Tupelo Data Room

Bakery for Sale in Florida

Nationally, similar businesses sell at 1.3x to 4.6x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Premier Culinary Incubator & Shared Kitchen with Verticals photo
Bakeries
Catering Companies

Premier Culinary Incubator & Shared Kitchen with Verticals

Hillsborough County, FL, US

This established commercial kitchen and retail facility represents a premier opportunity in the food service infrastructure sector, having operated continuously for over 10 years. The business operates as a comprehensive culinary incubator, providing fully equipped shared kitchen space and retail storefront opportunities to a diverse client base of food entrepreneurs, including bakers, caterers, food truck operators, and specialty food producers. The facility maintains 24/7 operational capacity, maximizing asset utilization and revenue generation potential. The business model centers on flexible hourly rental agreements complemented by a structured recurring membership program, creating predictable cash flow through annual contract commitments. This approach has successfully served over 1,500 food entrepreneurs throughout its operational history. Revenue streams demonstrate strong recurring characteristics with forecastable annual contracts. The scalable business model features documented operational systems that have proven their ability to expand beyond the original location. Client success metrics include alumni securing placement with major national retailers and e-commerce platforms, with numerous graduates establishing independent retail operations. Operational efficiency is evidenced by minimal owner involvement, requiring fewer than 20 hours per week and less than 2 days of on-site presence. The systematized operations and proven scalability position the business for potential franchising opportunities. The facility serves as critical infrastructure for the regional food entrepreneurship ecosystem, providing market entry solutions for food industry participants while maintaining established market position and client loyalty. Financial documentation and additional operational details are available to qualified buyers under a non-disclosure agreement, with proof of funds or financing pre-qualification required for due diligence access. * NDA and proof of funds/financing required for additional information*

$707,672
-Revenue
$177kCash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for bakery businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$357k
Median cash flow$81k
Median sale price$133k
Multiple range1.3x - 2.4x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$997k
Median cash flow$186k
Median sale price$650k
Multiple range3.0x - 4.6x

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 buying Bakeries

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

The Baker Is Often the Business

Of all the food service categories in the SMB marketplace, bakeries carry the highest owner-dependency risk. When the founder is the head baker and their job consists of developing recipes, training production staff, managing quality control, and maintaining the relationships with wholesale accounts a buyer is not just acquiring a business, they are acquiring a dependency that expires at closing. The most important due diligence question in any bakery acquisition is: can this business produce its core products at consistent quality without the selling owner present? Bakeries where the answer is clearly yes because recipes are documented, production staff are trained and stable, and quality systems are institutionalized command meaningfully higher multiples than those where the answer is ambiguous.

Recipe Documentation Is Non-Negotiable

Documented recipes with precise measurements, procedures, fermentation times, baking temperatures, and finishing instructions are the core intellectual property of a bakery. Buyers should require access to the full recipe library as a condition of due diligence and verify that every item currently sold can be reproduced from documentation alone. Undocumented operations, where recipes exist only in the founding baker's memory or through informal demonstration, face severe transition risk: product quality may change after closing, causing both retail and wholesale customer losses that cannot be reversed quickly. Industry sources indicate that buyers increasingly require recipe documentation as a table-stakes diligence condition before proceeding with any serious offer.

How Bakeries Are Valued

Independent bakeries typically trade at 1.3x to 3.0x SDE for retail-focused operations, with wholesale-oriented or multi-revenue bakeries (retail + wholesale + catering + custom orders) commanding higher multiples of 3.0x–4.6x. The wholesale component is particularly valuable: established accounts with grocery chains, restaurants, or institutional buyers provide recurring, predictable revenue that buyers price at a premium over walk-in retail. Baked goods margins vary meaningfully by category: pastries and specialty items carry 35–55% gross margins while wholesale bread production runs thinner. Beverages, if offered, run 65–75% margins. Assess the revenue mix carefully; a bakery with a strong cafe component and wholesale accounts has a more defensible earnings base than a pure retail walk-in operation.

Equipment Condition and Replacement Cost

Commercial bakery equipment like deck ovens, rack ovens, deck ovens, mixers, proofers, and walk-in refrigeration is expensive, depreciates quickly, and is critical to production. Request an asset schedule with purchase dates for all major equipment, and have an independent baker or equipment technician assess condition and remaining useful life before closing. Commercial deck ovens run $15,000–$50,000 to replace; rack ovens for high-volume production can reach $80,000–$120,000. Equipment over 10–12 years old should trigger careful inspection and may warrant price adjustments. Deferred equipment maintenance is one of the most common forms of pre-sale value extraction in food service. Equipment that looks functional may need significant investment within 12–24 months of closing.

Location, Lease, and Wholesale Channel

Retail bakeries are location businesses. The lease controls whether the customer base you are buying is accessible to you long-term. Review the full lease document, including remaining term, renewal options, rent escalation clauses, and assignability language. Leases expiring within 24 months without clear renewal rights are a material risk that should be resolved before any firm commitment. Separately, wholesale accounts are often the most durable and valuable revenue in the business but confirm they are contractually assigned to the business entity rather than informal relationships with the founding owner. A wholesale account with a local grocery chain that has no formal contract is a relationship, not an asset.

Seasonality, Staffing, and the Early Morning Reality

Bakery production typically begins at 2–4 AM to have product ready for opening. This is a genuine lifestyle consideration that affects buyer pool and transition planning. Assess whether you or a hired production manager will take on early morning hours and whether the current production team is stable and willing to continue under new ownership. Experienced bakers are difficult to replace, and trained production staff who leave after a change of ownership can disrupt product quality and output for weeks. Seasonality is also a real factor: many bakeries generate 25–35% of annual revenue in the fourth quarter (holiday orders, wedding cake season). Normalize SDE to reflect the underlying steady-state business, not the seasonally inflated period in which many sellers choose to market their business.