Tupelo Data Room

Liquor Store for Sale in Illinois

Explore Liquor Store businesses for sale in Illinois. Compare opportunities and connect with sellers.

Browse Listings

Iconic Tavern + Liquor Store + Apartment - Mixed-Use Property For Sale photo
Bars, Pubs & Taverns
+1

Iconic Tavern + Liquor Store + Apartment - Mixed-Use Property For Sale

Chicago, Cook County, IL, US

Iconic Tavern + Liquor Store + Apartment Chicago, IL - Mixed-Use Property For Sale! "Coveted Chicago Tavern License, Liquor Store License & Applied Gaming License Included" A unique opportunity to acquire a long-standing neighborhood institution & income-producing property in one of Chicago’s established northwest neighborhoods. This offering includes 2 connected freestanding commercial buildings, operating as sports bar & liquor store, along with a residential apartment above — creating multiple revenue streams from bar operations, retail liquor sales & rental income. Even more valuable, the sale includes both on-premise & off-premise liquor licenses, including a highly coveted Chicago Tavern License, which is extremely limited & difficult to obtain in today’s regulatory environment. Opportunities combining real estate, 2 liquor licenses & established neighborhood businesses are exceptionally rare in the city of Chicago! Investment Overview: Tavern — A classic neighborhood sports bar offering a welcoming atmosphere for locals to watch games, enjoy drinks & socialize. Liquor Store — The adjoining retail liquor store serves the surrounding neighborhood with a convenient selection of beer, wine, spirits & convenience beverage sales. Current Entertainment Revenue — The bar & liquor store also feature a juke box, dart board, pool table & ATM which bring in $3k-$5k a mth or $35k-$60k a year in supplemental revenue. This dual-concept model captures both on-premise & off-premise alcohol sales + entertainment sales maximizing revenue opportunities. This offering also includes multiple Chicago liquor licenses, an increasingly scarce asset — On-Premise Chicago Tavern License allows for: • Bar service & bar operation • Full alcohol service for consumption on the premises • Late operating hours typical for neighborhood taverns Off-Premise Retail Liquor License allows for: • Retail sales of beer, wine & spirits • Package carry-out alcohol sales Owning both license types in 1 location is a significant competitive advantage. Plus, the ability to add video gaming. Gaming Potential — Gaming application already in process. A buyer would inherit this positioning, potentially receiving activation approval shortly after acquisition, eliminating the typical 6–12 month lead time. The property meets zoning & licensing requirements for VGT placement. And passive residential income from its 3-bedroom apartment upstairs. Rental Income — Above the commercial space sits a residential apartment providing: • Additional rental income • Potential owner-operator housing • Investment upside • Covers taxes Overall, this configuration allows for multiple profit centers under 1 roof — • Bar operations • Amusement devices • Liquor store sales • Video Gaming revenue • Residential rent Very few listings offer real estate, multiple liquor licenses & 2 complementary alcohol businesses & the opportunity to add video gaming in 1 package! Prime retail space in a freestanding building w/a few parking spots in the rear & ample street parking. Perfectly situated on a well-traveled E-W corridor with 18,000-22,000 VPD serving Chicago’s northwest side & connecting the city with nearby suburbs. Additional location benefits: • Dense surrounding residential population • Strong demographics • Lg base of multi-generational households/long-term residents • Strong working-class/middle-income residential communities • High concentration of blue-collar/healthcare/logistics/retail workers • Consistent demand for neighborhood bar gathering spots/convenient liquor retail Neighborhood taverns with liquor stores often thrive in these established Chicago communities due to long-term loyal customer bases & consistent neighborhood traffic. If interested, please click on the black Inquiry button on the right to complete the Buyer Profile form or email Ted Aretos at [email protected] or call 815-761-833 for more information. Showings by appointment only outside

$900,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Well-Established Convenient Food & Liquor Store McHenry, IL-20 Years! photo
Convenience Stores
Liquor Stores

Well-Established Convenient Food & Liquor Store McHenry, IL-20 Years!

McHenry, McHenry County, IL, US

Well-Established Convenient Food & Liquor Store McHenry, IL - Over 20 Years! "All Inventory Included Allowing For A Seamless Continuation Of Operations" A neighborhood staple for over 20 years, this well-established business offers a strong mix of liquor, beer, wine, tobacco products and grocery essentials, plus lottery sales. Multiple high-frequency revenue streams under one roof! Product & Revenue Mix • Full selection of spirits, beer and wine • Tobacco and related products • Convenience grocery items (snacks, beverages, staple goods) • Lottery sales driving steady foot traffic • Complementary impulse-buy merchandise positioned for high-margin add-ons Independent - no royalty, advertising or transfer fees. Asset sale - all furniture, fixtures and equipment (FF&E) included. Plus all inventory is included, allowing for a seamless continuation of operations from day one. Ready for a new owner to step in and operate immediately or rebrand. Prime retail space in a busy strip center along with other popular tenants just off a major thoroughfare in the heart of McHenry. Boasts great signage, easy access and ample parking. Strategically positioned within a high-traffic pocket of McHenry, this location benefits from a powerful blend of daily-use demand drivers that fuel consistent, repeat business throughout the day. The surrounding area is anchored by a nearby hospital, a strong automotive corridor filled with dealerships and service centers and a local high school, collectively generating steady flow from employees, visitors and students. Also, surrounded by dense residential neighborhoods providing a loyal, built-in customer base, while proximity to key commuter routes capture strong morning and evening traffic. Plus, additional support from nearby retail centers, service businesses, recreational amenities and local parks further enhances foot traffic and dwell time in the area. This well-rounded mix of healthcare, education, retail and residential drivers positions the business for reliable, high-frequency customer visits - ideal for a convenience and liquor operation such as this! Feel free to stop by the location as a customer first. This is a HIGHLY confidential listing, DO NOT talk to any owners, employees or patrons. If interested, please click on the black Inquiry button on the right to complete the Buyer Profile form or email Pat Mahoney at [email protected] or call 847-208-9569 for more information. Showings by appointment only outside of business hours. Listed By Pat Mahoney at EatZ & Associates

$99,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow
Liquor, Wine & Beer Store For Sale photo
Gas Stations
Convenience Stores
+1

Liquor, Wine & Beer Store For Sale

Sangamon County, IL, US

Liquor, Wine & Beer Store for Sale – Sangamon County, IL Thriving Retail Business | $750K Average Annual Sales | Tasting License Included Here’s your opportunity to own a well-established and profitable liquor located in Sangamon County, Illinois. With a loyal customer base, a curated wine selection, and strong three year average annual revenue of $750,000, this turnkey business is ideal for a savvy retail entrepreneur. Highlights: • Diverse Inventory: Specializing in fine wines, spirits, and craft beer selections • Tasting License: Fully approved for on-site tastings — an excellent driver of repeat traffic • Strong Local Presence: High-traffic location with repeat customers and excellent reputation • Growth Potential: Expand into delivery, events, or curated clubs • Inventory & Fixtures Included: Sale includes all displays, POS systems, and coolers Reason for Sale: Owner is pursuing retirement/relocation — motivated to find the right buyer to continue the legacy. Easy operation, no late nights. Open 9 hours a day.

$250,000
-Revenue
-Cash Flow

What to know about buying Liquor Stores

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

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