Acquisitions Anonymous - #1 for business buying, selling and operating - The $2M Gun Range Deal: Worth It or a Trap?
Episode Date: August 29, 2025In this episode, the hosts analyze a Colorado gun range and retail shop listed at $2M, diving into regulatory risks, slim margins, and whether the business is worth its heavy inventory investment.Busi...ness Listing – https://www.tworld.com/agents/charleymitchell/listings/turnkey-and-established-gun-range-and-shopWelcome to Acquisitions Anonymous – the #1 podcast for small business M&A. Every week, we break down businesses for sale and talk about buying, operating, and growing them.💰 Sponsored by:Capital Pad – Buying a small business and need funding? Or looking to invest in others' deals? Capital Pad is the go-to marketplace for acquisition entrepreneurs and investors. It handles all the legal and governance headaches so you can focus on deals. Backed by entrepreneur Travis Jamison. Check out https://capitalpad.com and tell them Acquisitions Anonymous sent you!Heron Finance – build a personalized private credit portfolio for steady monthly income—without the market rollercoaster. In minutes, take a quiz, see your custom plan, and invest in 12+ top-tier funds from managers like Ares, Apollo, and KKR, overseeing $1T+ with loss rates under 0.5%. Higher returns than bonds, lower volatility than stocks—start earning today at https://www.heronfinance.comThe team reviews a 40-year-old turnkey gun range and retail shop in Colorado listed for $2 million. The business reports $2.7M in revenue and $460K in SDE, supported by nearly $900K in inventory and a team of 13 employees. With seller financing available and a retiring owner, the opportunity comes with both operational history and growth potential.Key Highlights:- Asking price: $2M with $460K SDE on $2.7M revenue- Nearly $900K in inventory—likely included in price- Regulatory risk: environmental hazards, FFL complexity, shifting gun laws- Margins: Firearms have little to no margin; profits come from accessories and range- Nearby competing listing offers leaner ops with higher returnsSubscribe to weekly our Newsletter and get curated deals in your inboxAdvertise with us by clicking here Do you love Acquanon and want to see our smiling faces? Subscribe to our Youtube channel. Do you enjoy our content? Rate our show! Follow us on Twitter @acquanon Learnings about small business acquisitions and operations. For inquiries or suggestions, email us at contact@acquanon.com
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Acquisitions Anonymous.
This is the Internet's number one podcast on buying, selling, and operating small businesses.
And today, I'm one of your hosts, Bill Dallessandro, and I am with Heather Anderson and Mills Snell.
And we have an interesting one today.
This is a gun store and gun range located in Colorado.
It is doing $2 million of sales.
They sell guns, but they also operate a gun range.
So we talk about the dynamics of the firearms industry.
We talk about some interesting things about gun ranges and that they're not really
replaceable or you can't really build new ones because no communities want them there.
And there's also a whole hazmat angle.
So in some ways, this is a very defensible business.
We also talk about some of the challenges, some of the benefits of the firearms industry,
gun ranges specifically.
We talk about the inventory challenges.
We also talk about more broadly how to diligence in industry, say you're not
familiar with the firearms industry, how would you get familiar enough to entertain a deal like this?
So without further ado, I hope you guys enjoy this episode of Acquisitions Anonymous.
We'll say Acquisition Anonymous. Hello, another episode of Acquisition Anonymous.
We don't have 100% beers anymore.
And thumbs downing on just the plus inventory alone.
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is for informational purposes only. All right, welcome to another episode of Acquisition Anonymous.
We've got Bill, myself, Mills and Heather.
How are y'all doing?
Hey.
Great.
Enjoying the summer.
It's not 7.30 a.m.
Heather's time, so she's feeling wait.
I have energy.
It's different.
Yeah.
Heather's looking alive.
So we have a listener submitted deal today.
So if you listen to the pod, go on X.
Somebody, an anonymous person on X, tweeted this at us, or X this at us.
are ex the saddesty,
and we're going to do it because it's a cool,
it's a cool deal.
So this is from our friends over at Trans World Business Advisors.
So Trans World, Trans World is a franchise, is it not?
They are.
It's like a franchise business brokerage.
So anytime you see Trans World,
it's really you got to figure out which individual broker you're buying from.
But this is a turnkey and established gun range
and gun shop in Colorado.
They're asking $2 million.
It makes $460,000 a year on $2.7 million of sales.
It's got almost $900,000 of inventory in guns, I would assume,
$125,000 of furniture fixtures and equipment.
13 employees, and it has been around for almost 40 years since 1985,
and it is selling because the owner is retiring.
It says this well-established turnkey gun shop and shooting range
offers an exceptional opportunity for a firearms enthusiast or investor.
Known for decades of expertise and service,
the business has earned a stellar reputation and a loyal customer base.
