How Do I Budget an Event Venue Buildout?
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Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Leases, TI, NNN & buildouts — negotiated in your favor</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>
How Do I Budget an Event Venue Buildout?
Direct Answer
Budget $50 to $120 per square foot for an event venue buildout, with a typical 5,000 to 15,000 sq ft space putting your all-in cost between $400,000 and $1.8M — the spread is wide because the make-or-break decision is whether you build a commercial catering kitchen on site.
A full prep-and-finish kitchen adds $150,000 to $400,000; a "warming/finishing" kitchen for outside caterers adds only $40,000 to $90,000 and is the smarter play for most operators, since you collect caterer commissions of 10 to 20% without owning the food risk.
The money move that decides your whole pro forma: build for the booking, not for the square footage. Event venue revenue is driven by guest capacity and rental rate per event, not by area. A clean 6,000 sq ft hall holding 200 guests that rents for $4,000 to $9,000 per Saturday can out-earn a sloppy 12,000 sq ft box.
So negotiate a lease that gives you high clear height (16 to 24 feet for that "wow" volume), big column-free spans, ample parking, and a TI allowance of $20 to $50 per square foot — then spend your build budget on the finishes, lighting, restrooms, and bar that photograph well and let you charge premium rates.
What Actually Drives the Budget
- Restrooms — the silent dealbreaker. Assembly occupancy fixture counts are brutal: a 250-guest venue may need 6 to 10 fixtures per gender. Building out adequate restrooms runs $60,000 to $200,000 and is the most commonly underbudgeted line. Bad restroom counts also cap your legal occupancy, which caps your revenue.
- Catering kitchen: $40,000 (finishing) to $400,000 (full commercial). Grease interceptor, hood/Ansul fire suppression, three-compartment sinks, and adequate gas/electric service drive the cost.
- Bar buildout: $30,000 to $100,000 — bar revenue and corkage are major profit centers.
- HVAC for assembly load: $10 to $20 per square foot — 250 bodies plus catering equipment is a serious heat load; underspending here makes summer weddings miserable.
- Lighting and AV: $25,000 to $150,000 — dimmable zones, uplighting, chandeliers, sound, and a projection wall let you charge premium and book corporate events.
- Flooring and finishes: $8 to $25 per square foot — this is what guests photograph; polished concrete, wood, or porcelain plus a stage or dance floor.
- Bridal/green room and prep suites: $20,000 to $60,000 — small space, big booking influence for weddings.
Occupancy, Egress, and Parking — the Three That Cap Your Revenue
Your venue's earning power is set by three code-driven numbers, so verify them before you sign:
- Occupant load. Assembly use is calculated by net floor area and use type. Confirm the space can be legally rated for the guest count your pricing assumes. A venue you thought held 300 but legally holds 180 just lost 40% of its rate ceiling.
- Egress. High-occupancy assembly requires two or more exits, panic hardware, and exit-path widths sized to occupancy. Adding a second exit through a masonry wall can cost $25,000 to $75,000.
- Parking. Many municipalities require 1 stall per 3 to 4 guests for assembly use. A 250-guest venue may need 60 to 85 spaces. If the site can't provide them or secure a shared/overflow agreement, the city can deny your occupancy permit. Get a parking feasibility check before the lease.
Pay $3,000 to $8,000 for a code and feasibility review up front. Discovering an egress or parking shortfall after signing turns a $600,000 build into a $900,000 build — or a venue you can't legally open.
Don't Get Screwed by the Landlord
Event venues are heavy improvers and high-traffic tenants, so the lease terms matter enormously.
- Demand a strong TI allowance. You're installing restrooms, kitchen, HVAC, and finishes that stay with the building and raise its value. Push for $20 to $50/sq ft, disbursed against construction pay applications, not after opening.
- Get HVAC and base-building delivery in writing. Make the landlord deliver a watertight, code-compliant shell with restrooms roughed-in and HVAC at a stated tonnage. Define "white box" with a punch list.
