How Do I Budget a Sports Bar Buildout?
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How Do I Budget a Sports Bar Buildout?
Direct Answer
Budget a sports bar buildout at $150 to $350 per square foot, for an all-in number of $400,000 to $1.4 million on a 3,500-to-8,000 sq ft space seating 120-to-350. The biggest money-saver is to take over an existing bar or restaurant with a working kitchen, grease interceptor, hood, walk-in cooler, and bar plumbing already in place — because a "second-generation restaurant" space saves you the $120,000 to $350,000 it costs to build a commercial kitchen and bar from a vanilla shell, and it usually carries the grease-trap and ventilation infrastructure the health department demands.
The four line items that define a sports bar are the AV system (TVs, distribution, sound) at $40,000–$200,000, the bar and draft system at $50,000–$180,000, the kitchen at $80,000–$300,000, and the dining/bar finishes and seating at $60,000–$200,000. The AV is what makes it a *sports* bar — budget a video distribution system (Just Add Power, AVPro, or similar) feeding 15–40 displays, a multi-zone audio system so you can run audio from any game to any zone, and enough satellite/cable/streaming feeds and a commercial DIRECTV or fiber package.
Make the landlord deliver a second-gen restaurant shell or a warm shell with a hood and grease interceptor, plus a TI allowance of $35–$70 per square foot.
The Real Cost Stack, Line by Line
For a 6,000 sq ft, 250-seat sports bar:
- AV system: $50,000–$180,000. 15–40 TVs ($600–$2,500 each installed), a matrix video-distribution system ($20,000–$60,000), multi-zone audio ($15,000–$50,000), a big-screen or LED video wall ($15,000–$80,000), and a control tablet so a bartender can route any game to any screen.
- Bar + draft system: $50,000–$180,000. A long bar with 24–60 taps on a glycol-cooled long-draw system ($20,000–$60,000), walk-in beer cooler, draft is the highest-margin product in the building, ice, glass-washer, and POS terminals.
- Kitchen: $80,000–$300,000. Hood and fire-suppression (Ansul) system ($15,000–$40,000), grease interceptor ($8,000–$30,000), fryers, flat-top, walk-in, prep line, and dish. Reusing a second-gen kitchen can cut this in half.
- HVAC + ventilation: $40,000–$110,000. Makeup air for the hood, crowd cooling, and balanced exhaust so the kitchen doesn't pull conditioned air or smell up the dining room.
- Seating, finishes, millwork: $60,000–$200,000. Booths, high-tops, the bar back, and durable surfaces for a high-traffic crowd.
- Restrooms, ADA, electrical: $50,000–$150,000. Fixture count for assembly use, ADA, and a panel upgrade if the AV and kitchen loads exceed the existing service.
How to Not Get Screwed
Confirm in writing what the landlord is leaving behind. The single most expensive surprise is discovering the previous tenant removed the hood, walk-in, or grease interceptor ("trade fixtures") before you took over. Get a delivery condition exhibit in the lease listing every fixture that stays, with photos, and the landlord's warranty that the hood, fire suppression, and grease interceptor are operational and code-compliant.
That clause can save $120,000+.
Get the grease interceptor sizing verified before you commit to a menu. Health departments size grease traps by fixture count and seating; an undersized existing trap means trenching the slab to install a bigger one — $20,000–$60,000 and weeks of delay. Have a plumber and the health department confirm the existing interceptor supports your planned kitchen during due diligence.
Don't let the AV integrator over-spec the matrix. A bartender needs to route any source to any TV — that's it. Integrators bid 48x48 matrix systems with redundant processors when a 16x32 ($25,000–$45,000) does the job. Get two bids, insist on open-standard distribution, and require full programming documentation so you can hire any tech later.
Reject cost-plus; demand GMP. Restaurant/bar buildouts run 10–18% in change orders because of what's hidden in old walls and slabs. Use a guaranteed maximum price contract, require written approval on any change over $2,500, and cap the change-order markup at 12–15%.
Hold retainage and verify the hood/Ansul certification. The kitchen hood and Ansul fire-suppression system must be certified before the fire marshal signs off. Hold 10% retainage until you have the certifications and the health-department and fire-marshal approvals in hand.
Lease Terms for a Restaurant-AV Hybrid
- Free rent: 3–6 months for the build; a closed bar earns nothing.
- TI allowance: $35–$70 per sq ft, disbursed in monthly draws against G702/G703, covering soft costs.
- Delivery-condition exhibit itemizing every fixture (hood, walk-in, grease trap, bar) that stays — the most valuable clause in a second-gen deal.
- Operating-hours and TV/audio rights — confirm you can run amplified game audio and operate until at least midnight or 2 a.m.
- Guaranty burn-off: full year one, 6 months by year three, zero by year five.
- Co-tenancy/exclusive for a sports-bar concept if you're in a center, plus audit rights on CAM.
Operating Math: Where a Sports Bar Actually Makes Money
A 250-seat sports bar does its volume on game days, weekends, and big events. The math: food typically runs 28–33% food cost (so 67–72% gross margin), draft beer runs 18–24% pour cost (76–82% margin), and liquor 18–22%. Beverage is the profit engine — a busy sports bar can do 50–60% of revenue in alcohol at far better margins than food, which is why the bar and draft system earn back faster than a fourth fryer.
A 250-seat room turning 2–3 times on a game day at a $28 average check can gross $14,000–$21,000 in a single day. 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 $5,000–$18,000/month and labor before profit.
Spend on draft taps, TV coverage, and a kitchen that can handle a Sunday rush — those three things sell the room.
FAQ
How much cheaper is a second-generation restaurant space versus a vanilla shell? A second-gen space with a working kitchen, hood, grease trap, and walk-in can save $120,000–$350,000 and 2–4 months of construction time. The catch is verifying everything actually stays and is code-compliant — put it in a delivery-condition exhibit with photos.
How many TVs does a sports bar need? Most successful sports bars run 15–40 displays plus one big-screen or LED video wall. The number matters less than the distribution system — every guest should see a screen, and a bartender should be able to route any game to any zone from a tablet.
What's the highest-margin item I should design the build around? Draft beer. A glycol-cooled long-draw system pours at 18–24% cost (76–82% margin) and high volume on game days. Build a long bar with 24–60 taps and a properly sized walk-in cooler; it pays for itself faster than almost any other line item.
Do I need a fire-suppression system over the kitchen? Yes — any commercial cooking line with a hood requires an Ansul (wet-chemical) fire-suppression system, $15,000–$40,000, certified and inspected before the fire marshal issues a CO. If you inherit one, have it inspected and recertified before you rely on it.
What permits take the longest? The liquor license (60–180 days) and health-department plan review. Start the liquor application the day you sign the lease — a sports bar with no alcohol sales rarely covers its rent.
Sources
- CBRE, *U.S. Construction Cost Trends* (restaurant/bar TI and cost-per-sq-ft benchmarks)
- JLL, *Restaurant and Retail Fit-Out Cost Guide* (kitchen, bar, and AV buildout costs)
- Cushman & Wakefield, *Tenant Improvement and Second-Generation Space Benchmarks*
- RSMeans (Gordian), *Building Construction Cost Data* (kitchen, grease interceptor, and MEP unit costs)
- NAIOP, *TI Allowance, Delivery Condition, and Work Letter Best Practices*
- BOMA International, *Operating Expense and CAM Pass-Through Standards*
- National Restaurant Association, *Restaurant Operations and Cost-of-Goods Benchmarks*
- International Code Council (ICC), *International Mechanical Code — Commercial Kitchen Hood and Ventilation Requirements*
