Coffee Cart Business Wiki
Colleyville · Tarrant County · Texas · 2026
Colleyville, Texas · Complete Business Guide · 2026

The Complete Coffee Cart Business Guide

Everything needed to launch and operate a mobile coffee cart in Colleyville, Texas and the broader DFW market — permits, regulations, financials, operations, and growth strategy.

$24K–$49KStartup Range
60–80%Gross Margin
3–6 moBreak-Even
July 1Target Launch Date
$0/moCommissary Cost (HB 2844)
$300–$800Daily Revenue Target

A coffee cart is a compact, mobile espresso bar — typically a push-cart or trailer-mounted unit — that prepares and sells specialty coffee drinks at temporary or recurring locations. It occupies a uniquely attractive position in the food service landscape: lower startup costs than a café, higher margins than most food trucks, and a product with near-universal daily demand.

The DFW mid-cities corridor — and Colleyville/Southlake/Grapevine in particular — represents an excellent market. Household incomes are high, the population is coffee-literate, and the density of office parks, fitness studios, auto dealerships, and upscale retail creates abundant placement opportunities.

✅ The July 1, 2026 Advantage — Launch Decision Made

Texas House Bill 2844, the "Food Truck Freedom Bill," signed by Governor Abbott in June 2025, takes full effect July 1, 2026. It eliminates the state commissary kitchen requirement for mobile food vendors and replaces all city/county permits with a single statewide DSHS license. The decision has been made to launch on or after July 1 to take full advantage — no commissary cost, no Tarrant County appointment process, one clean statewide permit valid everywhere in Texas.

📅 What Waiting Until July 1 Means Strategically

The gap between now (April 2026) and July 1 is 89 days — a productive preparation runway. Equipment can be ordered and received, the cart built or sourced, Crestline's corporate and tax standing verified, the DBA filed, insurance bound, food safety certifications completed, farmer market applications submitted, and private placement pitches made — all before the permit is needed. The son can be ready to open on July 2 or 3 with everything else already in place.

Market Tailwinds

  • Two-thirds of American adults drink coffee daily, averaging ~3 cups each
  • The global coffee market was valued at ~$66B in 2024, growing at 5.7% annually
  • Mobile food businesses have grown at 15%+ per year nationally
  • Specialty and artisan coffee continues to take share from chain coffee
  • Post-pandemic "third place" and outdoor market culture remains strong in DFW
  • HB 2844 is expected to trigger a wave of new food truck and cart operators in Texas — first movers in a market have a meaningful advantage
🏢
✅ Existing Entity Advantage

The coffee cart business will operate under Crestline Partners Inc, an existing Texas corporation. This eliminates the LLC formation step, the $300 filing fee, and the wait time — and means the EIN, business bank relationship, and registered agent are already in place. This is a meaningful head start.

Operating the Cart Under Crestline Partners Inc

The coffee cart can be launched as a new business line (division) of Crestline Partners Inc without any additional state filings, as long as the corporation is in good standing with the Texas Secretary of State. A few practical items to confirm or complete:

ItemAction RequiredWhereCost
Corporate good standingVerify Crestline Partners Inc is current on annual franchise tax filings and not in forfeitureTexas Comptroller — comptroller.texas.gov (Taxable Entity Search)Free to check; franchise tax varies
EINAlready exists — use Crestline's EIN on all permit applicationsFree
DBA ("doing business as")Optional but recommended if the cart will operate under a branded name other than "Crestline Partners Inc". File an Assumed Name Certificate with Tarrant County Clerk.tarrantcounty.gov → County Clerk → Assumed Names~$14–$22
Texas Sales Tax PermitRequired before MFU permit application. If Crestline already has one, verify it covers food/beverage sales. If not, add a new outlet or apply for a new permit under the same EIN.Texas Comptroller — comptroller.texas.govFree
Dedicated business bank accountOpen a separate account or sub-account for the coffee cart operation. Keeping revenue streams cleanly separated simplifies bookkeeping and taxes considerably.Existing bank or new institutionFree

DBA — Should You File One?

