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Mexican restaurant for Sale in Montana

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High-Volume Long-Established TacoTime Belgrade, MT-Sales Over $665,000 photo
Mexican Restaurants
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High-Volume Long-Established TacoTime Belgrade, MT-Sales Over $665,000

Belgrade, Gallatin County, MT 59714-3903, US

High-Volume Long-Established TacoTime w/Drive-Thru Belgrade, MT - Sales Over $665,000! "In The Heart Of Belgrade, A High-Growth Montana Market Just Minutes From Booming Bozeman" An exceptional opportunity to acquire a high-volume long-established TacoTime franchise in Belgrade, a high-growth Montana market just minutes from booming Bozeman. TacoTime is a wildly-popular quick-service Mexican restaurant chain offering a tasty variety of customizable freshly prepared, home-style Mexican fare including an assortment of delicious tacos, burritos, quesadillas, nachos, salads, sides and breakfast items. Chips, shells, salsas and special sauces are made fresh in-house every day. Plus, Coke fountain drinks. Known for their world-famous hand rolled crisp burritos along with their crispy Mexi-fries and proprietary spice blends. Simple operation - counter service. Dine-in, take out, pick-up and drive-thru, plus 3rd party delivery. Online ordering is also available. As well as an eclub and reward program. Well established franchise location for over 42 years. And a highly rated and recommended location. Current owner works part-time (20-30 hours a week). Turnkey - opportunity to promote the assistant manager to full-time manager. Franchise Highlights • Well established brand with decades of operating history • Known for their fresh, made-to-order Mexican-inspired menu items • Signature offerings - crisp burritos, soft tacos, mexi-fries, salads and combo meals • Strong regional presence in the western US • Popular QSR model with consistent demand • Incredible brand recognition Prime retail space in a freestanding building with convenient drive-thru. Boasts great signage, excellent visibility, easy access, ample parking and strong local patronage, plus strong tourist traffic. Perfectly situated in the heart of Belgrade’s Madison Ave, a bustling retail corridor just off Jackrabbit Ln/MT-85, one of the region’s busiest roads with up to 25,000 vehicles per day. Just down the street from Albertsons and Town & Country Foods. Plus, surrounded by retailers and hotels, plus a vast and growing residential area. And minutes from Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport (BZN), the gateway to Bozeman, Big Sky and Yellowstone National Park - delivering year-round and seasonal tourist traffic. This TacoTime enjoys steady everyday traffic from grocery-anchored shopping, neighborhood residents and airport-adjacent visitors! Ideally located in Belgrade, one of Montana’s fastest-growing communities, benefiting directly from the economic expansion of nearby Bozeman. The area is experiencing significant residential and commercial growth, increased tourism and a strong workforce base - creating sustained demand for convenient, high-quality dining options like TacoTime. Location Highlights • Prime corner lot with strong street frontage • Situated along W Madison Ave, a major E-W corridor through Belgrade • In close proximity to downtown Belgrade and residential neighborhoods • Minutes from Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport, driving consistent traveler traffic • Near Interstate 90, capturing commuter and pass-through demand • Surrounded by schools, retail and growing residential developments • Part of a rapidly expanding market fueled by Bozeman’s population growth 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 email Nicole Rayborn at [email protected] or call 208-967-0748 for more information. Showings by appointment only outside of business hours.

$159,000
$665,462Revenue
$111,348Cash Flow

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for mexican restaurant businesses.

Under $500K

Median revenue$518k
Median cash flow$86k
Median sale price$135k
Multiple range1.1x - 2.4x

$500K to $2M

Median revenue$1.68m
Median cash flow$305k
Median sale price$750k
Multiple range2.0x - 3.2x

Over $2M

Median revenue$4.60m
Median cash flow$1.03m
Median sale price$3.20m
Multiple range2.3x - 4.0x

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 Mexican restaurant acquisitions

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating Mexican restaurant acquisitions.

