You run a liquor establishment — bar, lounge, or similar — managing bartenders and servers, ordering inventory, handling licensing and compliance, and being the senior on-the-floor operator. Half hospitality manager, half licensed beverage operator.
Most days tend to start before opening — checking deliveries, prepping the bar and dining room, and getting the team set for service — and run through service into close. You'll often spend part of the time behind the bar or on the floor during peak hours, and part on the operational fabric of ordering, scheduling, payroll, and licensing.
The harder part is often the regulatory and legal complexity of operating a liquor establishment combined with the financial reality of running a beverage-driven business. You'll typically manage a team with significant turnover, while staying compliant with liquor laws, training requirements, and the responsibilities that serving alcohol carries.
People who tend to thrive here are operationally rigorous, hospitality-grounded, and comfortable with regulatory detail. The trade-off is the schedule — bars run nights and weekends — and the cumulative pressure of carrying licensing and safety responsibility. If you find satisfaction in running a place that becomes part of customers' social lives, the role can carry quiet, hands-on pride.
Where this role sits in the broader career landscape — and where it can take you.
Roles like this one sit within a broader occupational category. The numbers below reflect that full landscape — helpful for context, but your specific experience will depend on level, specialty, and where you work.
Roles with similar work and overlapping career paths
View all Food Service roles →You run a liquor establishment — bar, lounge, or similar — managing bartenders and servers, ordering inventory, handling licensing and compliance, and being the senior on-the-floor operator. Half hospitality manager, half licensed beverage operator.
Median pay for a Liquor Establishment Manager is about $65K nationally, with the field ranging roughly from $42K to $105K depending on experience, employer, and metro (BLS).
Core skills for this role include Monitoring, Speaking, Management of Personnel Resources, Active Listening, and Coordination.
Most people in this role hold a high school diploma.
Employment in this field is projected to grow about 6.4% through 2034, with roughly 244,230 people working in it today (BLS).
Closely related roles include Concessionaire, Dietary Manager, and Cafeteria Manager.
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