Why High Margin Bottles Are Hurting Your Bar
Key Takeaways
- Liquidate slow movers by pricing for dollars, not percentages. A bottle that sells at a 70% cost is infinitely better than a bottle that sells at a 20% cost zero times.
- A bottle with a great margin that doesn’t move is worse for your bar than a bottle with an average margin that turns over weekly. Velocity matters more than percentage.
- Your inventory turnover target should be 14 to 21 days. Anything sitting longer than 30 days is either a deliberate vanity choice or a cash flow problem.
- A handful of high-end vanity bottles is fine. Sixty bottles you can’t move is the same money stuck on a shelf instead of working in your business.
- Contribution dollars beat contribution margin. A $30 pour at 70% cost still puts more cash in your register than a $10 pour at 20% cost.
Introduction
Most bar owners are proud of their back bar. The premium bottles, the rare finds, the high-end whiskeys with the reputation. The label everyone notices when they sit down. Some of those bottles are working hard for you. Some are decoration with a price tag.
The problem is that owners can’t usually tell which is which, because they’re using the wrong number to evaluate them. The conversation in this industry is always about pour cost and margin percentage. What’s your liquor cost? What’s your beer cost? What’s your overall pour cost? Those numbers matter. They are not, however, sufficient. A bottle with a beautiful margin that you sell two shots out of in a month is one of the worst-performing assets on your books, worse than a bottle with an average margin that you turn over every week.
The thing that makes the difference is velocity. How fast inventory moves. How quickly the cash you spent on that bottle comes back to you, plus more. When velocity is missing, margin percentage becomes a vanity number. It looks great on paper and does nothing for your business.
Margin Percentage Is Only Half the Story
There are two ways to think about what a sale puts in your pocket. Most bar owners use one of them. The successful ones use both.
Cost percentage is the cost of an item divided by what you charge for it. A $10 drink that costs you $2 has a 20% cost. That’s the number you use to set targets — overall liquor cost should sit at or below 18% for most bars, draft beer around 25%, wine around 25%. It’s the number your distributor talks about. It’s the number on every industry article ever written about menu pricing.
Contribution dollars is the price minus the cost of the ingredients. That same $10 drink with $2 of cost contributes $8 to your business. That’s the number that actually pays your rent.
Cost percentage tells you how efficient a sale is. Contribution dollars tell you how much money the sale makes you. They are not the same thing, and the difference is where most bars are leaving money on the table.
Consider two pours. A standard well bourbon on the rocks, $12, costs you $2.40, that’s a 20% cost and $9.60 in contribution dollars. A premium bourbon on the rocks, $30, costs you $6, same 20% cost, but $24 in contribution dollars. The margin percentage is identical. The work of pouring and serving is identical. The dollars are not even close.
The same logic shows up even more dramatically when the costs differ. The same well bourbon at 20% cost gives you $9.60. A premium pour priced at $30 with a $9 cost (30% cost, five points worse than your target) gives you $21 in contribution dollars. The “worse” margin pour puts more than twice as much money on the bottom line for the same labor.
This isn’t an argument for ignoring cost percentage. Out-of-control costs eat profit fast. It’s an argument for not letting cost percentage be the only number you optimize. The dollars matter. Often they matter more.
Inventory Is the Worst Way to Hold Money
Once you understand contribution dollars, the next piece falls into place: a sale you don’t make is contribution dollars you don’t get. And bottles that don’t move are sales you don’t make.
Every dollar sitting in inventory is a dollar you cannot put in your pocket, cannot use to fix the broken cooler, cannot deploy into a marketing push, cannot save for the slow month. In financial terms, cash is a short-term asset, and real estate is a long-term asset — cash is liquid and easy to move, real estate is harder to convert. In the bar business, cash is a short-term asset, and inventory is a long-term asset, especially inventory nobody wants to buy. A bottle of obscure mezcal you’ve been sitting on for a year is functionally illiquid. You spent the cash. The cash is gone. Until the bottle sells, the cash isn’t coming back.
This is why slow inventory hurts so much more than the line item suggests. It’s not just a margin problem. It’s a cash flow problem. You are constantly running tighter than you should because thousands of dollars are sitting on a shelf instead of moving through your business.
The squeeze rarely shows up as a crisis. It’s not the moment you can’t make payroll. It’s the constant low-grade tension of feeling broke while doing fine on paper. It’s pulling from the wrong pocket to cover a vendor invoice. It’s deferring repairs because cash is tight even though sales are solid. That feeling, more often than not, is your back bar holding your money hostage.
Your Inventory Turnover Target
The number you want to hit is 14 to 21 days of inventory on hand, meaning your full bar inventory turns over completely every two to three weeks. That’s the comfortable range for most bars. You can push down toward seven days if you have tight purchasing systems and reliable distributors, but a lot of operators don’t sleep well there. Two to three weeks gives you margin for delivery hiccups without trapping months of cash on the shelf.
