


3 Days
76
2
$160,000.00
Hey friend, thanks for the interest. This is an awesome business. It is fairly easy to run, simple to hire and train for, and pays well for relatively low overhead. This business is also well insulated from recession as the product is a major grocery staple. I am selling the rights to distribute mission Guerrero and Calidad products to an area in Midvale Utah. the job is basically getting tortillas from the distribution center (California Avenue, Salt Lake City) onto the shelves in the grocery stores. This breaks down into: placing orders, picking those orders up, delivering orders to the stores, and merchandising the product.
This route has five accounts and generates an average of 13k in sales per week. The route owner gets paid an average of 18% on sales, a gross of 2,340/week.
fixed expenses include a device rental fee ($20/wk) warehouse fee ($40/wk) truck and business insurance ($75/wk) gas ($50/wk) stale product. This expense is entirely dependent on ordering, that is the game. Order to little, miss out on sales. Order too much, lose money on commissions. Returns are pretty easy to manage with this route and I aim to keep mine under 10%.
Of the five accounts three are small cash accounts. I deliver product to these once per week. The final two accounts are larger, one still receives only one delivery per week but requires more merchandising. The final account is where all the money is made, this account gets two to three large deliveries per week.
Running the business requires a box truck and I am including mine (international durastar 4300) in the sale. I use the truck three times per week and leave it parked at the warehouse. The warehouse is 25 minutes from the stores. I put an average of five to six thousand miles on the truck per year. not only does this insulate from the fluctuation of fuel costs, but it also keeps the wear and tear very low.
I work 5 days a week and hire out help for the weekends. I average between 4 to 6 hours per day but never go much over 30 hours per week. Most days I get started around 6:00 AM and I count on being home around 11:00 AM.
This is a solid first business or awesome as an additional stream of income. When people lose jobs, the government gives them money to buy this product. When a virus breaks out this business is considered essential and people buy the product in record numbers.
Please feel free to shoot me a call or text, happy to show numbers and do ride alongs.
KSL Classifieds makes it easy to buy and sell with peace of mind. Check our safety tips and quickly report anything that doesn’t look right to keep your experience smooth and secure.











3 Days
76
2
$160,000.00
KSL Classifieds makes it easy to buy and sell with peace of mind. Check our safety tips and quickly report anything that doesn’t look right to keep your experience smooth and secure.



Hey friend, thanks for the interest. This is an awesome business. It is fairly easy to run, simple to hire and train for, and pays well for relatively low overhead. This business is also well insulated from recession as the product is a major grocery staple. I am selling the rights to distribute mission Guerrero and Calidad products to an area in Midvale Utah. the job is basically getting tortillas from the distribution center (California Avenue, Salt Lake City) onto the shelves in the grocery stores. This breaks down into: placing orders, picking those orders up, delivering orders to the stores, and merchandising the product.
This route has five accounts and generates an average of 13k in sales per week. The route owner gets paid an average of 18% on sales, a gross of 2,340/week.
fixed expenses include a device rental fee ($20/wk) warehouse fee ($40/wk) truck and business insurance ($75/wk) gas ($50/wk) stale product. This expense is entirely dependent on ordering, that is the game. Order to little, miss out on sales. Order too much, lose money on commissions. Returns are pretty easy to manage with this route and I aim to keep mine under 10%.
Of the five accounts three are small cash accounts. I deliver product to these once per week. The final two accounts are larger, one still receives only one delivery per week but requires more merchandising. The final account is where all the money is made, this account gets two to three large deliveries per week.
Running the business requires a box truck and I am including mine (international durastar 4300) in the sale. I use the truck three times per week and leave it parked at the warehouse. The warehouse is 25 minutes from the stores. I put an average of five to six thousand miles on the truck per year. not only does this insulate from the fluctuation of fuel costs, but it also keeps the wear and tear very low.
I work 5 days a week and hire out help for the weekends. I average between 4 to 6 hours per day but never go much over 30 hours per week. Most days I get started around 6:00 AM and I count on being home around 11:00 AM.
This is a solid first business or awesome as an additional stream of income. When people lose jobs, the government gives them money to buy this product. When a virus breaks out this business is considered essential and people buy the product in record numbers.
Please feel free to shoot me a call or text, happy to show numbers and do ride alongs.










