All,
As it has been about 1 year since I registered my LLC company and started this insane journey, I wanted to put up the 'real' math numbers for the winery. I always found this information lacking while searching and planning for the winery. I also way-under estimated the costs and over-estimated the profit at the beginning.
So, here is the really cut and dry dirty numbers for a 300 case winery in the first 16 months of operation. If you want to change these numbers to make a living, you need to figure out how to do it with more efficiency or charge more.
300 cases @ 15 bucks a bottle wholesale price to the liquor store owners. That is 180 a case price. Retail will be around 22$ a bottle for the mead.
Revenue $47000 (looks good right!)
costs
Labels (2k), Bottles(4k), Cork(min) 6100$
Honey 4000$
Rental Space for winery 6000$ (500$ a mo)
Controlled Fermentation Equipment (4k) (I spent 6k in reality) (all second hand and Frankenstein creations nothing I got was from a commercial place, all ebay and all scrap yard finds)
So, do the Math
Revenue - Costs = Gross Margin
47,000 - 21100 = 26000
Still looking good right? 26k is a lot of money, but honestly, it is a 1st grade teacher salary.
But then there is income tax (I am negating all the other taxes for simplicity)
26k * (your personal income tax rate) 35% = 9100
Gross Margin - Taxes = Net Profit (take home pay)
26000 - 9100 = 16,900
16,900 dollars for 16 months worth of work, probably 1500 hours of blood sweat and tears worth of effort on my part and you had to have 23k dollars at the beginning to even start the business. If you want to do better, you need to have more sales (which equal more investment dollars to buy raw honey and packaging suppliers) and more time to create more wine. I didn't have another hour to invest, or another dollar to spend, so these were my numbers and I felt it would be useful to those guys starting out.
Have I regretted it...NEVER for a second.....(although I have regretted how 'big' we started. I should have not gone for such a large 300 case run with the budget we had originally, should have gone for 125-175 cases or there abouts)
As it has been about 1 year since I registered my LLC company and started this insane journey, I wanted to put up the 'real' math numbers for the winery. I always found this information lacking while searching and planning for the winery. I also way-under estimated the costs and over-estimated the profit at the beginning.
So, here is the really cut and dry dirty numbers for a 300 case winery in the first 16 months of operation. If you want to change these numbers to make a living, you need to figure out how to do it with more efficiency or charge more.
300 cases @ 15 bucks a bottle wholesale price to the liquor store owners. That is 180 a case price. Retail will be around 22$ a bottle for the mead.
Revenue $47000 (looks good right!)
costs
Labels (2k), Bottles(4k), Cork(min) 6100$
Honey 4000$
Rental Space for winery 6000$ (500$ a mo)
Controlled Fermentation Equipment (4k) (I spent 6k in reality) (all second hand and Frankenstein creations nothing I got was from a commercial place, all ebay and all scrap yard finds)
So, do the Math
Revenue - Costs = Gross Margin
47,000 - 21100 = 26000
Still looking good right? 26k is a lot of money, but honestly, it is a 1st grade teacher salary.
But then there is income tax (I am negating all the other taxes for simplicity)
26k * (your personal income tax rate) 35% = 9100
Gross Margin - Taxes = Net Profit (take home pay)
26000 - 9100 = 16,900
16,900 dollars for 16 months worth of work, probably 1500 hours of blood sweat and tears worth of effort on my part and you had to have 23k dollars at the beginning to even start the business. If you want to do better, you need to have more sales (which equal more investment dollars to buy raw honey and packaging suppliers) and more time to create more wine. I didn't have another hour to invest, or another dollar to spend, so these were my numbers and I felt it would be useful to those guys starting out.
Have I regretted it...NEVER for a second.....(although I have regretted how 'big' we started. I should have not gone for such a large 300 case run with the budget we had originally, should have gone for 125-175 cases or there abouts)