If the coffee cart will operate under a distinct brand name (e.g., "Colleyville Coffee Co." or anything other than "Crestline Partners Inc"), filing an Assumed Name Certificate — commonly called a DBA — with the Tarrant County Clerk is the right move. It costs about $14–$22 and takes a few days. Benefits:

  • Legally allows the business to operate, contract, and accept payments under the brand name
  • Required to open a business bank account under the brand name
  • Protects the name within Tarrant County
  • Presents a professional identity to farmers markets and placement partners

The DBA is filed under Crestline Partners Inc as the underlying entity. This means no new corporation or LLC is created — the existing corporate liability shield covers the coffee cart operation.

Insurance Under the Corporation

The general liability policy for the coffee cart should name Crestline Partners Inc as the insured entity. If Crestline already carries a business policy, contact the insurer to discuss whether a food/beverage MFU rider can be added, or whether a separate policy makes more sense given the different risk profile. Either way, markets and placement partners will request a certificate naming them as additional insured — standard and fast to produce once the policy is in place.

Tax Considerations

Running the coffee cart inside the existing corporation has accounting implications worth discussing with a CPA before launch. Key questions to ask:

  • Should the cart be a separate profit center within Crestline, or tracked as a division?
  • How does the corporation's current tax structure (C-corp vs. S-corp election) affect how coffee cart income is taxed?
  • Are startup equipment costs better depreciated under Section 179 (immediate deduction) or standard depreciation?
  • How should the son's compensation be structured — payroll, distributions, or a contracted arrangement?
💡 Sequence for Crestline-Based Launch

Verify corporate good standing → Confirm/obtain Sales Tax Permit for food sales → File DBA if using a brand name → Open dedicated cart bank account → Bind insurance under Crestline → Apply for MFU Permit

📋
✅ What HB 2844 Changes — Effective July 1, 2026

Texas House Bill 2844, the "Food Truck Freedom Bill," signed by Governor Abbott in June 2025, fundamentally changes mobile food permitting in Texas as of July 1, 2026: (1) A single statewide license issued by DSHS replaces all city and county MFU permits. (2) The mandatory commissary kitchen requirement is eliminated at the state level. (3) One permit is valid to operate anywhere in Texas — not just Tarrant County.

Before July 1 — The Transition Period (Now Through June 30)

The current Tarrant County MFU permit system remains in effect through June 30, 2026. Vendors who already have Tarrant County permits can continue operating under them until they expire, at which point renewal goes through DSHS. Since the decision is to launch on July 1, no Tarrant County permit needs to be applied for. The preparation period (April–June) is used to get everything else in place.

The New DSHS Statewide License — How to Apply

Step 1: Monitor DSHS Application Portal (Opens ~June 1, 2026)
DSHS is expected to open the new statewide MFV application process around June 1, 2026 — approximately 4 weeks before the July 1 effective date. Watch dshs.texas.gov for the launch of the new licensing portal. Submit an application as soon as it opens to ensure the permit is in hand by July 1.
Step 2: Complete the Application Under Crestline Partners Inc
The application will be filed under Crestline Partners Inc (or the DBA name if one has been filed). Required documents will include proof of food safety certifications, insurance, Sales Tax Permit, and vehicle/cart information. No commissary agreement required.
Step 3: Schedule DSHS Cart Inspection
DSHS will conduct a health inspection of the cart. Based on reports from early applicants in other parts of Texas, the inspection covers: fire extinguisher, handwashing station, 3-compartment sink, potable water and wastewater tanks, thermostats, refrigerator connections, and where the cart is parked during non-operation hours. No commissary inspection required.
Step 4: Statewide License Issued
Valid statewide — good to operate anywhere in Texas. No city-by-city permits. No county permits. One annual renewal with DSHS. Zoning, parking, and time/place regulations at the city level still apply, but no additional food service permits from cities.
ItemOld System (Pre July 1)New System (July 1+, HB 2844)
Issued byTarrant County Public HealthTexas DSHS (statewide)
CoverageTarrant County onlyAll of Texas
Commissary required?Yes — permitted commercial kitchenNo — eliminated by HB 2844
Permit fee$258/yearDSHS fee structure TBD (expected similar range)
Multiple city permits?Some cities required additional permitsNo — single statewide license
Application processIn-person appointment at TCPHOnline via DSHS portal (expected)

