I assume that a non-brewery owned distributor has to put a cooperage deposit down with the brewery. Possibly for internal accounting purposes a brewery owned distributor may have to as well.
The BevMo near me said they have slightly dented ones all the time that I can swoop up for $40.
I say we make a documentary film and post it on here as a sticky. "why to buy a keg: a brewer's tale"
Thats what I asked the liquor store owner that sold me the Keg... My words "Is this keg legit because it wont be returned in the same condition as you sold it to me", he said "They're yours" and gave me a receipt to prove it!
Taken into account, yeah kegs are lost/stolen, but they do have a life expectancy. If a keg is returned 20-25 times it would be safe to say that it has paid for itself probably twice. The ones I got were beat to hell, dents galore, which they were still functional and probably would have been sent off to get refurbished after another 5 or so returns. If they are beyond the point of repair then they probably get returned to the manufacturer by the brewer to be made into new kegs or scraped. Breweries know that kegs go thru wear and tear and will have to be replaced at some point.
MORAL OF THE THREAD: You can acquire Full Kegs (15.5 GL) from your local Distributor or Liquor store as long as it is understood by the selling and purchasing party that payment is not a deposit.
If the Brewery is taking losses greater than expected on their transportation containers then they would just raise the deposit of their kegs to offset that cost. No business is going to sit back a watch their customers take their profit!!!!
True, I misspoke myself in my post, apologies!... it's an issue that gets my dander up and I didn't fix an omission. What I should have said was something along the lines that breweries are forced by the market to take a low deposit from distribution, retail sometimes claims a higher deposit. Maybe a retailer gives you 30 days to return the keg or you forfeit the deposit. Retailers, in this case actually make money by NOT getting the kegs back. This is the money that the brewery never sees.
While I can't speak for all retailers, the one I work at only charges the same deposit as the distributor charges us. We also will take a keg back no matter how old and even will take a keg that was not bought from us for the full deposit (that we would charge) because we get credit back from the distributor in the same amount. We neither make or lose money on cooperage even if the keg does not get returned we only break even.
About the only way we make money on cooperage is occasionally a police officer will show up with some kegs confiscated from a party where minors were being served and just give them to us, we still get credit back from the distributor. That doesn't happen very often though.
Funny you say that because I am a Consultant... Professionally... I will say that it is a dynamic situation but it is hardly the problem that you make it out to be!
It all comes down to acountability... if the brewery's don't account for thier equipment then who's fault is it? It's a risk that they are willing to take because there will always be HUGH profits.
I think taking a Credit Card number from a customer might work and signing an agreement stating if they don't return it the they get charged the cost of the keg and a standard processing charge. if the dont sign the agreement.. No Keg! This way no money is being exchanged if everyone plays nice. It might even create a few jobs if keg losses are a growing problem!
Software industry... I know alot about excepting risks
One other note...local laws may prevent kegs from being returned.
The kegs in my town (possibly state) have a serialized zip tie attached. The zip tie serial is traced back to the original purchaser. This helps prosecute those responsible for underage drinking, out of control parties, etc. If that tag is missing or damaged, the liquor stores cannot accept the return.
I have seen numerous Local CL ads saying they only wanted their deposit money back.
i actually talked a bit with a bartender at Uber tavern (they sell kegs to go)
she said that the distributor charges Uber the deposit, too. in their case, the dist. actually charges them a larger deposit than they charge their customers.
as with most deposits, it's not the price of the object, it's incentive to bring it back.
i work at a paint store, and we rent out professional paint sprayers. we charge a $75 deposit for a rental (plus the actual cost of renting it) retail on the unit is between $800 and $1200.
Rabbit_Jake said:So, buying a keg of beer and not returning it is illegal but buying one off CL from someone who did that very same thing absolves you of all wrong doing?
Paying a deposit does not equal buying a keg. The deposit does not transfer ownership of the keg. It IS illegal to keep the keg. Whether you care or not is the question.
IB4TGUIF