The operation features a diverse and extensive inventory of firearms,
ammo, and accessories, and it benefits from a recognized brand within the firearms community.
With a proven track record of strong sales and growing members,
memberships. The business is on pace to surpass performance from the previous three years by the end of the
current fiscal year. This is a rare opportunity to step into a fully operational business with a solid
foundation, trusted name, and continued growth trajectory. Seller financing is available for a well-qualified
buyer. That's all we got. Has anyone ever looked inside the financials of a gun range before?
I don't think I've looked deeply at one before. I have looked at gun retail sales. And
And this is what interests me about this one is how much of it is selling guns, the retail shop.
It's a lot of inventory versus, you know, the revenue that they get from running the gun range.
I would think it's more heavy on the gun sales.
But I honestly, this is the question because I don't know the answer.
What is the average cost of a gun?
Average?
It depends.
But, I mean, you know, for a pistol, you can spend between $500 and $2,500 for, you.
a rifle or an assault rifle or shotgun,
I mean, it can be a thousand to many, many, many thousands.
Okay.
Yeah, so, I mean, they've got probably,
and remember, I assume this inventory is held at wholesale costs.
They probably have $900,000 of inventory.
That is going to be hundreds, if not thousands of guns in stock.
Okay.
So it feels to me like it's more of a retail shop that is also a gun range.
And our most gun range is that way,
like I've been to gun ranges before that didn't.
sell guns. Is this common to have both? It's way more common to have both. A lot of outdoor ranges
will just be a range, you know, and a lot of times those are like state owned. There are some
private ones too. But yeah, the vast majority, the only way you can really make money is if you have
the retail sales, because then you're able to sell ammo. You're also able to sell accessories.
You can have memberships to the range that get people in. But the big thing in this space is,
is having your FFL, being a registered firearm dealer.
So if I go online and I want to buy a gun, it has to get delivered to an FFL.
And I tell the online gun store where to send it, which FFL to use.
And that gets me in the door for a background check.
And for all the, every state has slightly different laws.
Like I think in Colorado, there's a waiting period.
You can't just walk in and buy the gun and, you know, walk out, things to like promote
some kind of public safety factor.
And usually you get to charge a fee for being the transferring FF&L.
So you've got, you know, you make 50 bucks just right there.
Plus they're in your store.
Hey, you need some ammo.
Hey, you need a case.
Hey, you need a scope.
Yeah.
Exactly.
And it's it's kind of like the interesting bond that ties all these different theoretical competitors
together because you would say, well, the online retailer is a competitor to this,
you know, typical retail.
That's the typical.
dynamic, but in this case, the online feeds the retail, you know, the brick and mortar retail,
and they rely on each other. And there's a very interesting pricing dynamic that happens. So I actually
looked at the firearm space. We did a couple episodes on firearms in the past, if you're interested in
this space. But I looked at buying businesses in firearms. And there's a very interesting margin
dynamic that happens, at least on the internet, which is that the margin in the actual firearm is
almost zero. I mean, I'm talking you can sell like a thousand dollar pistol and make $5
of margin. Like almost nothing because all of the margin then pools and aggregates in the
accessories. The optics, the optics especially can be hundreds of not thousands of dollars for
various types of optics and their 50% margin. So everybody is kind of slugging it out to sell
accessories. The guns are the lost leader or the break-even leader. And it's all
also interesting that the online stores always have the best prices because they're all
price competing with each other all the time. And then the in-person stores always have
worse prices, but almost by exactly the cost of an FFL transfer. Right? So you can buy it online
at the best price and then pay 50 bucks to the retailer or you can just walk into the retailer
and pay 50 bucks more and you as a consumer are basically a wash. So the retailers,
it's weird in this industry. The retailers have defensible way to capture margin.
against the e-commerce stores.
Yeah.
The other interesting thing about this is the regulatory risk around anything firearm-related.
I remember looking at a really, really large company maybe eight years ago that was a brace manufacturer.
So, like, firearm laws are incredibly stringent.
I would say kind of borderline in the same level as, like, you know, beer and, you know, spirits distilling.
Like, it's just you need a very, very, very, very specialty focus to know what you're doing in this space, like health care law or anything else.
Like, it's this level of detail.
But we looked at this company that was making braces, which a brace is an accessory that goes on the back of what's called a, there's, pistol is kind of like a elastic term now.
Like, Heather, you probably think like a pistol is just like a handgun.
Well, now there are AR pistols, which looks like.
like a small assault rifle, but it's still designated as a pistol. And the rules state that you can't
put a stock on the back. You can only have a brace. Well, we looked at this company that was making like,
I think it was $9 million a year in EBITDA selling braces. But the problem was, is the regulatory
risk around them, it was almost like go to zero risk. Like the company was printing money,
hand over fist. But one law can come out. You know, one assault rifle ban, one headline, you know,
Those things drive change in this industry, but it's almost inverse.
