Tupelo Data Room

liquor store for Sale in California

Explore liquor store for sale in California. Compare opportunities and connect with sellers.

Liquor Store gross: $42,000/monthly photo
Liquor Stores

Liquor Store gross: $42,000/monthly

Alameda County, CA, US

Great opportunity to own an established, thriving liquor store in Alameda County at a reasonable price. Monthly gross: $42,000. Lotto sale $40,000/ month. Store floor space: 1200 sq.ft. Rent $4,750/month including NNN. Long term lease with option. Inventory: $90,000. Utilities: $1100/month. For more information, call 510-427-8597

$140,000
$504,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
$200K+ Net Liquor Store | $5K Rent + Seller Finance | Absentee-Owned photo
Liquor Stores

$200K+ Net Liquor Store | $5K Rent + Seller Finance | Absentee-Owned

Sonoma County, CA, US

**Exceptional Liquor Store Opportunity – High Sales, Low Rent, Seller Financing** This is a rare opportunity to acquire a beautifully remodeled liquor store in a prime Sonoma County location with strong sales, low rent, long lease terms, and seller financing available for a qualified buyer. The store is located in a busy, well-established shopping strip with excellent visibility, steady customer traffic, and a loyal neighborhood customer base. The business is clean, modern, well organized, and easy to operate, making it a strong fit for both investors and hands-on owner-operators. According to the owner, the business generates over **$90,000 in monthly gross sales** with approximately **35% gross margins**. The store is currently absentee-owned, which gives a new hands-on owner a major opportunity to improve operations, increase involvement, and potentially increase profitability. One of the strongest parts of this deal is the rent. The business pays only **$5,000 per month**, which is very attractive for a store doing this level of sales. The lease also gives the next owner long-term stability, with a **7-year lease plus two 5-year options**. The business operates daily from **9:00 AM to 9:00 PM** and serves customers from the surrounding neighborhood, nearby businesses, and repeat local shoppers. The seller owns multiple businesses and is looking to downsize. Because of this, the seller is willing to provide **over $300,000 in seller financing for a qualified buyer**, creating a much easier path to ownership compared to many other liquor store opportunities. Inventory is estimated at approximately **$200,000**. The seller is flexible and may be open to financing the inventory or adjusting it depending on the buyer’s needs. With the current sales volume, strong margins, low rent, and absentee ownership structure, an owner-operator could potentially generate over **$200,000 in annual net income**. This is the type of opportunity buyers look for but rarely find: strong sales, low rent, long lease, clean remodeled store, seller financing, and real owner-operator upside. Serious buyers should inquire soon. Opportunities with this combination of terms do not stay available long.

$699,000
$1,080,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Turnkey Alameda Co. Liquor Store — $85K Net, $220K Asking photo
Liquor Stores

Turnkey Alameda Co. Liquor Store — $85K Net, $220K Asking

Alameda County, CA, US

$85000 net income Liquor store in the heart of Alameda County, an excellent location This establishment is a fantastic location, next to many residential homes and apartments; the owner is a semi-absentee. According to the owner, the store does over $50,000 in gross sales per month at a 35% margin, plus $10,000 in lotto sales. The owner takes about $85,000 in net income with minimum participation. The owner-operator can easily increase the sales to over $100,000 per month. The rent is very low at $3,800, including NNN. The owner receives extra money from the ATM. A motivated seller is asking $220,000 only For more information, contact: Matt Sadati, DRE#00704888, or his assistant Tamana at 510-415-6023

$220,000
$720,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Liquor Store - Alameda County - Gross $80,000/mo photo
Liquor Stores

Liquor Store - Alameda County - Gross $80,000/mo

Alameda County, CA, US

Great opportunity to own thriving business in Alameda County. 2400 sf store in high traffic area. Gross: $80,000/mo; margin: 35%; Lotto sales: $100,000; ATM: $300/mo; Rent: $4300/mo ;10 yrs fixed lease- no increase; with 10 yrs option; PG&E: $2400/mo Asking: $500,000

$500,000
$960,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Liquor Store combined with a Restaurant $300,000 Net Profit photo
Liquor Stores

Liquor Store combined with a Restaurant $300,000 Net Profit

Alameda County, CA, US

Low rent, excellent lease! This is a rare opportunity to acquire a highly profitable combination business featuring an authentic Indian food restaurant and a liquor store in Alameda County. The business occupies approximately 3,000 square feet and benefits from a very low rent of only $4,600 per month, which includes utilities. The Indian restaurant section generates about $400,000 in annual sales with a favorable food cost of just 25%, while the liquor store produces approximately $500,000 in sales per year with strong profit margins of 35%. Operating costs are well controlled, with payroll averaging around $5,500 per month, and the owner claims an impressive net profit of roughly $300,000 annually. In addition, the seller is willing to finance the $300,000 inventory for a qualified buyer, making this a turnkey investment with immediate income potential. With two strong revenue streams under one roof, low overhead, and excellent margins, this business offers a unique chance for a motivated buyer to step into a proven operation in a desirable Alameda County location.