The math is simple. Take your monthly cost of goods sold, divide by 30, and multiply by your target days on hand. If your monthly COGS runs $20,000, your target inventory value is between roughly $9,300 and $14,000. If you’re sitting on $35,000 of inventory, you have a problem regardless of how nice it looks.
| Days on Hand | What It Means | Where Your Cash Is |
|---|---|---|
| 7–14 days | Aggressive, tight purchasing | Working in your business |
| 14–21 days | Comfortable target range | Working in your business |
| 21–30 days | Loose, examine why | Partly trapped |
| 30+ days | Slow movers piling up | Trapped on a shelf |
| 60+ days | Active cash flow problem | Choking the operation |
The total number tells you whether you have a problem. The line items tell you where the problem is.
The Two Categories of Slow Movers
When you look at bottles that have been sitting longer than 30 days, every one of them falls into one of two buckets. Knowing which is which is what separates a managed back bar from a pile of expensive decorations.
Category 1: Deliberate vanity bottles. Every bar has a few of these, and that’s fine. The Louis XIII you keep behind the bar because high-end people notice it. The rare scotch that signals you take whiskey seriously. The bottle that gets opened maybe once a quarter, but its presence on the shelf signals something about your concept that matters more than its turnover. This is a marketing decision wearing an inventory line. As long as you’ve actively decided that the bottle is there for that reason, and as long as the decision is limited to a handful of bottles, not dozens, it’s a legitimate use of capital.
Category 2: Accidental vanity bottles. This is the bigger problem, and it’s harder to see. These are bottles you bought because you liked them, because a distributor talked you into them, because something seemed like it would sell, because you were trying to round out a category. Then they didn’t move, and you didn’t notice, and the cash sat there. Some of them have been sitting for six months. Some for a year. They aren’t doing anything for your concept. They aren’t generating revenue. They’re just there because they got there, and nothing made them leave.
The honest test is straightforward. For every bottle that’s been on the shelf longer than 30 days, ask: Did I deliberately put this here knowing it wouldn’t sell often, accepting that decision as a brand or concept choice? If yes, leave it alone. If you have to pause and rationalize the answer — if you find yourself constructing a reason after the fact — it’s accidental. Move it.
A reasonable cap on deliberate vanity bottles is somewhere between one and ten, for most bars. A high-end whiskey bar can carry more than a neighborhood spot. But if you’re sitting on 50 or 60 bottles that haven’t moved in a month, almost none of them are deliberate. You have an accidental back bar problem. Your job is to liquidate it.
How to Move Slow Inventory
Once you’ve identified the bottles that need to go, the strategy is simple in concept and counterintuitive in execution: price for dollars, not for percentage.
Most bar owners try to liquidate slow inventory by trying to upsell it, hoping to cover their standard margins and call it done. That doesn’t work. Slow movers are slow because they’re priced as if they were premium high-velocity items. A bottle that’s been sitting for three months is telling you the market in your bar has rejected the price. Raising it doesn’t help. Holding it doesn’t help. The only thing that helps is making the price a deal.
Here’s the math. Say you have a bottle where a 1.5-ounce pour costs you $9 and you currently price it at $30 — a normal 30% cost, which already runs hot relative to your 18% liquor cost target. The drink hasn’t sold in two months. Your usual cocktail menu runs around $12 with about a $2.40 cost — $9.60 in contribution dollars per pour, your normal benchmark.
Drop that $30 pour to $19. The cost percentage explodes, $9 cost on a $19 sale is 47%, over twice your liquor cost target. Looks terrible. But the contribution dollars are $10, and that drink moves. If you sell it twice a week instead of zero times a month, you’re generating $80 a month in contribution dollars where you were previously generating zero. The high cost percentage is irrelevant. The dollars are real.
Push the price further if you want to move it faster. At $15, your cost is 60%. Looks even worse. But you’re now getting $6 in contribution dollars per pour. If it sells eight times a week, that’s almost $200 a month. Still better than zero from a bottle gathering dust. And once the bottle is gone, your cash is back.
The principle: a bottle that sells at a 60% cost is infinitely better than a bottle that never sells at a 20%. The percentage is always a way to the dollars. When the percentage stops producing dollars, the percentage stops mattering.
After you move it, the other half of the discipline kicks in: don’t buy it again. The bottle proved itself wrong for your bar. Whatever the distributor says, whatever the trend story is, whatever made you think it would sell the first time, the data has already come back. Don’t make the same mistake.
Where Bar Owners Get This Wrong
Treating high cost percentages as failure. A 60% cost on a slow mover you’re liquidating isn’t a failure. It’s a deliberate strategy to extract trapped cash. The failure was buying the bottle in the first place and pricing it for margin instead of velocity. Don’t compound the mistake by holding the bottle out of pride.
