We're a direct buyer, not a broker. We own and operate laundromats in the Greater Philadelphia Region, and we buy laundromats across Camden County for cash.
If you own a laundromat in Camden, Cherry Hill, Gloucester Township, Pennsauken, Voorhees, Lindenwold, Collingswood, Bellmawr, Haddonfield, or anywhere else in Camden County and you've started thinking about selling, this page should save you a few weeks of guessing.
We're not brokers. We don't list stores and we don't shop your numbers around. We buy laundromats ourselves and we run our own, so we already know what your collection routine looks like, and we won't ask you for a polished P&L that nobody in this business actually keeps.
→ Text or call about your store, 856-239-3203We've had a lot of these calls, and the reasons repeat.
There's no single sticker price for a laundromat. What a store is worth comes down to a few things we look at on every deal: how many years are left on the lease, how old the machines are, and whether the revenue holds up when we check it against the water usage. Two stores with the same weekly gross can be worth very different numbers once you account for those.
There's the number a broker puts on a listing, and there's what you actually keep after a commission, six to twelve months on the market, and a buyer whose bank may or may not come through. We're the second path. We pay cash, we price for speed and certainty, we close on your timeline, and there's no commission coming out of the back end.
When we talk, we'll walk you through how we get to our number, so it isn't a mystery. No obligation, and nothing about the conversation leaves the two of us.
We're not calling in from out of state. Most of Camden County's wastewater runs through the Camden County Municipal Utilities Authority (CCMUA), the regional system that treats sewage for 36 Camden County towns at its plant on the Delaware River. Water service depends on your town: much of the county is served by New Jersey American Water, while some towns run their own municipal water.
That matters because we read your water bill against your machine count to verify revenue, and we know what a healthy water-cost-to-gross ratio looks like on these systems. We also buy in Philadelphia and Delaware County, PA, so we see how routes run differently across the region.
Every buyer says "show me the books." Most laundromat owners don't keep books a bank would love, and in this business you don't need them, because water usage tells the story. Gallons in roughly equals turns run, and turns run roughly equals revenue. Give us copies of your water bills and walk us through your collection routine, and we can verify your real gross within a few points.
Confidentiality matters more with laundromats than with almost any business. Once word gets out that a store is for sale, attendants start looking for other jobs, wash-and-fold customers get nervous, and the operator a few plazas over starts talking to your customers. A public listing puts your plans in front of all of them for months.
We keep it discreet. It's one phone call and a quiet visit, and nothing about your sale becomes public until you decide it should.