$599,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
$200,000+ net income per year Liquor store & Pizza photo
Pizza Restaurants
Liquor Stores

$200,000+ net income per year Liquor store & Pizza

Alameda County, CA, US

Prime Liquor Store & Pizza Business Opportunity with Real Estate Available – Alameda County This is a rare opportunity to acquire a freestanding retail building in a prime, high-visibility location on a busy street in the heart of Alameda County. The property offers strong existing cash flow with additional development potential. The 3,400 square-foot building currently houses a successful liquor store and pizza operation. According to the owner, the property also has the potential for an additional 1,500 square feet of development, which may allow for the construction of multiple apartment units or office space, offering significant upside for future value and income (buyer to verify with the city). The liquor store generates approximately $55,000 in monthly sales, with margins between 35% and 40%. In addition, the pizza operation produces between $22,000 and $25,000 per month in gross revenue, with an impressive 75% gross profit margin. The space is already equipped with a built-in hood and kitchen, making it ideal for continued food service operations. The business operates daily from 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM and is currently run semi-absentee by the owner, with two full-time employees and one part-time employee managing daily operations. Inventory is approximately $180,000. Buyers have two attractive acquisition options: • Business Only: $650,000 with rent of $10,380 per month • Business & Real Estate: $3,150,000 with approximately $600,000 down payment

$649,000
$1,000,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
$200,000+ net yearly Liquor store & Pizza With the Real Property photo
Pizza Restaurants
Liquor Stores

$200,000+ net yearly Liquor store & Pizza With the Real Property

Alameda County, CA, US

Prime Liquor Store & Pizza Business Opportunity with Real Estate Available – Alameda County This is a rare opportunity to acquire a freestanding retail building in a prime, high-visibility location on a busy street in the heart of Alameda County. The property offers strong existing cash flow with additional development potential. The 3,400 square-foot building currently houses a successful liquor store and pizza operation. According to the owner, the property also has the potential for an additional 1,500 square feet of development, which may allow for the construction of multiple apartment units or office space, offering significant upside for future value and income (buyer to verify with the city). The liquor store generates approximately $55,000 in monthly sales, with margins between 35% and 40%. In addition, the pizza operation produces between $22,000 and $25,000 per month in gross revenue, with an impressive 75% gross profit margin. The space is already equipped with a built-in hood and kitchen, making it ideal for continued food service operations. The business operates daily from 9:00 AM to 10:00 PM and is currently run semi-absentee by the owner, with two full-time employees and one part-time employee managing daily operations. Inventory is approximately $180,000. Buyers have two attractive acquisition options: • Business Only: $650,000 with rent of $10,380 per month • Business & Real Estate: $3,150,000 with approximately $600,000 down payment This is an excellent opportunity for an owner-operator or investor seeking high current income with future development potential in one of Alameda County’s established commercial areas.

$3,150,000
$1,000,000Revenue
-Cash Flow
Liquor Store photo
Liquor Stores

Liquor Store

Sacramento County, CA, US

8AM-11PM Mon-Sun (7 days per week) $65,000 per month gross sales Rent is $3,340

$549,999
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Liquor Store $150,000 Net Profit photo
Liquor Stores
Other Retail

Liquor Store $150,000 Net Profit

CA, US

$150,000 Net Profit This liquor store is in a prime location in a desirable part of San Francisco. It boasts a spacious layout with a large underground storage area. The property has an excellent lease, offering the potential to expand the business by introducing food items such as pizza or pastries. Situated on a busy corner, it serves as a convenient gathering spot for local shoppers. According to the owner, the store generates over $70,000 in monthly sales with a markup of 35% to 40%, plus an additional $15,000 per month from lottery sales. The 3,000 sq. ft. space has a monthly rent of $5,000, utilities averaging $2,000, and credit card processing fees of approximately $1,100. The absentee owner currently spends $7,000 per month on labor. With the current setup, the absentee owner earns around $10,000 per month. However, an owner-operator could generate over $150,000 annually. SERIOUS BUYERS MUST SHOW PROOF OF FUNDS. For more information, contact the listing agent Matt Sadati DRE#0070488 or Tammy at 510-415-6023.

