I've looked into this since my wife and I want to start something similar. There are a couple of ways to navigate around this. 1) If you are a vendor at a larger event you would typically fall under the event license, granted they have one. So in that case you would not need to acquire anything personally as long as the event coordinators allow you to serve alcohol. 2) If you are doing private events, say for a corporation or wedding, you can typically navigate around this by essentially selling your service as a mobile bar with bartenders. You do not supply the liquor or beer but merely provide the facilities to do so. Client will buy everything for the event and you just serve it. There are other models around this, and it varies state to state, but these were the two largest scenarios I've found.
@@Stubs2424 thank you for the information. I'm currently looking to do something but of course, COVID-19 has put a Holt on that. I have my own vintage catering caravan that I'm modifying to become a mobile bar. In regards to your comment, are those rules for the USA or elsewhere? I'm from Australia so I'm not 💯% sure on the full requirements yet.
In the UK people are allowed to drink on the street, but the place you are selling from needs a licence to sell alcohol. So you wouldn't be able to just drive around selling booze. You could take it events etc.
I hope I could have this business in the future, Bartender here for 15 years in different Luxury bars and luxury hotels worldwide.
How do you legally sell liquor and beer mobiley?
How do licenses work?
That is what I want to know too.
I love this idea. who did the conversion? I know I will have to travel to get the work done.
Looks amazing
Hello guys,
Could I ask where you purchased those ice bins?
Cheers :)
how does the liquor license work in this case?
I've looked into this since my wife and I want to start something similar. There are a couple of ways to navigate around this. 1) If you are a vendor at a larger event you would typically fall under the event license, granted they have one. So in that case you would not need to acquire anything personally as long as the event coordinators allow you to serve alcohol. 2) If you are doing private events, say for a corporation or wedding, you can typically navigate around this by essentially selling your service as a mobile bar with bartenders. You do not supply the liquor or beer but merely provide the facilities to do so. Client will buy everything for the event and you just serve it. There are other models around this, and it varies state to state, but these were the two largest scenarios I've found.
@@Stubs2424 thank you for the information. I'm currently looking to do something but of course, COVID-19 has put a Holt on that.
I have my own vintage catering caravan that I'm modifying to become a mobile bar.
In regards to your comment, are those rules for the USA or elsewhere? I'm from Australia so I'm not 💯% sure on the full requirements yet.
@@waltertrejo9512 This was based on current U.S. laws. I'm not sure how any of this would vary internationally.
In the UK people are allowed to drink on the street, but the place you are selling from needs a licence to sell alcohol. So you wouldn't be able to just drive around selling booze. You could take it events etc.
@@BlatentlyFakeName Just driving around selling booze would be awesome though!!!
Maybe in Somalia.
This is sooooo dope
Amazing
Guys buy a fucking truck smh