Tupelo Data Room

catering business for Sale in Arizona

Similar businesses sell at 1.1x to 1.7x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for catering business businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$864k
Median cash flow$109k
Median sale price$111k
Multiple range1.1x - 1.7x

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 catering business acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

Channel mix dictates the operational model

Identify what the business actually does. Drop-off catering (sandwiches, salads, simple hot food delivered to offices) is high-volume, low-margin, predictable. Full-service event catering (weddings, corporate events, fundraisers) is high-margin per event, lumpy by season, and requires substantial staff and equipment. Specialty catering (kosher, halal, vegan, regional cuisine) carves out higher-margin niches. Verify the revenue mix and ensure the kitchen, equipment, and staff actually match the business model.

Booked event calendar is the forward indicator

Read the calendar yourself. Full-service caterers' future revenue is largely visible — events are typically booked 3–12 months in advance with deposits. Pull the calendar for the next 12 months and verify booked events with deposits in the bank. Drop-off and corporate lunch catering has shorter booking horizons but still has standing-order relationships that show forward demand. Verify what's actually committed versus tentative.

Kitchen capacity and licensing limit the ceiling

Walk the production kitchen. Catering kitchens have different requirements than restaurant kitchens — large-batch cooking equipment, substantial cold storage, holding equipment, transport vehicles, and adequate prep space. Verify the kitchen size, equipment capability, and licensing (commercial kitchen, food service license, possibly a commissary license for hot food transport). Capacity constraints often determine the maximum revenue ceiling for the business.

Customer concentration in corporate accounts is real risk

Pull the customer list ranked by revenue. Caterers with strong corporate relationships (regular lunch service for offices, repeating event work for the same companies) have stability — but also concentration risk. If 30% of revenue is one corporate client and they're up for review, that's a real problem. Verify the customer concentration, contract terms, and recent retention patterns.

Staffing model varies dramatically by channel

Look at the labor structure. Drop-off catering needs steady kitchen and delivery staff. Event catering needs flexible event staff (servers, bartenders, captains) who work as 1099 or temporary employees per event. The two staffing models are very different in cost structure and management complexity. Verify the model and the staff retention pattern — event caterers often depend on a pool of reliable freelance event staff that takes years to develop.

Equipment, vehicles, and rental inventory affect economics

Walk through the asset inventory. Caterers often own substantial rental inventory — tables, chairs, linens, china, glassware, serving equipment, chafing dishes, beverage service equipment. Delivery vehicles include refrigerated trucks for cold transport. Verify what's owned outright, the condition, and the replacement cycle. Strong rental inventory can be a competitive advantage (avoiding markup from rental companies) but requires storage space and maintenance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Smaller drop-off catering operations and single-chef specialty caterers typically sell in the Tier 1 range (under $500K). Mid-size full-service caterers with established event books, dedicated commercial kitchens, and substantial revenue usually trade in the Tier 2 range ($500K–$2M). Larger catering operations with corporate contract portfolios, multiple kitchens, or specialty positioning can reach Tier 3 ($2M+). Equipment and rental inventory typically represent significant value.