What the Inspector Will Still Check

HB 2844 eliminates the commissary and permit patchwork — it does not lower food safety standards. The cart itself must still meet all Texas Food Establishment Rules for equipment and sanitation:

  • Potable water tank: minimum 15 gallons under pressure (hot and cold)
  • Wastewater tank: at least 15% larger than the water supply tank
  • 3-compartment sink for washing, rinsing, and sanitizing utensils
  • Dedicated handwashing sink with soap and paper towels
  • All food-contact surfaces smooth, cleanable, non-absorbent, and durable
  • Chemicals and cleaning supplies properly stored and labeled with test strips
  • Fire extinguisher on board
  • Adequate lighting, shielded fixtures
  • Equipment capable of maintaining proper food temperatures
💡 Key Action — Monitor DSHS Portal Starting May 2026

Check dshs.texas.gov weekly starting May 1, 2026 for news on the new MFV license portal. Bookmark the DSHS Mobile Food Vendor page. Being among the first applicants in Tarrant County positions the cart for an opening-week July launch before competitors who wait to apply.

⚠️ City Zoning & Parking Still Apply

HB 2844 does not override city zoning, parking, or time/place ordinances. Cities retain authority over where and when food carts operate. For private property placements (with owner permission) this is generally not an issue. For public locations, check with the specific city. Farmers markets each have their own vendor rules regardless of state law.

🎓

Tarrant County Public Health requires food safety training for everyone who works on the cart. There are two levels:

Food Handler Card

Required for every employee and the owner/operator. Covers basic food safety principles — temperature control, cross-contamination, personal hygiene.

  • Providers: ServSafe, 360training, StateFoodSafety (all ANSI-accredited)
  • Format: Online course, ~2 hours
  • Cost: $10–$15 per person
  • Validity: 2 years

Certified Food Manager (CFM)

May be required depending on menu complexity and inspector discretion. Recommended even when not mandatory — it demonstrates seriousness and protects against inspection issues.

  • Provider: ServSafe Manager (most widely accepted)
  • Format: Study course + proctored exam
  • Cost: ~$150 for course + exam
  • Validity: 5 years
  • In-person testing sites: Multiple DFW locations; search at servsafe.com
🛡️

Insurance is required by farmers markets and most private business placements, and essential for basic business protection. A hot beverage business has meaningful liability exposure — spills, burns, allergic reactions.

Policy TypeWhat It CoversEst. Annual CostPriority
General LiabilityThird-party bodily injury or property damage (e.g., customer burned by spill)$400–$800Required
Product LiabilityIllness or injury from a food/beverage product servedOften bundled with GLRequired
Commercial EquipmentEspresso machine, grinder, cart damage or theft$150–$300Recommended
Commercial AutoCovers the vehicle used to tow or transport the cartVariesIf towing
Workers CompEmployee injury on the jobVariesWhen hiring

Most farmers markets require a minimum of $1,000,000 per occurrence / $2,000,000 aggregate in general liability, with the market listed as an additional insured. Get that certificate before applying to any market.

Recommended providers for small mobile food businesses: Next Insurance (next.com), Hiscox, or a local independent broker who specializes in food service.

⚙️

The Cart

The cart is the largest variable in startup cost. Key decisions: new vs. used, size, and whether it meets Tarrant County's plumbing/sink requirements out of the box.

  • New custom cart: $8,000–$20,000. Built to spec, meets all health code requirements, branded graphics included or add-on. Longer lead time (4–12 weeks).
  • Used cart: $3,000–$8,000 on Facebook Marketplace, Craigslist, or specialty platforms. Inspect carefully — verify water system, sink configuration, and surface integrity before buying.
  • Cart builders / sellers: CartKing International, Cambro, Coffee Blenders, Espresso Outfitters. Also search "food cart builder DFW Texas" for local fabricators.

Espresso Machine — The Critical Investment

Don't cut corners here. A machine failure during a busy event is devastating. Buy the most reliable commercial unit the budget allows.

