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ice cream shop for Sale in Texas

Similar businesses sell at 1.5x to 3.3x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

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Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for ice cream shop businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$292k
Median cash flow$59k
Median sale price$106k
Multiple range1.5x - 2.9x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$914k
Median cash flow$208k
Median sale price$767k
Multiple range2.6x - 3.3x

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 ice cream shop acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating ice cream shop acquisitions.

What You’re Actually Buying

An ice cream or frozen yogurt shop acquisition is a purchase of a lease, equipment, a brand (franchise or independent), and a seasonal revenue pattern that requires more careful financial modeling than the sunny foot traffic numbers might suggest. The business that looks wonderful in July can look unsustainable in January and many buyers who evaluate acquisitions during peak season don’t fully reckon with the off-season until they’re funding it from reserves. That’s not a reason to avoid the category. It’s a reason to analyze two full years of monthly P&Ls before making any assumptions about annual performance. The shops that work best have either extended their season through add-on offerings, or built a cost structure lean enough to survive the gaps. Know which kind you’re looking at.

What the Financials Need to Show

Monthly revenue distribution is the most important financial document in this category. Ask for month-by-month P&Ls for at least 24 months, not just annual summaries. A shop generating $400,000 annually may generate $80,000 in July and $12,000 in January and the staffing, lease, and equipment costs don’t scale down proportionally. Cost of goods sold runs 28–35% for well-run ice cream operations; anything above 38% suggests waste, theft, or a product mix tilted toward low-margin offerings. Pay particular attention to lease cost as a percentage of peak-month revenue versus off-peak revenue. A lease at $4,000 per month is 5% of July revenue and 33% of January revenue. The business that can sustain that math is the exception, not the rule.

The Lease, Location, and Seasonality Triangle

Location drives everything in this category in ways it doesn’t in other food service businesses. A waterfront or tourist-facing location generates intense seasonal volume that a suburban strip mall can’t replicate. But tourist-dependent revenue is also the most fragile; one bad weather summer, a competing attraction, or a tourism decline in the market can compress revenue meaningfully. The sweet spots are neighborhood-serving locations with consistent foot traffic year-round, ideally near a school or community anchor that drives traffic in cold-weather months too. Verify the lease term and renewal rights before pricing the deal. A five-year lease with three years remaining and no renewal option in a proven location is a fundamentally different asset than a five-year lease with two five-year renewal options at defined rates.

Franchise vs. Independent: What the Royalty Costs Over Time

Franchise acquisitions in this category require franchisor consent to the transfer, payment of a transfer fee (typically $2,000–$10,000), and ongoing royalty obligations of 5–8% of gross revenue. Over a five-year ownership horizon, that royalty cost on a $400,000-per-year shop equals $100,000–$160,000 in total royalties paid. Evaluate the value the franchisor claims to provide against the actual benefits you receive in your specific market. In a high-recognition tourist market, Dairy Queen’s brand may drive genuine incremental traffic. In a neighborhood where regulars are loyal to the shop regardless of the sign, an independent premium product model may outperform on net economics. We see buyers overpay for franchise locations in markets where the brand hasn’t driven traffic in years but the seller presents the franchise agreement as a differentiator. The franchise is only worth its premium if it’s actually earning its royalty.

Financing and Exit Considerations

SBA 7(a) is available for ice cream shop acquisitions but requires demonstrated profitability across full-year cycles. SBA lenders want to see cash flow over at least two complete seasonal cycles, not just the peak season. Seller financing is common for independent shops in the $80,000–$200,000 range. The exit market for ice cream shops is primarily individual owner-operators; strategic or PE-backed acquirers exist only at the multi-unit franchise level. If your plan includes eventual resale, focus during ownership on two things: diversifying revenue across seasons through coffee programs, food add-ons, and event catering, and building out any franchise infrastructure cleanly so the transfer process is as simple as possible.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

Request month-by-month P&Ls for at least 24 consecutive months. Run the annualized SDE calculation from full-year data only. Then model three scenarios. First, your actual projected seasonal revenue distribution based on monthly data, with a realistic cost structure. Second, a downside scenario where your worst month is 20% lower than the seller's worst month. Third, a working capital analysis asking how much cash you need on hand to fund operations through your lowest three consecutive months without drawing on a line of credit. Businesses that can't withstand a 20% revenue drop in their off-season without a cash flow crisis are priced for perfect execution. Most acquisitions don't go perfectly in year one. Know what the floor looks like before you close.