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art gallery for Sale

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10-Year Established Art Gallery in Prime Sedona Location photo
Art Galleries

10-Year Established Art Gallery in Prime Sedona Location

Sedona, AZ, US

Live the dream of running a highly successful art gallery in a desirable, high-foot-traffic Sedona location. This profitable, 10-year established business is a local staple, celebrated for its well-curated, diverse set of inventory and stellar Google reviews. The gallery thrives on its inviting atmosphere, supported by a wonderful staff that customers frequently praise for their warmth and service. Due to health issues, the owner is ready to pass this turnkey, structurally sound business to the next passionate buyer. Inventory is not included in the purchase price.

$249,000
$800,000Revenue
$100,000Cash Flow
Rare Antique Maps & Prints Inventory Asset Sale photo
Art Galleries
+4

Rare Antique Maps & Prints Inventory Asset Sale

Palm Beach County, FL, US

Rare opportunity to acquire a highly curated inventory of antique maps, rare prints, select reprints, giclée works, and historical pieces dating from the 16th through 19th centuries. This is an inventory and asset sale only, offered as a non-operating business. The buyer is acquiring the collection, related support assets, and the included website, not an active operating business with current revenue or cash flow. The collection consists of 290+ pieces assembled over decades by a longtime dealer with a refined eye for rare historical works. The seller sourced and authenticated inventory through extensive travel, careful acquisition, and years of direct involvement in the antique maps and rare prints market. The seller previously operated a gallery in Colorado before relocating the gallery and inventory to Florida for retirement. The inventory includes extremely rare and unique antique maps, historical prints, decorative works, select reprints, and giclée pieces with strong visual, historical, and collector appeal. Many pieces would be extraordinarily difficult, and in some cases impossible, to replace in today’s market. The collection has appeal across multiple buyer groups, including antique map dealers, fine art and antiques collectors, rare print dealers, gallery owners, online sellers, designers, auction-oriented buyers, and entrepreneurs interested in starting or expanding an antique maps and prints business. This offering may be especially attractive to an existing antique dealer, art dealer, gallery, or online retailer seeking to add distinctive historical inventory without spending years sourcing individual pieces. It may also appeal to a private collector of fine art and antiques with elegant, historically refined taste who appreciates the beauty, rarity, and significance of curated historical works. Included in the sale are the inventory, selected supporting assets used for storage, display, handling, and presentation, and the included website. Supporting assets include 40 frames with acid-free matting and French ink lines, adding presentation value for gallery display, collector placement, resale, or online merchandising. Together, these components provide a buyer with a meaningful platform for relaunch, private sales, online merchandising, or future expansion within a niche category centered on rare and highly desirable historical works. Potential paths for growth include relaunching the included website, building an online sales channel, marketing through antique and art dealer networks, selling through collector channels, attending specialty shows, pursuing auction relationships, presenting pieces to galleries, and targeting interior designers, hospitality groups, and luxury commercial spaces seeking unique historical statement pieces. This should be evaluated as a specialized asset acquisition, not as a traditional cash-flowing business. No financial statements are being provided because the sale is based on inventory and related assets only. A buyer with industry knowledge, collector relationships, online marketing ability, or gallery/dealer experience may find meaningful upside in repositioning and monetizing the collection. Asking Price: $86,000 Established: 1998 Business Status: Non-Operating Business Sale Type: Inventory / Asset Sale Only Website Included: Yes

$86,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Profitable South FL American Craft & Art Gallery photo
Art Galleries

Profitable South FL American Craft & Art Gallery

FL, US

South Florida American Craft & Art Gallery This Gallery is a well-established boutique gallery on the Treasure Coast, known for a thoughtfully curated mix of contemporary fine art and American-made craft. For more than two decades the gallery has served beginning collectors and seasoned art lovers with distinctive paintings, sculpture, ceramics, glass, jewelry and functional art, backed by knowledgeable, personalized service and professional installation. Key strengths - Strong reputation and repeat clientele built over two decades - Award-winning collection; named “Niche Top Retailer of American Craft” - Diverse inventory appealing to both gift and fine-art markets - Proven retail presentation, merchandising and event programming - Opportunity to expand online sales, wholesale, corporate and interior design partnerships Leadership and credentials Founded and led by an expert of Art History and Architectural Design, who is a licensed interior designer and has juried national craft shows including the Philadelphia Museum of Art Craft Show and the Niche Awards. This turn-key gallery offers a rare combination of strong local brand recognition, deep artistic expertise and operational stability—an excellent opportunity for a buyer passionate about craft, contemporary art and community-driven retail.