MachineTypePrice RangeBest For
Breville Dual BoilerProsumer$1,500–$2,000Low-volume start, tight budget
Nuova Simonelli Appia LifeCommercial$3,500–$5,500Best entry-level commercial option
La Marzocco Linea ClassicCommercial$6,000–$9,000High-volume, premium positioning
ECM Synchronika (used)Prosumer$2,000–$3,000Good mid-range used option

Other Equipment

  • Commercial burr grinder (Mazzer Mini, Baratza Forte): $500–$1,500. Fresh-ground espresso is non-negotiable for quality.
  • Generator: Honda EU2200i (~$1,100) is the gold standard for cart operators — quiet, fuel-efficient, reliable. Many markets require quiet inverter generators specifically.
  • Under-counter refrigerator for milk: $300–$600
  • Commercial blender (Vitamix or Blendtec, if offering frappes): $400–$700
  • Stainless pitchers, tampers, portafilters, knock box, thermometers: ~$200
  • Water heater (for hand-washing sink): propane or electric, ~$100–$250
  • Cups, lids, sleeves: Budget 4–6% of revenue ongoing; buy in bulk from Restaurant Depot or WebstaurantStore
📖 Equipment Deep Dive Available Below

This section provides a summary overview. For full Top 5 ranked analysis with pros/cons, specs, pricing, and new vs. used recommendations for every piece of equipment — including espresso machines, grinders, generators, refrigeration, water heaters, pumps, and smallwares — see Sections 20–28 below.

💳

Cash-only is not viable in 2026. Customers expect contactless payments, Apple/Google Pay, and digital receipts. The right POS system also provides invaluable sales reporting from day one.

SystemMonthly FeeProcessing RateBest Feature
Square (recommended for start)$0 base2.6% + $0.10/swipeWorks offline; free reporting; easy setup
Toast Go$0–$692.49% + $0.15Best if planning to expand to a café
Clover Flex$14.95+2.3–2.6%Durable hardware; good for busy events
Lightspeed Restaurant$69+CustomBest analytics; overkill for one cart

Set up a digital tipping prompt on the screen at checkout — studies show digital tip prompts increase tip rates by 15–20% compared to a cash jar. On Square, configure suggested tip percentages (18%, 22%, 25%) to normalize generous tipping.

Additional Tech

  • Google Business Profile (free) — Lets customers find the cart via "coffee near me" when at a recurring location. Takes 15 minutes to set up.
  • Linktree or similar — A single link in the Instagram bio pointing to the weekly schedule, ordering info, and booking contact
  • Simple booking form (Google Form or Jotform) — For private event inquiries
🌾

Farmers markets are an excellent way to build brand awareness, develop a loyal customer base, and generate consistent weekend revenue. They also require advance planning — most markets curate their vendors and cap category slots.

What Markets Typically Require

  • Proof of Tarrant County MFU permit
  • Certificate of liability insurance ($1M+ per occurrence, market listed as additional insured)
  • Completed vendor application (often reviewed by committee)
  • Application fee: $0–$50
  • Weekly booth fee: $25–$100 depending on market size
  • Commitment to regular attendance (most markets want consistent vendors)

Nearby Markets Worth Applying To

Farmers Market of Grapevine
📍 520 S. Main St., Grapevine
🕐 Daily, Year-Round
Closest to Colleyville
Keller Farmers Market
📍 400 Bear Creek Pkwy, Keller
🕐 Saturdays, Mar–Nov
Seasonal
Saint Michael's Farmers Market
📍 8011 Douglas Ave, Dallas
🕐 Saturdays, seasonal
Apply online; $25 approval fee
Dallas Farmers Market (The Shed)
📍 920 S. Harwood St., Dallas
🕐 Weekends, Year-Round
High Traffic
Saginaw Farmers Market
📍 752 S. Knowles, Saginaw
🕐 2nd & 4th Saturdays
Less Competition
Mansfield Farm & Cottage Market
📍 703 E. Broad St., Mansfield
🕐 Saturdays, May–Nov
Artisan Friendly
💡 Apply Early, Diversify Markets

Most markets for the spring/summer season open applications in December–February. Apply to 3–4 markets simultaneously. Category slots (especially coffee/beverages) fill quickly. Being waitlisted at one doesn't preclude being accepted at another.

🏪

Operating on private property by invitation from the business or property owner is the most stable and profitable model for a coffee cart. It delivers repeat customers, predictable revenue, and lower marketing effort once established.

