Starting a bar business is a twelve to eighteen month process when done right, not a weekend project. This page covers the essential steps in the right sequence – concept development, business planning, funding, location, licensing, build-out, staffing, and opening. It is the process-focused companion to the broader How to Open a Bar pillar framework.
Before the mechanics, the fundamental question: is bar ownership the right move for you specifically? Honest self-assessment on five questions:
First-time founders without hospitality experience who are generic-shopping for a business to own tend to struggle. Founders with operational experience, committed time, adequate capital, and a concept they believe in tend to succeed. This does not mean the first profile cannot succeed – it means the learning curve is steeper and the capital cushion needs to be larger.
Lock the concept before spending money on anything else. A concept includes venue type, target customer, positioning, price point, operational hours, and atmosphere. Concepts you can articulate in one paragraph tend to execute well. Concepts that require five paragraphs to explain are not yet ready.
Lock the concept before spending money on anything else. A concept includes venue type, target customer, positioning, price point, operational hours, and atmosphere. Concepts you can articulate in one paragraph tend to execute well. Concepts that require five paragraphs to explain are not yet ready.
Confirm the concept matches a real market opportunity. Drive target areas. Visit competing and complementary venues. Talk to customers. Check liquor license availability. Review demographics. Three weeks of validation work is cheap protection against years of operating a venue that does not match the market.
Write the complete business plan – executive summary, market analysis, products and services, marketing, operations, management team, financial projections, funding request. This is what lenders, investors, and landlords will read. For the complete customizable bar business plan, see the Bar Business Plan product. For the guide on what goes into a defensible plan, see the Bar Business Plan Guide pillar.
Secure the capital. Sources typically include owner equity, SBA loans, private investors, equipment financing, and sometimes supplier financing. Most new bars need 20-40 percent owner equity as a starting position. For detailed startup cost analysis that supports funding conversations, see the Bar Startup Costs pillar.
Engage a commercial real estate broker. Evaluate multiple locations. Confirm liquor license eligibility at the specific address before negotiating lease terms. Engage a hospitality-experienced commercial attorney before signing any lease.
Submit license applications immediately after lease signing – licensing has independent timelines that run parallel to construction. Build-out proceeds according to the dependency sequence mapped in the Critical Path Checklist pillar. Both tracks must complete before opening.
Hire management 90 days out, key roles 60 days out, line staff 45 days out. Begin structured training 21 days out. For the complete training system including the bartender training manual, see Bartender Training for New Bars and bartendertrainingmanual.com.
Soft opening events 7-10 days before public opening to stress-test the team and workflow. Final adjustments. Opening day marketing coordinated with license activation.
Each step above has resources that support it. For founders who want the complete system in one purchase – business plan, startup cost spreadsheet, critical path checklist, and bartender training manual – see the Open a Bar Founder Bundle.
How to Open a Bar pillar →the complete opening framework
Bar Business Plan Guide →the planning layer
Bar Startup Costs pillar →the numbers
Critical Path Checklist pillar →execution sequence
Bar Business Plan (product) →complete plan document
Open a Bar Founder Bundle →complete operating system
Ryan Dahlstrom
Author & Expert Witness
20+ years of hospitality operations. Author of The Ultimate Responsible Alcohol Service Manual and The Bar Starts Here.
12 Month Financial Summary
A one-page editable outline of the four-phase framework. Adapt it for your venue.
The Bar Business Plan is the planning side of 20+ years of bar operating experience — structured to the questions lenders, investors, and landlords actually ask.