So from the folks that I know in the industry, when, you know, Biden was in office,
every time he opened his mouth, they would sell more guns.
But then when Trump came in office, people were like, oh, well, we're not scared that we're
going to lose access to firearms and ammunition.
So it takes the pressure off of selling.
So it's this weird dynamic that you really have to be tuned into to know whether or not
you're kind of on the rising or the falling tide.
Well, they always say Democrats are the best gun salesman for that reason, right?
But what's interesting is reading the description of this business.
So as we sit here in 2025 with three and a half years of Trump left to go, they say they're having a great year.
They say that this year they're going to do better than each of the last three years, which would have been Biden years.
So they're having a positive trajectory, even during a time, I would think, when the firearms industry cycles downwards.
So that's positive.
I like to see that.
They don't really say they have a niche, like you're talking about braces or anything like
that's probably a very diverse inventory.
No, this would be very diverse.
Yeah, that would be more like a manufacturer.
Yeah.
This is, I mean, I don't think we have a city, right, Bill?
We don't know if this is like in a rural.
It just says Colorado.
So, I mean, I'm thinking for it to do, you know, $2.7 million.
I haven't looked at a ton of these, but I think this is still a small, you know,
a small gun retail store.
And so maybe it's in kind of a,
more of a rural area or a suburban area and not a major metro.
The one thing that I like about this is that it is not going anywhere.
The people who come to this store and buy firearms, buy ammunition, use the gun range.
It's very steady.
It's going to keep happening short of some major, you know, political regulatory compliance thing that comes in and just, but there's never, there's never going to be zero gun stores.
in Colorado. So I think this business probably has some staying power. You have to be willing to
work retail and retail hours, which is predominantly, you know, nights and weekends for a business like
this. People get off work and they want to come by some bullets and they want to shoot. You know,
it's, that's just what, that's this dynamic. Well, and this is only an eight year old business.
And they're saying it's semi-absentee. So somebody started to. I pull the rug out from under you.
there's another gun range for sale also on Trans World, which I clicked over to.
The one that we're supposed to be talking about is 40 years old.
Oh, you switched on me.
I switched on you.
I cheated.
Yeah.
Sorry.
That was my fault.
I'm not going crazy, but I am, but, you know.
But so we like the 40-year-old one better than the eight-year-old.
Yeah.
Okay.
And this one doesn't say semi-absentees.
All right.
So now I'm back on track.
Okay.
Yeah.
There was something that I noticed, though, valuation-wise.
Um, you know, I'm not a fan of SDE because when we service debt, we are servicing debt after salary.
So, 460 SDE turns into probably 300. I mean, Colorado's not super cheap place to live. Maybe, maybe this is super rural and it's less than that. But if it's 300 of EBITDA, this is over a 6x. And what it tells me is that 900,000 or so of inventory, they're trying to get paid like a multiple of cash flow plus the inventory.
which like the math doesn't math, you know, when you do it that way.
Yeah, well, that's going to be the problem.
If you've got to tack 900K on top of this to buy all the inventory, this is going to be really tough.
Yeah, yeah.
I think that's what they already did in the price.
This is going to be a very inventory-driven business.
You've got to have the inventory on the floor in order to actually have something to sell.
Most people want to come in and, you know, feel it, touch it, buy it, even if they can't walk out with it the same day.
But then the other dynamic here is like trends.
I'm not the best person to buy this business because I don't know the trends,
especially the trends in this market about what's actually moving and what's not.
And if I come in and I look at their $900,000 of inventory, I don't know if it's relevant or not.
It could be super stale.
And I won't know until I own the business for two years and go, oh, none of this stuff is selling.
And I paid face value for it.
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A good analogy is like this is sporting goods, right? Like you've got to know which brands are
cool. You got to know which technology is coming out and new, you know, what types of rifles
and handguns people are into. It's like it has trends. It has fads. It has new technology, just like
anything else. Yeah. And it's a lot of inventory for the size company that it is. That is expensive
to run a business with that much tied up in inventory. And I think this is a very competitive space.
I mean, yes, you're anchored as the kind of local retailer, but the attention is, you know,
being competed on an online level way above you. And so if you want to grow this business, I think
you're incredibly limited. Do you double the size of the store footprint? Do you double the size
of the gun range? Let's assume your market can actually sustain that. Then you're just doubling
your inventory needs. You know, you're like it's, I don't know that it's a race that you ever kind of win.
You never get off the wheel, so to speak. Now, I mean, I think you're, I mean, you're right,
Mel, like tripling this business is going to be tough. I think there are some things like
gun ranges near me will offer classes and certifications and trainings. And sometimes I have a friend who owns one of the ranges here. And they try to get kind of more exotic allocations of some interesting inventory. So I think there's things you could do to move more dollars through your existing footprint. But like, you know, and that's, but that's incremental. You know, you grow the business 10, 20 percent a year, something like that or probably not a year, but probably once, you know, and then hold it. I did the reason I was clicking on this other one,
though is there is also
another semi-absentee
turnkey firearm store for sale
in Douglas County, Colorado, which is
near Denver, just south of Denver.