Best Target Businesses — DFW Mid-Cities

  • Office parks & corporate campuses — Southlake Town Square area, Mid-Cities office corridors. Target property managers, not individual tenants.
  • Auto dealerships — Customers wait 1–2 hours for service. DFW has dozens of luxury dealerships (Grapevine Lexus, Southlake BMW, etc.).
  • Fitness studios & gyms — Pre/post-workout coffee demand is high. CrossFit, OrangeTheory, yoga studios.
  • Upscale apartment complexes — Community amenity events, weekend "pop-up" mornings in the courtyard.
  • Salons & med spas — Long wait times, affluent clientele who appreciate specialty coffee.
  • Real estate open houses & model homes — Realtors in the Colleyville/Southlake/Westlake market hire coffee carts as a draw. $300–$600 per event.
  • Corporate events, team lunches, milestone celebrations — Higher per-event revenue; book via direct outreach and referral.

The Pitch

Keep it simple and low-risk for the business owner:

📣 Sample Pitch Script

"I operate a specialty coffee cart and I'm looking for 2–3 recurring weekly locations in the area. I'd set up on your property 2–3 mornings a week — no cost to you, I handle setup, cleanup, all permits and insurance. Your employees get great coffee without leaving the building. All I need is your permission and a spot to park. Happy to do a free trial morning so you can see how it works."

Legal Requirements for Private Placements

  • Written permission from property/business owner (even a simple email works as a record)
  • Location update with Tarrant County — any new regular operating locations must be submitted to TCPH
  • Certificate of insurance naming the property owner or business as additional insured (standard request; takes 5 minutes with your insurance provider)
  • No city sidewalk/street permit needed for private property placements

Revenue Structures

  • Pay-per-drink (standard): Customers buy directly; business pays nothing. Best for office parks and gyms.
  • Corporate buy-out: Business pays a flat fee ($150–$400) for X hours of service; drinks are free to employees. Great for team events.
  • Commission model: Some property owners may want 5–10% of revenue in exchange for a premium location. Evaluate case-by-case.
🌤️

DFW's climate creates meaningful seasonal patterns. Planning menus, hours, and location priorities around them is the difference between a profitable year and a stressful one.

🍂
Fall (Oct–Nov)

Peak season. Festivals, outdoor markets, corporate events. Pumpkin, apple, cinnamon, chai menus. Book aggressively. Build your customer list now.

❄️
Winter (Dec–Jan)

Corporate holiday party season. Market traffic drops but event bookings spike. Hot chocolate, peppermint, white mocha. Catering at premium rates.

🌸
Spring (Mar–May)

Excellent. Wedding season, outdoor markets reopen, ideal weather. Lavender, rose, floral specials. Expand market presence.

☀️
Summer (Jun–Sep)

Texas heat is brutal. Shift to early mornings (6–10am). Cold brew, shaken espresso, iced matcha dominate. Prioritize shaded or indoor placements.

💰

One-Time Startup Costs

Cart (new)
$8K–$20K
Custom built; used saves $5K–$10K
Espresso Machine
$2K–$9K
Commercial grade; buy new
Grinder + Accessories
$700–$1,700
Don't skimp on the grinder
Generator
$1,100–$2,200
Honda EU2200i or paired units
Refrigeration
$300–$600
Under-counter milk fridge
DBA + Permits
~$280
DBA ~$18 + MFU permit $258 (LLC not needed — Crestline exists)
Insurance (Year 1)
$600–$1,200
GL + product liability
Initial Inventory
$500–$1,500
Beans, syrups, milk, cups
Branding + Signage
$500–$2,000
Logo, cart wrap, menu board
Certifications
~$200
Food handler + manager cert
Working Capital
$2,000–$4,000
3 months operating buffer
POS System
$0–$300
Square base plan is free
📊 Total Range

Lean startup (used cart, entry-level machine): $18,000–$28,000  |  Professional setup (new cart, commercial machine): $35,000–$49,000

Monthly Operating Costs (Ongoing)

