billvon
Well-Known Member
I mean, I can't believe that there is NO supply of kegs that are broken beyond repair out there!
There are - but people such as yourselves buy them as quickly as they get broken.
I mean, I can't believe that there is NO supply of kegs that are broken beyond repair out there!
There are - but people such as yourselves buy them as quickly as they get broken.
The distributor I believe would be stuff with the bill, not the liquor store guy or the brewery.
Typically, when the brewery delivers the beer to the distributor, they include the deposit on the invoice. So if Brewer's Brewing drops off 48 1/2bbls kegs at a wholesale of $100, there'll be an item on the invoice for 48 1/2bbl @$100, and an item for 48 keg deposits @$50.
When the distributor sells a keg to a retailer, they invoice it the same way, one line item for the beer, one for the keg deposit.
When the distributor picks up empty, returned kegs, they just count up how many and issue the retailer a credit. When the brewery picks up empties from the distributor, same thing.
So if you buy one of those 48 1/2bbls of Brewer's Beer from Drinker's Retail, you pay a $50 deposit. If you keep the keg, Drinker's gets credited for 47 1/bbls returned, and make up the loss on the 48th with your deposit, while the distributor is ahead $50. When Brewer's picks up the empties from the distributor, they only credit the distributor with 47 deposits @$50, and the distributor makes it up having only credited Drinker's Retail with 47 deposits earlier. That means that Brewer's Brewing stands at having $50 more cash on hand and one less keg, having initially invoiced the distributor for 48 keg deposits and only credited them for 47 returns.
Keg pricing depends on the size of the float, or order, but for small craft breweries its generally in the $150-$160 per keg range.
Except the minimum order appears to be 24... that's a lot of keggage.