Great location across from US Bank Stadium

SPACE AVAILABLE
5,442 SF
LEASE RATE
Negotiable
OPERATING EXPENSES
2020 Total: $12.12/SF

POPULATION AVARAGE HOUSEHOLD
INCOME
DAYTIME POPULATION
1 MILE 41,413 $73,711 168,807
3 MILES 256,930 $77,492 348,889
5 MILES 489,171 $91,858 467,654

Liquor vs 🍔🍔 Food (Restaurant) — Key Averages

1) Profit margins (biggest difference)

Liquor (bars / alcohol sales)

  • Gross margin: ~70–85%  
  • Cost of goods (pour cost): ~15–24%  
  • Net profit (bars): ~10–15% typical  

👉 Liquor is the highest-margin product in hospitality

Food (restaurants)

  • Gross margin: ~60–70%  
  • Net profit: ~3–5% average (can reach 10–15% if well-run)  

👉 Food looks decent on paper, but labor + waste crush margins🧠

 

2) Minneapolis-specific revenue mix rules (important)

Historically, Minneapolis enforced rules like:

  • Restaurants must get ~60% of revenue from food
  • Alcohol capped around 30–40% of sales  

👉 Meaning:

  • Even though liquor is more profitable, you often can’t rely on it fully
  • Business model is structurally “food-first”

3) Taxes (Minneapolis nuance)

  • Special local taxes exist for both:
    • Liquor: ~2.4–2.5%
    • Restaurants: ~2.5–2.6%  

👉 Roughly similar tax burden, so margins—not taxes—drive the difference

 

What this means in Minneapolis specifically

  • A restaurant with strong bar sales is far more profitable
  • A bar-only concept can outperform restaurants—but licensing/zoning limits that

🧠 Real-world takeaway

If you’re comparing business models:

  • Best profit potential: Bar / liquor-heavy concept
  • Most common model: Restaurant subsidized by alcohol
  • Most stable but lower upside: Liquor retail
  • Budgeted 601 Chicago revenue required to support rent structure:

              Base rent $30 plus CAM/Tax of $12 = $42 Per Square Foot

              $42 per square foot requires gross sales of  at least $420 PSF or $2,268,000, say $3,000,000 annually.

🍽 Food-Only Restaurant Averages

Revenue mix

  • 100% food sales
  • No high-margin alcohol to boost profits.

Typical cost breakdown (industry averages similar in Minneapolis)

  • Food cost: 28–35%
  • Labor: 30–38%
  • Rent/occupancy: 6–12%
  • Other expenses (utilities, supplies, insurance, etc.): 15–25%

Net profit margin

  • ~2% to 5% average
  • Well-run operations: 6–10%
  • Many operate close to break-even in slower seasons

Why food-only restaurants earn less

Alcohol normally:

  • Has much higher markup
  • Requires less labor per dollar sold
  • Raises the average check size

Without liquor, restaurants rely on:

  • Higher volume
  • Faster table turnover
  • Takeout/delivery sales
  • Tight food cost control

Typical sales averages (rough real-world ranges)

Small independent food-only restaurants in cities like Minneapolis often see:

  • $500k – $1.5M annual revenue (very common range)
  • Profit after all expenses:
  • Around $10k – $75k per year in many cases

Fast-casual or busy locations can do better, but margins stay thin.

In restaurant economics, the amount of gross sales you can realistically spend on rent is pretty well established across the industry—and it’s especially tight for food-only concepts.

📊 Standard Rent Rule (Restaurants)

  • Ideal: 6–8% of gross sales
  • Acceptable (urban areas like Minneapolis): 8–10%
  • Risky: 10–12%+
  • Danger zone: Over 12%

🍽 For Food-Only Restaurants (No Alcohol)

You should aim lower, because you don’t have high-margin liquor to cushion costs:

  • Target: 5–7%
  • Max: 8% (tight but doable)
  • Above that → profits get squeezed fast

Why rent % matters so much

From a typical food-only breakdown:

  • Food cost: ~30%
  • Labor: ~30–35%
  • Other expenses: ~20%

👉 That already eats up 80–85% of revenue

So:

  • If rent = 10%, you’re basically at break-even or losing money

🧠 Simple rule of thumb

A lot of operators use this quick formula:

Max annual rent = 6–8% of projected gross revenue


Example:

  • If you expect $1,000,000/year in sales
  • Safe rent = $60,000 – $80,000/year
  • That’s about $5,000 – $6,700/month

Reality in cities like Minneapolis

Because of higher rents:

  • Many restaurants accept 8–10%
  • But they compensate with:
    • Higher menu prices
    • Smaller spaces
    • Fast-casual models
    • Takeout-heavy business

Bottom line

  • Food-only restaurant: keep rent ≤ 7% if possible
  • Absolute ceiling: ~8–9%
  • Above 10%: very hard to stay profitable without alcohol
 

For more information calll
Commercial Connection

Scott Pietig
612-767-7364