Tupelo Data Room

Pizza Shop for Sale in Alberta

Nationally, similar businesses sell at 1.1x to 4.0x SDE. Compare live listings and connect with sellers.

Browse Listings

No listings found

We couldn't find any listings matching your filters. Try adjusting your search or clearing the filters.

Clear all filters

Market Snapshot

National transaction benchmarks for pizza shop 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 buying Pizza Restaurants

GW

By George Wellmer

Cofounder & CEO

Key diligence, valuation, financing, and transition considerations for buyers evaluating pizza restaurants acquisitions.

The Pizza Business Model: Why It Works and When It Doesn't

Pizza is one of the most resilient food service categories in the SMB marketplace — consistent demand, manageable food costs, delivery-native operations, and strong repeat customer frequency. But the category is also highly competitive and margin-sensitive. The key due diligence question for any pizza restaurant acquisition is whether you are buying a genuine customer relationship or simply a location and equipment. Independent pizza shops with loyal local followings and established delivery routes are fundamentally different businesses from operations where the customer base is price-driven and easily redirected to Domino's or Pizza Hut. Understand which one you are evaluating before setting your price.

Food Cost Discipline and the 28% Benchmark

Pizza restaurants should run food costs (dough, sauce, cheese, toppings) at approximately 25–30% of revenue for a well-managed operation. Cheese pricing in particular is volatile and can swing margins significantly during commodity spikes. Request monthly P&Ls for at least two years and specifically analyze food cost percentage month-by-month, not just as an annual average. Operations that show consistent food cost discipline through commodity price cycles have demonstrated real management depth. Those showing wide swings or a trend toward rising food costs have a problem that will be yours to solve post-acquisition. Dough production methodology also matters: scratch dough operations have higher labor costs but typically better margins and product differentiation than partially baked or third-party dough programs.

Delivery Infrastructure: Third-Party vs. Owned

The shift to third-party delivery platforms (DoorDash, Uber Eats, Grubhub) has fundamentally changed the pizza business economics. Platform commissions of 20–30% of order value are the industry standard, which means delivery orders through these channels often generate margins 40–60% below in-house delivery. Analyze the revenue split carefully between owned delivery, third-party platforms, carryout, and dine-in (if applicable) and model the true margin contribution of each channel. Operations that have retained meaningful owned delivery capacity, their own driver network, phone order infrastructure, and customer loyalty program, have a competitive moat that is increasingly rare and genuinely valuable. Third-party platform ratings and review history should be reviewed as part of diligence.

How Pizza Restaurants Are Valued

Independent pizza restaurants typically trade at 1.5x to 2.5x SDE for standard operations, with higher multiples reserved for established concepts with strong delivery economics, loyal customer bases, and owner-independent management. Franchise pizza concepts (if sub-franchised) trade differently; franchise agreement, royalty obligations, and territory rights are all material deal terms that require separate review. SBA 7(a) financing is standard for pizza restaurant acquisitions, and lenders will require verified financials that support the purchase price. As a general rule, verbal representations, including claims about delivery volume or undocumented cash sales, are not accepted in underwriting.

Equipment Condition and Replacement Cost

Pizza restaurants are equipment-intensive: deck ovens, conveyor ovens, dough mixers, walk-in refrigeration, and delivery vehicle fleets all represent significant capital. Request an asset list with purchase dates and maintenance records for all major equipment, and have an independent technician assess the condition of primary ovens. Deck ovens used for high-volume production can run $15,000–$40,000 to replace; conveyor ovens for delivery-focused operations run similar replacement costs. A seller who deferred major equipment maintenance in the years before listing has effectively extracted value at your expense. Your offer should take into consideration deferred CapEx.

Staffing Stability and Kitchen Management

Pizza kitchen operations depend heavily on reliable, trained kitchen staff and the labor market for food service workers remains tight. Ask the selling owner specifically about the staff's tenure, wage rates relative to local market, and whether any key kitchen employees have indicated intent to leave. Pizza operations where the owner is the primary pizza maker, baking, shaping dough, managing bake times, overseeing qualityl carry significant key-person risk that buyers frequently underestimate. A shop that runs well when the owner is on vacation is a business; one that deteriorates when the owner is absent for two days is a job.