Confusing premium positioning with slow inventory. Some bottles need to be expensive on the menu because the price is part of the brand signal. A $40 pour of a known premium spirit positions the bar a certain way. That’s defensible. A $40 pour of an obscure bottle nobody asks for, and nobody recognizes, is not premium positioning — it’s an accidental vanity bottle wearing a price tag.
Ignoring monthly turnover until it becomes a crisis. The cash flow squeeze from slow inventory is rarely sudden. It accumulates over months as bottles pile up. Owners notice when they’re already $20,000 over their target inventory level and feeling broke. The discipline is monthly, not quarterly — review days-on-hand and SKU-level velocity once a month, every month, before the squeeze sets in.
Buying because the distributor said so. Distributors have inventory targets too. They are not necessarily aligned with yours. A bottle a distributor needs to clear is not automatically a bottle your bar needs to carry. The distributor’s incentives end at product delivery. Yours start there.
Discounting without a stop date. A liquidation price isn’t a permanent menu price. Move the bottle, then take it off the menu. Leaving a fire-sale price in place trains regulars to expect it on other items and erodes your overall margin discipline.
The Bottom Line
Margin percentage is a useful number. It is not the only number that matters, and on slow-moving inventory, it is the wrong number entirely. The right number is the cash that lands in your register, and the speed at which it lands. A bottle that turns over fast at a mediocre margin will outperform a beautiful-margin bottle that sits for a month every time you run the math.
Audit your back bar. Identify the bottles that haven’t moved in 30 days. Sort them into deliberate vanity (keep), and accidental vanity (price for liquidation, move, don’t reorder). Watch your inventory days-on-hand drop into the 14 to 21-day range. Watch your cash position get healthier without changing a single thing about your sales volume.
The cash is already yours. It’s just sitting on a shelf instead of in your account.
For a personalized review of your back bar inventory and a plan to free up the cash trapped in slow movers, book a free strategy session at barbusinesscoach.com/strategy-session.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a good inventory turnover for a bar?
Most bars should target 14 to 21 days of inventory on hand, meaning the entire bar inventory turns over every two to three weeks. Aggressive operators with tight purchasing systems can push toward 7 days, but that requires reliable distributors and disciplined par levels. Inventory sitting longer than 30 days typically indicates slow movers that need attention.
What’s the difference between contribution margin and contribution dollars?
Contribution margin is a percentage, the price minus the cost, divided by the price. Contribution dollars is the absolute dollar amount left after costs. A $10 drink with a $2 cost has an 80% contribution margin and $8 in contribution dollars. A $30 pour with a $9 cost has a 70% contribution margin but $21 in contribution dollars. The dollars matter more than the percentage on a per-sale basis.
Why do high-margin bottles tie up cash flow?
High-margin bottles are typically expensive to purchase, which means each unit represents a significant cash outlay. When those bottles don’t sell, the cash sits on the shelf rather than circulating through the business. A back bar with $20,000 in slow-moving premium inventory has $20,000 unavailable for repairs, marketing, payroll, or growth — regardless of how good the margins look on paper.
How do I identify slow-moving inventory in my bar?
Run a report from your point-of-sale system showing units sold per SKU over the last 30, 60, and 90 days. Cross-reference against current on-hand counts. Any bottle where on-hand quantity exceeds 30 days of typical sales volume is a slow mover. Sort the list by dollar value tied up to prioritize which bottles to address first — the most expensive slow movers should move first.
Should I keep premium bottles that don’t sell often?
A small number of premium bottles can serve a legitimate marketing or concept purpose even with low velocity. The rule of thumb is one to five deliberate vanity bottles, depending on the bar’s concept. Beyond that, slow-moving premium bottles usually indicate accidental over-ordering rather than strategy. The test is whether the bottle was deliberately chosen as a brand signal or whether it ended up on the shelf without a clear purpose.
How do I price slow-moving liquor to move it?
Price for dollars rather than for a percentage. Calculate the cost per pour, then set a price that beats a normal cocktail’s contribution dollars when you account for likely volume. A bottle that sells at a 70% cost percentage but moves several times a week generates more total cash than a bottle priced at a 20% cost that doesn’t sell. Treat the high cost percentage as a temporary strategy to recover trapped cash, then take the item off the menu and don’t reorder.
Should I reorder a bottle after liquidating it?
Generally no. A bottle that required liquidation pricing to move has already demonstrated that it doesn’t fit the bar at normal pricing. Replacing the cash with a higher-velocity bottle is almost always the better move. The exception is bottles that were slow due to external factors (a temporary trend shift, a one-time pricing error) that have since changed — in which case, reorder cautiously and watch the velocity carefully.
