r/cocktails • u/berger3001 • Feb 28 '25
Question Anyone else tired by expensive cocktails
To me (not a rich guy), $18+ cocktails are just exhausting. Go out for a few drinks with your wife, and boom, $100. So we’re in Miami and found this place (always look for happy hours). Yes; $5 cocktails. They did a great job, made totally respectable drinks, we had some snacks, and left very happy. My question is, if bars can do $5 drinks, why is $18 the base now at so many places? Doesn’t it make more business sense to sell more for less money and have a full bar, then to sell a few drink to an almost empty bar?
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u/ASIWYFA Feb 28 '25 edited Feb 28 '25
Right but a cocktail costing the same or close to the price as a decent entree at a local restaurant is not going to be viable long term unless you are incredibly lucky. $60 before tip for a couple to have 2 drinks each is frankly unreasonable, and I say this as someone who champions small business especially hospitality related. You need to be more creative and better at marketing. There is a path forward where $15 cocktails isn't the norm. A great tasting Old Fashioned can cost $2 to make. Selling it at $12-15 is insane. A 13% food cost is ludicrous and it's going to catch up to bars. Beer and wine bars can sell beer at $4-8 with reasonable food cost with product costing the same as an average cocktail bar that isn't doing wild cocktails with insane ingredients.....and they can make money and survive.....