ExpenseMonthly RangeNotes
Commissary kitchen$0Eliminated by HB 2844 effective July 1, 2026 — residence serves as base of operations
Coffee beans & ingredients25–30% of revenueVariable; largest ongoing cost
Cups, lids, sleeves, supplies4–6% of revenueBuy in bulk from Restaurant Depot
Insurance (monthly portion)$50–$100Paid annually; budget monthly
Fuel (generator + vehicle)$100–$200Depends on operating days
Phone + Square + apps$50–$100Business phone line + POS fees
Farmers market booth fees$100–$400Depends on # of markets/week
Miscellaneous / maintenance$100–$200Machine servicing, cleaning supplies
📈

Daily Revenue Targets

Volume ScenarioDrinks/DayAvg TicketDaily RevenueAnnual (5 days/wk)
Conservative start60–80$5.50$330–$440~$89K
Established cart100–140$6.00$600–$840~$182K
High-traffic / event day150–200$6.50$975–$1,300(event days)

Gross Profit Margin by Drink Type

Drip Coffee85–88%
Cold Brew80–85%
Latte (hot or iced)75–80%
Matcha / Chai Latte68–74%
Pastry (partnered bakery)40–55%
Gross margin = (price − ingredient cost) ÷ price

Net Profit After All Expenses

With no commissary cost under the July 1 launch model, a well-run coffee cart operating under HB 2844 typically nets 30–45% of revenue — higher than the pre-HB 2844 model due to elimination of the $100–$400/month commissary fixed cost. This is significantly above the average restaurant (3–9%) or brick-and-mortar café (10–15%).

Break-Even Analysis

With a $30,000 total investment and $200–$300/day in net profit on operating days, most carts reach break-even within 4–6 months of consistent operation. Event catering days (where net margins can hit 60–80%) dramatically accelerate this timeline.

✅ The Catering Multiplier

A 3-hour corporate catering booking at $400 flat fee with ~$80 in COGS yields an 80% margin on that event. Actively building a catering/event pipeline alongside recurring locations is the fastest path to strong profitability.

In the Colleyville/Southlake/Grapevine market, aesthetics signal quality. The cart is the brand's most visible asset. Investing in a cohesive visual identity pays back immediately in walk-up traffic and social sharing.

Brand Identity

  • Name: Make it memorable, easy to spell, and search-friendly. Check Instagram handle availability before finalizing.
  • Logo: Hire a designer on Fiverr or 99designs ($50–$300) for a professional result. Avoid AI-generated logos — they look generic.
  • Cart wrap/signage: A well-wrapped cart gets photographed and shared on social media constantly. Budget $500–$1,500 for vinyl graphics. This is not a place to cut corners.
  • Uniform/apron: Branded apron creates a professional impression and photographs well for social content.

Social Media Strategy

  • Instagram: Primary platform for this market. Post the weekly schedule every Monday. Reels of latte art, cart setup, and behind-the-scenes content perform exceptionally well with zero ad spend.
  • TikTok: Document the build process and launch. Authenticity > production value on TikTok. A good "day in the life of a coffee cart owner" video can reach thousands locally.
  • Facebook: Secondary but useful for community groups — Colleyville/Southlake local Facebook groups are active and receptive to small business promotions.
  • Google Business Profile: Free, and lets the cart appear in "coffee near me" searches when operating at a regular location.

Loyalty & Retention

  • A digital punch card via Square Loyalty ($45/mo) or a simple physical stamp card builds repeat visits
  • Name recall — learn and use regular customers' names and orders. This is the most powerful retention tool available and costs nothing.
  • An email or text list for location updates, seasonal specials, and event announcements
🚀

With 89 days between now and July 1, the preparation runway is tight but very manageable. The strategy: complete all non-permit steps during April and May, apply to DSHS as soon as the portal opens (~June 1), and be ready to operate on July 2 or 3 at the latest.

✅ Why July Is Actually Great Timing

Summer in DFW is not dead time for a coffee cart — cold brew, iced lattes, and shaken espresso dominate, and the morning window (6–10am before heat peaks) is highly productive. July also kicks off the second half of the farmers market season, corporate back-to-school events begin in August, and the critical fall peak (Oct–Nov) is only 3 months away. A July 1 opener hits the ground running into the best commercial season of the year.