- Pin down parking rights. Your lease must guarantee a specific number of stalls plus evening/weekend overflow rights. This is non-negotiable — it's tied to your legal occupancy. Get any shared-parking agreement with neighbors recorded.
- Use clause must cover alcohol and noise. Get "event venue, banquet, assembly, and bar service" explicitly permitted. Address noise and hours directly so a neighbor complaint can't shut your Saturday nights down.
- Cap CAM and exclude capital items. 3 to 5% CAM cap; exclude roof, structure, parking-lot resurfacing.
- Free rent for the long build. Venue buildouts run 6 to 12 months — negotiate 5 to 9 months of free rent and tie rent commencement to certificate of occupancy.
- Burn off the guaranty after 24 to 36 months, or negotiate a good-guy clause.
Don't Get Screwed by the Contractor
A venue mixes restaurant-grade MEP with high-end finishes — scope creep heaven for a careless GC.
- Hire a GC experienced in restaurant/assembly work. Grease interceptors, Ansul hood suppression, assembly egress, and high-tonnage HVAC are specialized. A retail or office GC will miss these and change-order you later.
- GMP contract, 10% retainage until CO plus health-department and fire-marshal sign-off.
- Get the kitchen on a detailed equipment schedule before bidding so the plumber and electrician quote to real loads, not assumptions.
- Carry a 12 to 18% contingency — venues in older shells routinely surface inadequate gas service, sub-slab plumbing problems, and ADA restroom rework.
- Coordinate three inspectors: building, health, and fire marshal. A GC who sequences these poorly costs you a missed wedding season.
Where the Smart Money Wins
The biggest savings is choosing a finishing kitchen over a full commercial kitchen and partnering with a preferred-caterer list — you keep 10 to 20% commissions with $300,000 less capital and zero food spoilage risk. Pair that with phasing the finishes: open with the main hall, restrooms, bar, and core lighting, then add the premium chandeliers, upgraded AV, and outdoor ceremony area in year two from operating cash, cutting day-one capital by $80,000 to $200,000.
Never trim restroom count (it caps occupancy and revenue, and drives reviews), HVAC tonnage (a hot reception is a refunded reception), or the photographed finishes and lighting that justify a premium rate. Those three are the venue. Trim back-of-house, oversized kitchens, and exterior frills.
FAQ
How much does it cost to build out an event venue? Plan $400,000 to $1.8M all-in for a 5,000 to 15,000 sq ft space, with the catering kitchen decision swinging the budget by $150,000 to $360,000. A finishing-kitchen model with outside caterers is the most capital-efficient path.
Should I build a full kitchen or use outside caterers? For most operators, a finishing kitchen plus a preferred-caterer program wins — far less capital, no food risk, and you still earn 10 to 20% caterer commissions plus bar revenue. Build a full kitchen only if in-house catering is your core business model.
What determines how much I can charge per event? Legal occupant load and the quality of finishes, lighting, restrooms, and bridal suite. A higher legal capacity and better photos directly raise your per-Saturday rate. Verify capacity before you sign.
What's the most overlooked cost? Restrooms and parking. Assembly fixture counts and parking ratios are unforgiving, frequently underbudgeted, and can legally cap your occupancy — which caps your revenue. Check both before leasing.
Sources
- CBRE, "Experiential and Hospitality Real Estate Outlook" — clear-height, conversion, and rent benchmarks for assembly use.
- JLL, "Hospitality and Events Sector Report" — TI allowance and lease-term comparables for banquet/event tenants.
- Cushman & Wakefield, "Assembly and Hospitality Lease Structuring Guide" — parking, use-clause, and rent-commencement negotiation.
- RSMeans Building Construction Cost Data — assembly-occupancy restroom, commercial kitchen, HVAC, and finish cost units.
- NAIOP, "Tenant Improvement and Lease Negotiation Best Practices" — TI disbursement and base-building delivery standards.
- BOMA International, "Experience Exchange Report" — CAM and operating-cost benchmarks for hospitality and assembly space.
- International Code Council (ICC) / International Building Code — assembly occupant-load, egress, and fixture-count requirements.