What You’re Actually Buying

A Mexican restaurant acquisition is a purchase of a concept, a kitchen system, and a customer relationship built on consistency. Mexican restaurants are among the most operationally repeatable concepts in casual dining. The prep-heavy, protein-forward menu structure means that a well-trained kitchen team can execute at volume with less chef-dependence than French or Italian cuisine concepts. That’s the upside. The corresponding risk is that the concept’s value lives in the efficiency of the system, and any disruption to prep workflow or kitchen staffing in the transition period affects throughput and quality simultaneously. Understanding the kitchen operation before you commit to a price is not optional.

What Are Mexican Restaurants Multiple Drivers

Full-service Mexican restaurants with a bar program and strong margarita/cocktail revenue trade at the upper end; liquor margin contribution (30–40% gross margin on beverages versus 65–72% food cost) is a meaningful multiple driver. Catering accounts like corporate events, quinceañeras, and regular event contracts are the highest-multiple component of any Mexican concept because they represent committed future revenue with documented accounts.

What the Financials Need to Show

Food cost for Mexican concepts typically runs 28–33% of food revenue. Protein-heavy menus (beef, chicken, pork) are sensitive to commodity price fluctuation, particularly in beef markets. Request a 12-month supplier invoice history alongside the P&L to understand the actual input cost trend, not just the averaged annual figure. Labor at 28–35% is typical for well-run Mexican operations with prep-heavy menus that front-load labor to morning prep rather than line-cooking complexity during service. Verify that the stated SDE accounts for full market-rate management compensation. Mexican restaurant owners who work the line alongside their team often understate their own labor contribution in the add-back calculation.

Licensing, Alcohol, and the Margarita Program

The liquor license is the single most valuable standalone asset in a full-service Mexican restaurant acquisition in markets where licenses are restricted or quota-limited. Verify the license type (full liquor versus beer-and-wine), transfer process, and timeline — 60 to 120 days in most states. The margarita program is often the difference between a 2.0× acquisition and a 2.8× one — not because margaritas are complicated, but because well-executed cocktail revenue at 75%+ gross margin fundamentally changes the unit economics of the business. A restaurant generating $90,000 in bar revenue annually on a 75% margin contributes $67,500 in gross profit from a relatively small operational investment. That contribution is real and should be part of your normalized SDE calculation.

Kitchen Team and Prep Dependency

Mexican restaurant kitchens run on prep like fresh salsas, marinated proteins, hand-pressed tortillas in authentic concepts, batch cooking of beans, rice, and sauces. The prep cook and the lead line cook are the two positions whose departure most directly affects food quality and service speed. Meet them before close. Understand their tenure, their compensation, and their relationship to the current owner. Long-tenured kitchen staff at a Mexican restaurant are often the living repository of the recipes. If the recipe documentation isn’t formalized, that’s the first project after close.

Growth and the Catering Opportunity

Mexican food has among the highest catering demand of any cuisine type. The food travels well, scales naturally for large groups, and is broadly appealing. Restaurants that have not pursued catering are leaving one of the most accessible growth levers in the category untouched. Building a catering program from an existing Mexican restaurant base involves creating a dedicated catering menu, packaging infrastructure, and online booking. Catering operations typically generates $30,000–$80,000 in incremental annual revenue within 18 months of focused effort. Catering revenue is among the most reliable value-creation levers available to a new owner in this category.

Frequently Asked Questions

Answers to common buyer questions for this market.

A full liquor license in a quota-restricted market can be worth $50,000–$200,000 independently of the business, and the bar program it enables can account for 25–40% of total revenue at gross margins of 70–80%. That math makes the liquor component one of the highest-margin revenue drivers in the entire business. The margarita program specifically is the most profitable single beverage in most Mexican restaurant contexts and should be analyzed as its own revenue line: weekly/monthly margarita sales, average ticket contribution from alcohol, and bar cost percentage. A restaurant where margarita and cocktail sales represent 30%+ of total revenue and run a 72% gross margin is a materially more profitable business per revenue dollar than the food P&L alone would suggest. Verify the license type (full liquor vs. beer-and-wine), the state ABC transfer process timeline, and whether there are any outstanding compliance issues with the license before LOI.