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bed and breakfast for Sale

Explore bed and breakfast for sale. Compare opportunities and connect with sellers.

Established Bed & Breakfast Business with 9,000 SF Historic Mansion | photo
Bed & Breakfasts
Other Travel

Established Bed & Breakfast Business with 9,000 SF Historic Mansion |

Clinton County, MI, US

This is a rare opportunity to acquire a thriving bed and breakfast business housed in a fully restored 9,000 sq. ft. historic mansion in mid-Michigan. Since launching in 2018, the inn has built a strong brand centered on upscale lodging, curated experiences, and personalized guest service. The property features seven uniquely themed suites with private bathrooms and luxury amenities, along with inviting common areas, a gourmet breakfast service, and multiple revenue streams—including events, retreats, and package enhancements. The business has shown impressive growth, tripling revenue since 2020 and projecting over $300,000 in revenue by 2026. A full-time innkeeper is in place, making it ideal for a semi-absentee owner or someone looking to scale operations. The mansion itself has been meticulously maintained with recent major upgrades including HVAC, hot water systems, and continual capital improvements. Offered at $145,000 for the business and $800,000 for the real estate, this opportunity combines lifestyle, income potential, and long-term value. Location and business details will be disclosed upon buyer qualification.

$945,000
$236,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Prime Location Restaurant Asset Sale – Save Time & Money photo
American Restaurants
+2

Prime Location Restaurant Asset Sale – Save Time & Money

Palo Alto, Santa Clara County, CA, US

***Photo is not the actual photo of the restaurant*** Turnkey restaurant opportunity in a prime location—perfect for an owner-operator or experienced restaurateur looking to launch quickly without the time and expense of a full buildout. This is an asset sale, giving you the flexibility to bring your own concept while taking advantage of an already built-out, fully equipped space. Key Highlights: -All FF&E included (kitchen equipment, hood, fixtures, etc.) -Prime, high-traffic location with strong visibility -Favorable lease terms (option to negotiate new lease) -Clean, well-maintained space – ready for immediate takeover -Ideal for any cuisine concept -Save significantly vs. starting from scratch -Type 47 liquor license Gross Sales: $1.4 million Rent: 12,000 plus NNN Lease: New Lease needed Size: 3,472 SQ FT

$300,000
$1,400,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Price Drop for Quick Sale - Asset Sale photo
American Restaurants
+3

Price Drop for Quick Sale - Asset Sale

Watsonville, Santa Cruz County, CA, US

Highlights: -Turnkey setup – all equipment and furnishings included. -Includes 6 foot hood. -Great for sandwich, coffee or burger concept. -No financials provided – asset sale only. -Ideal for owner-operator or family-run business. Rent: ~$4,200 includes CAM (~$1,000). Lease: 03/31/2027 plus extension. Size: ~900 sq ft (TBD).

$50,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Historic 19 Room Inn with Endless Possibilities in Central IL photo
Miscellaneous Restaurant & Bars
+4

Historic 19 Room Inn with Endless Possibilities in Central IL

IL, US

Discover this extraordinary property, where historic charm meets modern convenience. Located in the heart of Central Illinois, this unique offering includes: • 13 beautifully appointed guest rooms, blending timeless architecture with contemporary comforts. • 6 long-term suites, perfect for extended stays or steady rental income. • A banquet center accommodating up to 300 guests, ideal for weddings, corporate events, and celebrations. • An enchanting outdoor garden space for up to 150 guests, offering a stunning backdrop for unforgettable gatherings. This versatile property is a rare gem combining boutique hotel, wedding destination, or event venue. Don’t miss the opportunity to own a piece of history with thriving business potential.

$2,700,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow

What to know about bed and breakfast acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

Most B&Bs are valued as real estate first, business second

For B&Bs under 8-10 rooms, the underlying real estate often makes up 60-80% of total value. A historic Victorian in a tourist destination is appraised mostly on what the building would be worth as a luxury residence, with operating cash flow as a premium. This is structurally different from larger hotels, where the operating business value dominates. Buyers should evaluate both the residential market value and the going-concern business value separately, then understand which one the seller is actually pricing and which financing structure makes sense (residential mortgage with bed-and-breakfast use vs. commercial loan).

Room count drives everything about the operating model

A 4-room B&B is a true lifestyle business; a 12-room property is closer to a small inn. Below 6 rooms, owner-operators can usually handle housekeeping, breakfast, and guest relations themselves with seasonal help. Between 6-10 rooms, dedicated staff becomes necessary. Above 10 rooms, operations approach small-hotel complexity with a corresponding step-change in management requirements and labor cost. Buyers should understand which threshold the property they're evaluating sits at, and whether the room count matches their willingness to be hands-on.

Revenue model is concentrated and seasonal

Most B&Bs earn 60-80% of annual revenue in their peak season. Peak season varies by location: Maine and the Northeast peak in the summer, Florida and the Southwest peak in the winter, and wine country peaks from late spring through harvest. Average daily rates run higher than comparable hotels ($200-$500/night vs $100-$200 at similar local hotels) because guests are paying for the experience, not just the room. Buyers should model annual revenue against annual costs (not monthly), maintain working capital reserves for off-season, and understand whether the business needs to be open year-round to be viable.

Wedding and event revenue is the upside lever

B&Bs with event hosting capability like weddings, corporate retreats, and weekend buyouts often generate as much revenue from events as from room nights. A property hosting 20 weekend weddings annually at $5,000-$15,000 in venue revenue plus room buyouts can double the room-only revenue. Properties with the physical capability to host (gardens, parlor spaces, kitchen capacity, parking) but no event business represent upside; properties already running strong event calendars are trading at a premium that already reflects that revenue.

Owner involvement is the defining characteristic

Bed and breakfast ownership is hands-on by nature. Most buyers serve as innkeepers, breakfast cooks, and guest-relations leads. The "lifestyle business" framing is accurate: many B&B operators measure success in lifestyle terms (live in a beautiful place, meet interesting people, run their own schedule) as much as financial. Buyers underwriting purely for cash returns often find better risk-adjusted returns elsewhere. Buyers seeking a lifestyle transition into hospitality often find B&Bs fit the goal better than larger properties.

Resale market is thinner and longer than other hospitality assets

B&Bs typically take 12-24 months to sell and have a narrower buyer pool than other hospitality formats. The buyer profile is specific: someone with savings or proceeds from another business, often making a lifestyle change, often with no prior hospitality experience but strong customer-service instincts. SBA financing is available but harder to structure than for traditional hotels because lenders sometimes treat the residential character of the property as a complicating factor. Buyers planning eventual resale should price the property's flexibility. Keep in mind properties that can also work as private residences hold value better.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Most B&Bs in the 4-10 room range sell between $500,000 and $2.5 million, with larger inns and properties in premium destinations exceeding $5 million. Real estate is typically 60-80% of the total value, so location and building quality matter more than operating performance for smaller properties.