$499,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Liquor Store photo
Liquor Stores
Other Retail

Liquor Store

CA, US

$360,000 Net Profit This is a wonderful liquor store located in the fantastic, busy shopping center in the heart of Daly City, San Francisco County. They know this place is a lucky store; they had multiple lotto winners out of this store. The owner claims approximately over $200,000 per month in lotto sales. The base rent is $6000 per month and $3000 NNN the payroll is about $2,000/m, Cr/cd fees are about $1500/m and utility are about $2000/M The owner claims over $100,000/m in sales with a minimum of 35% markup. The owner-operator can easily make over $360,000 in net profit. For more information, contact the listing agent Matt Sadati DRE#0070488 or Tammy at 510-415-6023.

$850,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
2

What to know about liquor store acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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

The License Is the Asset — Understand It Before You Buy

A liquor store without a valid, transferable license is just a retail space. The license itself can represent 30–60% of total acquisition value in quota-limited markets, and its transferability is the most important due diligence item in any liquor store transaction. Confirm with the state's Alcohol Beverage Control (ABC) authority, not the seller, that the license is in good standing, transferable, and not subject to any pending administrative action, citation, or suspension. License violations, even minor ones, can complicate or delay transfer approval. In states with moratoriums or caps on new licenses, existing licenses can be extremely valuable and that value needs to be documented and verified independently. Consider engaging a lawyer who has experience in the transfer of liquor licenses to assist in the transfer of the license.

SBA Financing Has a Critical Limitation

SBA 7(a) loans are widely used to finance liquor store acquisitions and are generally well-suited to the category. However, there is one essential constraint buyers must understand: SBA loan proceeds cannot be used to purchase a liquor license directly. When buying an existing store as a going concern, the license typically transfers as part of the business acquisition, which SBA lenders will accept. But if the deal is structured in a way that allocates significant purchase price to a standalone license purchase, SBA financing may not cover that portion. Work with a lender experienced in liquor store transactions to structure the deal correctly from the start. Most liquor store acquisitions in the $300,000–$2M range are financeable through SBA 7(a) with 10–20% down from a qualified buyer.

Cash Revenue and the Verification Challenge

The liquor retail industry has a well-documented history of cash management irregularities. Multiple industry sources, including SBA lenders familiar with the category, note that poor bookkeeping and underreported cash sales are common. Verify reported revenues through multiple independent sources: POS records, credit card processing statements, sales tax filings, and purchase invoices from distributors. Cross-reference total inventory purchases with total sales using known category margin benchmarks: spirits typically carry 25–35% gross margins, wine and beer 20–25%. Significant unexplained discrepancies between purchases and reported sales warrant careful investigation. Buyers who accept verbal representations about unreported revenue assume the liability for those representations.

Inventory Valuation and Working Capital Planning

Liquor store inventory is substantial, typically $50,000–$150,000 for a mid-sized operation, and must be carefully valued at closing. Insist on a physical inventory count as a condition of closing, conducted jointly by buyer and seller with independent verification if possible. Assess inventory quality as well as quantity: aged, slow-moving, or damaged product should be excluded from the inventory valuation or discounted significantly. Inventory in the spirits category holds value better than beer and wine, which have shelf life considerations. Post-acquisition working capital needs are meaningful in this category; you will need capital to maintain inventory levels while building relationships with distributors and understanding local purchasing patterns.

Location, Competition, and Regulatory Environment

Liquor store performance is highly sensitive to local regulatory environment. Understand the competitive landscape at the city and county level: are there restrictions on hours of operation, proximity to schools or places of worship, or upcoming ballot measures that could affect the category? Some jurisdictions have moved to expand grocery store and convenience store alcohol sales, which directly competes with standalone liquor retail. Research whether the location has benefited from local restrictions that may not persist. Conversely, locations in dry counties bordering wet counties can generate exceptional sales volume but also carry concentration risk if alcohol regulations change.

Operational Efficiency and the Path to Premium

The difference between a commodity liquor store and a premium retail destination is significant and so is the valuation difference. Stores that have invested in specialty selection (craft spirits, natural wines, local breweries), staff product knowledge, tasting events, and customer loyalty programs generate higher margins and more defensible customer relationships than pure volume retailers competing on price. Assess whether the current owner has positioned the business for the premium channel or the discount channel and whether the surrounding demographic supports a repositioning if needed. A store that can credibly compete on curation rather than price has substantially better long-term economics than one competing against Total Wine on price.