This one has another 621
of SDE,
priced on a similar multiple
about 4X, but it has
significantly less
inventory, which I
thought only five employees.
And only five employees. And I wonder
if you could,
if I were going to buy one of these businesses, I would
absolutely get the book on both and figure out what one of them is doing well and the other
one's not doing. Maybe you can buy them both and take a whole bunch of cost out. Maybe you share
employees. Yeah. And even though it's trans world, like you said, this is a franchise. So it's two
different trans worlds. It's two different franchises of trans worlds. So they're competing with
each other on these two listings, which is interesting. Yeah. Yeah. There's really is.
I don't think this is a take it to the moon business. The thing that's tough on the FFL too is
I don't want to say almost anybody, but it's a lot easier to get an FFL and act as a discount
transfer than it is to buy $900,000 worth of inventory and have a gun store. So like if you search
your town FFL, you will find 50 of them, you know, some of which are in shady homes and stuff.
Like home-based FFLs, which is scary. I'm not sure I'm going to someone's house to pick up my firearm.
But still, like, you know, so you're getting nipped at from below and then you've got, you know, the massive online firearms retailers that kind of take up all the auction above.
So this is, this is a local business.
This is people in this market who want to transfer a firearm or to go shoot and maybe they will rent a firearm while they're there to try it out and then maybe buy it if they're thinking about it.
So most ranges will also rent and sell ammo.
This is a local retail business with a local,
kind of services business. There's
CapEx to put these things in. You know, you kind of need the
baffle that's bulletproof and
safe. So like there's
a ROI. I also wonder about
kind of build versus buy. I imagine
they're kind of saturated so you wouldn't
want to. So I know a little bit about
these facilities in and of themselves.
They are incredibly expensive
to build. Not just because
of the, you know, bulletproofing and the
baffles and everything that go in, but
the air quality. I may have talked
about this on a previous episode, but
the air quality and the air filtration because of so much lead dust,
we've done some work in one.
And the employees have the ones who go back into the back to, like,
clean the filters,
they have to wear full respirators.
And they have to get blood,
blood tests done for lead poisoning every six months.
Yikes.
Because there's so much,
I mean,
everything,
way back in the back,
everything's covered in dust.
Like just lead dust everywhere.
And if they leak,
you know,
if the lead dust is pouring out of the building,
because of like a building problem,
the fines are incredible, the environmental fines.
Environmental cleanup.
Oh, interesting.
So I do think that this is one of those things that, like,
if you could get in and make sure this isn't like about to fall apart,
the value of having one that's already opened,
licensed, credentialed, inspected, all those things,
is a lot better than trying to build one from scratch.
Because certain municipalities don't want them.
I knew some guys, Bill, who were trying to do one in,
the Charlotte area, and the county just was basically like, we're going to make it so hard.
You know, we don't want you to do it. Yeah. Yeah. I'm stuck on the metrics of one of them has higher
SDE, lower inventory, and five employees. And the other one, you know, 13 employees for less
STE and double the inventory. Boy, that tells you there's a big range of, you know, which,
no pun intended, between, you know, in terms of how you can run one of these. And I'd certainly rather be the one
running with five employees and less inventory. Much better. You've, like, y'all both are hitting
on something, which we don't really get the benefit of doing typically on the episode, but this is
kind of the game, right, and the puzzle of looking at a business for sale. It fell conveniently into
our lap this time because we just had another very, very similar listing in the same geography
on the bottom of the page. But whenever you pick a thesis and you can really start drilling down,
and all of a sudden your sample size isn't one,
but I mean, our sample size is two,
and we're already learning something.
Imagine if you looked at 25, you know, gun stores and ranges,
the things that you would figure out would just be amazing.
And that's why you kind of, at a certain point in searching,
you kind of have to pick something and run with it
because you just can't boil the ocean fast enough.
Yeah.
All right.
I got to wrap us up.
Heather, thumbs up, thumbs down.
Thumbs down because lenders don't like gun ranges,
so I can't do anything with this one.
Mills, thumbs up or thumbs down?
I'm thumbs down just because it's Colorado.
I like Colorado,
but I don't know that it's the place
that I would want to own this business.
It's far away from me,
so that's a big part of it too.
I think I'm thumbs down just because
I don't think I can grow it
and I don't love the margins.
All right.
If you like this one,
we did a couple other firearms ones.
Go to ACQU and on.com.
You can learn about this
or a ton of other small businesses
that are for sale.
get our reactions. So thank you for listening this episode of Acquisition and Honors. We will see
on the next one.
