How Do I Budget a Comedy Club or Live-Music 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 a Comedy Club or Live-Music Venue Buildout?
Direct Answer
Budget a comedy club or small live-music venue at $150 to $350 per square foot, with an all-in number of $400,000 to $1.5 million for a 3,000-to-8,000 sq ft room holding 150-to-450 people. The money-saving move is to find a space that was already an assembly-use occupancy — a former club, theater, banquet hall, or restaurant with an existing bar, grease interceptor, and high occupant load — because changing a use group to A-2 (assembly) triggers fire sprinklers, two-or-more exits, panic hardware, and ADA upgrades that can add $80,000 to $250,000 on their own.
The three line items that decide your budget are the stage and sound system ($60,000–$250,000), the bar and draft system ($50,000–$180,000), and acoustic treatment plus soundproofing ($40,000–$150,000). For a comedy club specifically, the room geometry matters more than the PA — tight sightlines, a low 14-to-18-inch stage, and a ceiling treated to kill slap-back make jokes land; for live music, you flip the budget toward a 200-to-1,200 sq ft stage, a 24-to-32-channel system, and serious low-frequency isolation.
Make the landlord deliver a warm shell with HVAC and 400–800 amp electrical service, and demand a TI allowance of $35–$75 per square foot.
The Real Cost Stack, Line by Line
For a 5,000 sq ft, 300-capacity room with a bar:
- Stage and rigging: $25,000–$120,000. A built 24'x16' stage runs $15,000–$45,000; add $10,000–$60,000 for rigging points, line array hangs, and a structural engineer's letter certifying the ceiling can take the load.
- Sound system (PA): $40,000–$180,000. A comedy room needs vocal clarity (a $25,000–$60,000 point-source or small line array); a music room needs mains + subs + monitors + a 32-channel digital console, easily $100,000–$180,000.
- Lighting: $20,000–$90,000. Comedy can run a simple $15,000–$35,000 wash-and-spot rig; music wants moving heads, a DMX board, and trussing — $50,000–$90,000.
- Bar and draft system: $50,000–$180,000. A full bar with a 12-to-24-tap glycol-cooled draft system ($15,000–$40,000), walk-in cooler, three-compartment sink, ice, and POS.
- Acoustics and soundproofing: $40,000–$150,000. STC 55–60 demising walls, bass traps, broadband absorbers, and an isolated entry vestibule (sound lock) so the street door doesn't leak the show.
- HVAC: $40,000–$110,000. A packed room generates massive latent heat; size cooling at ~400 sq ft per ton and add CO2/makeup-air for a crowd.
- Restrooms, ADA, seating, finishes: $60,000–$180,000. Assembly occupancy means more fixtures — an A-2 room for 300 may need 6–10 toilets by code.
How to Not Get Screwed
Verify the occupant load and exits BEFORE the lease, not after. Operators sign a 4,000 sq ft lease assuming a 300-cap room, then the fire marshal limits them to 199 because there's only one code exit. Your capacity is your revenue ceiling. Pay a code consultant $2,000–$5,000 to confirm the legal occupant load and exit count during due diligence — it is the cheapest insurance in this entire project.
Don't let the landlord dump A-2 upgrade costs on you for a building that should already comply. If the space was previously assembly use, existing sprinklers, exits, and a fire-rated shell are the landlord's responsibility — negotiate that they deliver code-compliant base building and you only pay for *your* improvements.
Put "landlord to deliver shell in compliance with current code for A-2 assembly occupancy" in the work letter.
Get the rigging and structural load certified in writing. A GC who hangs a line array off untested joists is a lawsuit. Require a stamped structural engineer's letter for all rigging points, and hold 10% retainage until you have it.
Cap the change orders and reject cost-plus. Venue buildouts run 10–18% in change orders because of surprises behind old walls. Demand a GMP contract, require written approval on any change over $2,500, and cap the GC's change-order markup at 12–15%.
Audit the draft-system bid. Integrators love to over-spec glycol runs and tap towers. A 16-tap system should run $20,000–$35,000 installed, not $60,000. Get two competing bids and confirm the line-cleaning access is built in.
Lease Terms for a High-Capital, Single-Use Room
- Free rent: 4–8 months to cover the build; a dark venue earns nothing.
- TI allowance: $35–$75 per sq ft, disbursed in monthly draws against G702/G703, covering soft costs.
- Noise/operating-hours clause: confirm in writing you can operate until 2 a.m. With amplified sound — a use restriction kills a music venue.
- Percentage-rent vs. Flat rent: if the landlord wants percentage rent, cap the breakpoint high so your first profitable years aren't taxed.
- Guaranty burn-off: full year one, down to 6 months by year three, gone by year five.
- Exclusivity/co-tenancy: if you're in a district, get exclusive live-entertainment use so the landlord can't lease the next door to a competitor.
Operating Math: Sizing the Build to the Revenue
A 300-cap comedy club running 5 shows a week at $25 cover, 70% full grosses ~$26,000/week in tickets; the real money is the two-drink minimum and food — bar can run 50–70% of total revenue at 75–80% margin. That's why the bar buildout earns its keep faster than the lighting rig.
A live-music room earns on ticket + bar + a $200–$1,500 per-show production fee or door split with touring acts. If your buildout is $900,000 financed at $600,000 / 12%, debt service is ~$80,000/year; the room must clear that plus rent of $6,000–$20,000/month before profit.
Over-building the PA while under-building the bar is the classic way to go broke with a beautiful room.
FAQ
What's cheaper to build — a comedy club or a live-music venue? A comedy club. It needs vocal clarity, not concert SPL, so the PA, lighting, and rigging are lighter — typically $400,000–$800,000 versus $700,000–$1.5M for a comparable music room. Comedy also seats more people in less space (cabaret tables vs. A dance floor).
Do I really need professional acoustic treatment, or can I DIY foam? Foam panels kill high frequencies and do nothing for bass or transmission to neighbors. Real treatment means broadband absorbers, bass traps, and STC-rated demising walls — budget $40,000–$150,000. Skimping here generates noise complaints that can shut you down.
How many bathrooms does the code require? Assembly (A-2) occupancy is fixture-heavy. A 300-person room often needs 6–10 toilets plus accessible stalls; check your local plumbing code early, because adding fixtures after the fact means tearing up finished floors — a $30,000–$80,000 surprise.
Can I open with a temporary/rental sound system to save cash? Yes — many rooms open with rented or financed PA and lighting and buy later from cash flow. A monthly equipment lease ($1,500–$5,000) preserves capital for the bar and acoustic work, which you cannot rent.
What permits will hold me up the longest? The assembly-occupancy certificate, fire-marshal sign-off, and liquor license. The liquor license can take 60–180 days depending on jurisdiction — start it the day you sign the lease, because a venue with no bar revenue rarely survives.
Sources
- CBRE, *U.S. Construction Cost Trends* (TI and base-building cost-per-sq-ft benchmarks)
- JLL, *Retail and Restaurant Fit-Out Cost Guide* (bar, kitchen, and assembly-use buildout costs)
- Cushman & Wakefield, *Tenant Improvement and Work Letter Benchmarks*
- RSMeans (Gordian), *Building Construction Cost Data* (stage, acoustic, and MEP unit costs)
- NAIOP, *Lease Negotiation and TI Allowance Best Practices*
- BOMA International, *Operating Expense and CAM Standards*
- National Independent Venue Association (NIVA), *Independent Venue Operating Benchmarks*
- International Code Council (ICC), *International Building Code — Group A-2 Assembly Occupancy Requirements*
