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food truck for Sale in Ohio

Explore food truck for sale in Ohio. Compare opportunities and connect with sellers.

Grilled Cheese Gangster Trucks w Business and Kitchen for sale photo
Food Trucks

Grilled Cheese Gangster Trucks w Business and Kitchen for sale

Newark, Licking County, OH, US

Successful Food Truck Business for Sale with Commissary Kitchen – Central Ohio This is a rare opportunity to acquire a thriving multi-truck food business with a strong reputation and efficient operations. The sale includes three fully equipped food trucks, each of different sizes, along with the brand name, recipes, concept, customer relationships, and a fully built-out commissary kitchen. Established in 2022, the business started with one truck and expanded each year to meet growing demand. The trucks are active across street sales, events, and catering, generating steady and diversified revenue streams. Each food truck has been meticulously upgraded—including new motors, transmissions, and other key components—to ensure dependable performance. Every truck is outfitted with its own hood system, grills, fryers, and full cooking equipment, and each is operated by its own dedicated manager and staff. The commissary kitchen is brand new and features all new equipment. The building that houses it includes five food truck electrical hookups, a garage door for easy loading, and ample space for prep, deliveries, and catering orders. This is a turnkey operation ideal for an entrepreneur or group looking to own a scalable, well-run food business with a strong local presence and excellent reputation. ? A signed confidentiality agreement is required to receive detailed financials and learn more about the trucks and operations. Ad#:2431414

$259,000
$890,000Revenue
$220,000Cash Flow
Fat Kids Burger with Business for sale Central Oh photo
Food Trucks

Fat Kids Burger with Business for sale Central Oh

Newark, Licking County, OH 43055-5532, US

Food Truck & Business for Sale – Central Ohio Exciting opportunity to own a turnkey food truck business in Central Ohio! This sale includes the fully equipped 30-foot food truck, business name, recipes, and concept — everything you need to hit the ground running. The truck is new to the streets and already building a strong reputation with growing customer demand. It’s ideal for events, catering, or daily route operations. This large, well-designed truck comes complete with a hood system and full cooking line, allowing you to produce this menu or easily adapt to your own concept. Recent major mechanical updates include a new engine, radiator, belts, alternator, brakes, and starter, ensuring reliable performance and minimal downtime. Highlights: 30-foot fully equipped food truck Includes business name, concept, and recipes All kitchen equipment in great condition New engine and key mechanical components Strong reputation and growing presence Turnkey and ready to operate The current owner is pursuing other business interests, creating a great opportunity for the next owner to build on this momentum.

$69,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Food truck w New Engine Central Oh photo
Food Trucks

Food truck w New Engine Central Oh

Newark, Licking County, OH, US

? Food Truck for Sale – 19 Feet, Totally Updated & Ready to Roll! Turnkey opportunity! This 19-foot food truck has been fully updated and is ready to hit the streets. The truck features a brand-new engine and is mechanically sound, giving you peace of mind and reliability. Inside, you’ll find a 4-foot hood with fryers, clean prep space, and everything in great condition — perfect for launching your own concept or adding to an existing fleet. At just 19 feet, it’s easy to drive and maneuver, ideal for events, catering, and daily street sales. Highlights: 19 feet long – compact & manageable size New engine and fully serviced 4-foot hood with fryers Clean, efficient layout Excellent condition inside and out Perfect for chefs, entrepreneurs, or anyone ready to jump into the booming food truck scene! Ad#:2431922

$49,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow

What to know about food truck acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

Revenue and earnings are smaller than buyers expect

Sales volume tells you almost everything about a food truck's profile. Industry data puts the typical food truck at $250,000 to $500,000 in annual revenue, with monthly sales swinging between $20,000 and $42,000 depending on season and event calendar. Net profit margins average around 5% across the industry per IBIS data, meaningfully thinner than the casual-dining restaurants buyers often compare them to. The result is most food trucks sell between $50,000 and $200,000, with only the top decile crossing $1.5 million. Buyers expecting "restaurant cash flow without restaurant overhead" are usually disappointed; the right way to underwrite a food truck is as a small, high-effort lifestyle business with potential to scale into catering or multi-unit operations.

Earnings multiples sit lower than other food categories

Food trucks multiples are noticeably below brick-and-mortar restaurants in the same revenue band. The discount reflects three structural realities: revenue depends on permitted locations the buyer doesn't control, equipment is mobile (and therefore depreciates differently than a built-out kitchen), and the buyer is often acquiring a personal brand that doesn't transfer cleanly. The trucks that command the higher multiple have proven catering pipelines, multi-truck operations, or signed contracts with corporate parks, hospitals, or breweries, revenue that is more sticky and predictable.

Locations and permits drive almost everything

The permits transferred with the truck are often worth more than the truck itself. Major metro areas have multi-year waitlists for the best lunch spots, food hall slots, and event circuits. A truck with established placements at a tech campus, a brewery lot, or a recurring weekly market is acquiring revenue continuity that a new entrant simply can't buy at any price. Conversely, a truck whose revenue depended on an owner's personal relationships with venue managers is acquiring depreciating goodwill. Buyers should ask for every permit, license, and informal location arrangement in writing, confirm what transfers vs. what reverts to the venue, and check renewal terms. Where commissary kitchens are required (most municipalities), the commissary contract is equally critical. A forced commissary switch can wipe out months of margin.

Equipment age and condition determine near-term capex

A food truck is essentially a kitchen on a depreciating chassis. Most trucks need full refurbishment every 7-10 years; commercial cooking equipment lasts about as long with heavy use. Buyers should walk through the truck with a third-party inspector who has seen mobile food units before; a regular auto mechanic, will most likely miss important aspects like generator hours, hood ventilation compliance, propane system age, refrigeration cycle life, amongst others. Tariffs on imported steel and aluminum have pushed replacement costs up since 2024. Budget for $25,000-$50,000 of deferred maintenance on most trucks more than five years old, and factor that into the offer rather than discovering it after closing.

Catering and events are the real margin

The trucks generating real money have a catering business attached. Street sales are unpredictable; catering contracts (weddings, corporate, private events) are booked weeks in advance, priced 40-60% higher per head, and have minimum-spend floors that protect against weather and no-shows. Industry operators consistently report that catering accounts for the majority of profit dollars in mature food truck businesses, even when street sales account for more revenue. Buyers should ask for the catering booking calendar, the average booking size, repeat-client percentage, and any preferred-vendor agreements with venues or corporate clients. A truck with a strong catering book is a different asset class than a truck with just a regular street rotation.

Owner involvement is total, then transferable in stages

Most food trucks are owner-operated, and buyers should plan accordingly. Expect to be on the truck the first 6-12 months, both to learn the operation and to maintain the customer relationships that drive social-media-fueled sales. The transition path most established food truck operators describe is roughly: months 1-6 the buyer is full-time on the truck; months 6-18 the buyer hires and trains the prep and service staff; year 2+ the buyer can step back to managing the business, booking events, and handling marketing. Buyers underwriting the business as semi-absentee from day one are almost always disappointed. Where the seller's brand is the truck's brand (their name, their social media, their face), buyers should negotiate a transition period or a brand handoff plan as part of the deal.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Most established food truck businesses sell for $50,000 to $200,000. The biggest factors in where a specific deal lands are annual revenue, catering pipeline, permit and location strength, and the age and condition of the truck and equipment. The top 10% of food trucks are typically multi-truck operations or trucks with major catering contracts and have revenue that surpasses $1.5 million.