself, don't rely on the seller's explanation. Seasonality shows up clearly in weekly data. Try to get trailing twelve months and monthly financials over the course of multiple years so you can look at the full picture.