$1,500,000
$1,383,482Revenue
$330,603Cash Flow
Profitable Self-Run Capsule Toy & Claw Game Arcade in Prime SF photo
Art Galleries

Profitable Self-Run Capsule Toy & Claw Game Arcade in Prime SF

San Francisco, CA, US

This is a rare opportunity to acquire a profitable, turnkey Japanese-style claw machine and capsule toy arcade in a prime San Francisco retail corridor. The business combines entertainment and specialty retail, attracting both tourists and locals through a curated mix of claw machines, Gachapon-style offerings, and authentic Japanese-inspired merchandise. Its distinctive concept benefits from repeat traffic, impulse purchases, and broad customer appeal. Designed with a simple, low-labor, self-service operating model, the business can run efficiently without on-site staff, making it well suited for a first-time owner-operator, semi-absentee owner, or strategic buyer. With a reported 25.6% net profit margin and included furniture, fixtures, and equipment, the business offers a smooth transition and immediate operational continuity. There is also clear upside potential through adding machines, refreshing prize offerings, expanding merchandise, improving storefront and social media marketing, building local partnerships, and optimizing pricing and operations. This is a compelling opportunity to own a high-margin, easy-to-manage, experience-driven business in one of San Francisco’s most recognized retail areas.

$65,000
$102,927Revenue
$27,703Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for art gallery businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$303k
Median cash flow$54k
Median sale price$96k
Multiple range1.4x - 2.7x

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 art gallery acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating art gallery acquisitions.

Artist roster is the inventory and the relationships

Pull the represented-artist list. Galleries operate through relationships with represented artists, typically 15–40 artists with formal or informal exclusive representation agreements covering specific geographic regions. The artist roster is simultaneously the inventory source, the marketing draw, and the curatorial identity. Verify the artist list, the exclusivity status, and whether the represented artists will stay with the gallery under new ownership (they often won't if they signed up because of relationships with the owner).

Collector list is the actual customer base

Verify the active collector relationships. Galleries don't have walk-in customers in the conventional sense; they have collector relationships built over years. Most sales go to a relatively small group of repeat buyers. Verify the collector list, the average annual spending per collector, the diversity of the buyer base, and whether collectors will continue to buy through new ownership. Plan for substantial collector relationship-building in the first year.

Inventory and consignment structures matter for cash

Understand who owns the art on the walls. Galleries operate through several arrangements: direct purchase from artists (gallery owns the work), consignment from artists (artist owns, gallery sells for commission), and consignment from collectors (resale market). Each arrangement has different cash flow and risk implications. Verify the inventory mix, the consignment terms, and what's actually included in the sale.

Real estate, presentation space, and lease terms are critical

Visit the space and understand the lease. Gallery space requires specific characteristics — high ceilings, neutral walls, controlled lighting, climate control, security, and ideally a recognizable location. Build-outs are expensive ($50K–$500K+ depending on space and standards) and not easily relocated. Verify lease terms, remaining term, rent as percentage of revenue, and any landlord considerations.

Art fairs and digital presence have become essential

Look at the marketing mix. Modern galleries supplement physical-space sales with participation in art fairs (Art Basel, Frieze, regional fairs) and increasingly digital presence (Artsy, Artnet, gallery websites with e-commerce, Instagram). Fair participation is expensive ($30K–$200K+ per fair depending on tier) but drives major sales for committed exhibitors. Digital presence drives international collector engagement. Verify the gallery's investment in both channels.

Specialty positioning beats generalist galleries

Identify what the gallery is actually known for. Galleries with clear positioning — emerging contemporary, established post-war, photography, prints and works on paper, regional, specific cultural focus — have defensible niches and known collector bases. Generalist galleries showing whatever the owner likes have weaker market positions. Specialty positioning also reduces the curatorial pressure on new ownership; the existing identity provides direction.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Most independent art galleries are small operations that trade in the Tier 1 range (under $500K), with some never finding a buyer because the value is too founder-specific. Established galleries with strong artist rosters, active collector bases, and good locations can trade in the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M). Larger commercial galleries representing major artists or operating in primary art markets can reach Tier 3 ($2M+). Inventory value can be significant; collector relationships are the largest soft asset.