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grocery store for Sale in Illinois

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European Subs, Grocery & Catering Business photo
Delis & Sandwich Shops
+2

European Subs, Grocery & Catering Business

Lake County, IL, US

Established European grocery store and deli offering authentic imported foods, freshly made sandwiches, homemade soups, desserts, specialty grocery items, and unique gift products in a welcoming neighborhood setting. The business has built a loyal customer base from both local residents and customers specifically seeking authentic Eastern European and Balkan offerings. In addition to in-store sales, the business also generates revenue through catering services and online orders. The sandwich and prepared food side of the business has become a major driver of customer traffic and repeat business. Freshly made hot and cold sandwiches, paninis, pierogi, homemade soups, and desserts continue to be customer favorites, often bringing customers into the store who then shop the grocery and specialty product aisles during their visit. The store has developed a strong local reputation through quality food, personalized customer service, and a warm, community-oriented atmosphere. The specialty grocery and prepared foods industry continues to see growing demand as consumers increasingly seek authentic international products, homemade meal options, and locally owned businesses. One of the strongest growth opportunities for a new owner is expanding the catering side of the operation, particularly corporate sandwich trays, office lunches, and catering orders for local businesses, schools, and events. This opportunity would be well suited for an owner-operator, family business, chef, caterer, or entrepreneur looking for an established specialty food operation with an existing reputation and loyal customer base. The owner remains actively involved in overseeing operations and is pursuing the sale in order to spend more time with family.

$220,000
$345,870Revenue
$20,295Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for grocery store businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$1.05m
Median cash flow$106k
Median sale price$213k
Multiple range1.4x - 2.9x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$2.57m
Median cash flow$263k
Median sale price$697k
Multiple range2.1x - 3.2x

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 grocery store acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

What You’re Actually Buying

A grocery store or independent supermarket acquisition is a purchase of a location, inventory, customer relationships, and a position in a thin-margin industry that has been navigating significant competitive pressure from major chains, dollar stores, and online grocery for over a decade. Independent grocers and supermarkets succeed in the modern market by serving specific niches like ethnic markets serving immigrant communities, specialty markets focused on quality or local sourcing, neighborhood markets in dense urban areas, or rural markets too small for chain operations. Understanding the specific positioning and competitive moat of the store you’re evaluating is foundational; generic grocery operations without clear differentiation face structural pressure that’s difficult to overcome.

What the Financials Need to Show

Margin analysis in grocery requires understanding the contribution of different departments: produce, meat, dairy, frozen, dry goods, prepared foods, alcohol. Each department has different gross margins and inventory characteristics, and the mix significantly affects overall profitability. Produce typically runs 35–45% gross margin but has high spoilage. Dry goods run 22–28% margin with low spoilage. Prepared foods and deli can run 50%+ margin and are the highest-value segments in modern grocery operations. Verify shrink rates by department. Industry benchmark for shrink in grocery is 2–4% of revenue; anything above 5% indicates operational problems with theft, spoilage, or inventory management. Three years of detailed P&L data with department-level decomposition.

The Lease, Real Estate, and Location Equation

Grocery store profitability is location-dependent in ways few other retail categories match. The store that serves a 2-mile radius with limited competition and a stable customer base is fundamentally different from the store competing within a half-mile of a Walmart Supercenter. Walk the trade area thoroughly. Identify all competitors within a 3-mile radius, including chain supermarkets, dollar stores, ethnic markets, and any new construction that might add competition. Lease terms are critical; grocery operations require 10,000–40,000 square feet of well-located space, and the lease commitment is substantial. A lease with five or more years remaining at sustainable rent is essential to operating viability.

Vendor Relationships, Supplier Diversification, and Buying Power

Independent grocers compete on price and selection against chains with vastly greater buying power. Most independents address this through buying cooperatives, wholesale relationships, and specialty supplier partnerships. Verify the wholesale supplier relationships, any volume rebate or patronage programs, and the credit terms that the business has built over years of operation. A new owner without established supplier credit may face cash flow challenges in early operation. Ethnic markets often have specialized supplier networks that aren’t easily replaceable. Take for example a Korean grocery sourcing from Korean wholesalers in Los Angeles or New Jersey has supply chain relationships that require maintenance to continue.

The Modern Grocery Landscape and Realistic Outlook

The grocery category has been under structural pressure from multiple directions: Walmart’s grocery expansion, Amazon Whole Foods, Aldi and Lidl’s discount growth, dollar store food category expansion, and online grocery delivery. The independents that have thrived in this environment have built specific moats like community relationships, specialty product expertise, ethnic market depth, or service quality that chain operations can’t easily replicate. Buyers acquiring in this category should understand the local competitive picture thoroughly and have a clear thesis about why this specific store will continue to win. Operations without that specific moat face structural headwinds that good management can address but not fully overcome.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Walk the trade area thoroughly before pricing the deal. Identify all competitors within a 3-mile radius, look for chain supermarkets (Kroger, Albertsons, Walmart Supercenter), dollar stores, ethnic markets, and any new construction adding competition. Then ask the foundational question: what specifically does this store offer that customers can't get from competitors? Generic neighborhood grocery competing on price and selection against chain alternatives faces structural pressure. Specialty positioning like ethnic markets serving immigrant communities, organic and natural foods, prepared foods focus, neighborhood markets in dense urban areas, rural markets too small for chain operations has more defensible competitive moats. Look at the customer base: who shops here and why? Speak with regulars if possible. Customer loyalty driven by product selection, cultural connection, or unique service quality is defensible. Customer loyalty driven only by location convenience is vulnerable to any new competitor opening nearby.