April — Corporate & Legal Foundation

Verify Crestline Partners Inc Corporate Standing
Search "Taxable Entity Search" at comptroller.texas.gov. Confirm active status, no forfeiture. Bring any delinquent franchise tax filings current now — the Comptroller can withhold the Sales Tax Permit from a forfeited entity, and the Sales Tax Permit is required before the DSHS license application.
Confirm Texas Sales Tax Permit Covers Food/Beverage Sales
Log in to the Comptroller taxpayer portal. Verify the existing permit covers food and beverage retail sales. If not, add an outlet or apply for a separate permit under Crestline's EIN. This step is time-sensitive — allow 2 weeks for processing if a new permit is needed.
File DBA with Tarrant County Clerk (If Using a Brand Name)
If the cart operates under any name other than "Crestline Partners Inc," file an Assumed Name Certificate at tarrantcounty.gov → County Clerk → Assumed Names. Fee: ~$14–$22. Allows the brand to accept payments, sign market agreements, and open a dedicated bank account under the cart name.
Open Dedicated Cart Bank Account
Use Crestline's formation documents, EIN, and DBA certificate. Keeps coffee cart revenue cleanly separated from Crestline's other business activity. Simplifies bookkeeping and tax reporting significantly.
Complete Food Safety Certifications
Food Handler Card for every operator ($15, online, ~2 hours via ServSafe or 360training). ServSafe Manager certification recommended (~$150, in-person exam). These will be required by DSHS and by most farmers markets regardless of the permit system.
Source and Order Cart + Equipment
Decide new vs. used cart. Request quotes from 2–3 builders. Order the espresso machine and grinder now — lead times of 2–6 weeks are common for commercial equipment. Custom carts can take 8–12 weeks. Getting these ordered in April ensures delivery well before July 1.

May — Build, Brand & Pitch

Finalize Cart Build & Equipment Installation
Install espresso machine, grinder, water system (tanks + sinks), refrigeration, and generator. Confirm all plumbing meets DSHS water tank minimums: 15 gallons potable, wastewater tank 15%+ larger. Set up water fill connection at the residence (food-grade hose + 3/4" fitting at outdoor spigot).
Bind Insurance Under Crestline Partners Inc
General liability + product liability policy naming Crestline as the insured entity. Minimum $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate (required by farmers markets). Get a certificate of insurance issued — markets and placement partners will request this immediately upon application.
Commission Logo, Cart Wrap & Signage
Hire a designer (Fiverr, $50–$300). Get cart wrap or vinyl signage installed after equipment is mounted. A polished visual identity is what drives walk-up traffic and social sharing from day one.
Set Up Square POS + Google Business Profile + Social Media
Load full menu into Square with tipping configured. Create Google Business Profile (verify it — takes 1–2 weeks). Launch Instagram and TikTok accounts. Start documenting the build process — this content performs extremely well and builds an audience before the cart opens.
Apply to Farmers Markets for Summer/Fall Season
Submit vendor applications to Farmers Market of Grapevine, Keller Farmers Market, and 2–3 others simultaneously. Include insurance certificate and food safety certifications. Note that the DSHS permit will be submitted/in-process — most markets accept an application in process for summer season slots.
Begin Pitching Private Business Placements
Target 15+ businesses: office parks, auto dealerships, fitness studios, salons, apartment complexes near Colleyville/Southlake/Grapevine. Personal visit beats phone which beats email. Offer a free trial morning the first week of July to secure commitments now.
Dial-In Espresso + Workflow at Home
Once equipment is installed, run daily practice sessions at the residence. Pull shots, texture milk, time every drink. The goal is to serve any menu item in under 90 seconds before the first public-facing day. This practice period is the single biggest quality investment.

June — Permit, Soft Launch & Finalize

Watch for DSHS Application Portal (~June 1)
Monitor dshs.texas.gov weekly starting May 15. The DSHS MFV license portal is expected to open approximately June 1, 2026. Submit the application for Crestline Partners Inc (or DBA) immediately when available. Include Sales Tax Permit, food safety certifications, insurance, and cart/equipment details.
Schedule and Pass DSHS Cart Inspection
DSHS will schedule an inspection of the cart itself. Based on early adopter reports from other Texas cities, inspections take ~1 hour and focus on water systems, sinks, fire extinguisher, refrigeration, and food contact surfaces. Have the cart in inspection-ready condition from June 1 onward.
Friends & Family Soft Launch Day (Late June)
Before the permit is officially active, set up in the driveway or a private property (friend's business, neighbor's yard) for a low-stakes friends-and-family run. Work out any operational kinks — workflow bottlenecks, water tank capacity, generator noise, payment processing. Document everything with photos and video for social content.
Confirm All July Bookings
Follow up with every market, private placement, and early event booking made during May outreach. Confirm specific dates, times, and locations for the first two weeks of July. Have a full week-one schedule locked before July 1 arrives.

July 1 — Official Launch

DSHS Statewide License in Hand
Operating legally under the new Texas MFV statewide license. No commissary. No county permit. Valid anywhere in Texas.
First Public Operating Day
First farmers market appearance or private placement. Announce on Instagram, local Facebook groups (Colleyville Community, Southlake Neighbors, Grapevine groups). Offer a launch week special — free flavor upgrade or complimentary pastry with latte — to drive trial and word-of-mouth.
Pull Square Report at End of Week 1
What sold most? Which location generated the highest revenue per hour? Which time slot was the peak window? This data shapes everything going forward. Adjust week 2 based on what week 1 revealed.
🔑

Location Is the Business

A mediocre cart in a great location will consistently outsell a great cart in a mediocre one. Invest real time in scouting before committing to recurring spots. Count foot traffic manually during the proposed operating hours. Talk to other vendors about what works.

Consistency Builds Regulars

The most valuable asset of a coffee cart is its regulars — people who show up because they know you'll be there. Show up at the same locations on the same days, every week. Missing a scheduled day breaks trust quickly and is very hard to recover from.

Quality Justifies Premium Pricing

In the Colleyville/Southlake market, customers will readily pay $5.50–$6.50 for a latte — but only if it's clearly better than what they can get at a drive-through. Proper espresso extraction, well-textured milk, and consistent quality are non-negotiable. Use good beans (local DFW roasters like Cultivar, Avoca, or White Rock are good options).

Track Everything from Day One

Square's reporting is free and powerful. Know: which locations produce the highest revenue per hour, which drinks have the highest ticket, which days outperform, and what the break-even volume is for each spot. This data drives every future location and menu decision.

Keep Overhead Lean

The structural advantage of a cart over a café is low fixed costs. Resist the urge to over-invest early. Prove revenue at one or two spots before buying a second cart or hiring staff. Upgrade the espresso machine when revenue supports it, not before.

Build the Event Pipeline Early

Private events and corporate catering carry the highest margins (60–80%) and the most predictable revenue. Start building relationships with event planners, real estate agents, and corporate admins from month one. These bookings don't come in organically — they require direct outreach and relationship maintenance.

📌
  • 🏛️
    Texas DSHS — New Statewide MFV License (HB 2844)
    dshs.texas.gov
    Primary permit authority as of July 1, 2026. Monitor for new MFV license portal launch (~June 1, 2026). One statewide license, no commissary required. Replace the old Tarrant County MFU system entirely.
  • 📞
    Tarrant County Public Health — Reference Only
    tarrantcountytx.gov/inspections · 817-248-6299
    Tarrant County MFU permits phase out July 1, 2026 under HB 2844. TCPH may contract with DSHS to conduct local inspections on the state's behalf — call for updates on the transition as it approaches.
  • 🏢
    Texas Secretary of State — LLC Formation
    sos.texas.gov
    File business formation documents online. $300 state fee.
  • 💼
    Texas Comptroller — Sales Tax Permit
    comptroller.texas.gov
    Free, issued immediately online. Required before MFU permit application.
  • 🩺
    Texas DSHS — Food Establishment Rules
    dshs.texas.gov/retail-food-establishments
    The governing rulebook for all food service in Texas. Reference 25 TAC Chapter 228 for MFU requirements.
  • 🎓
    ServSafe — Food Safety Certifications
    servsafe.com
    Food Handler ($15 online) and Manager certification ($150). ANSI-accredited; accepted by Tarrant County.
  • 🌾
    Farmers Market of Grapevine
    farmersmarketofgrapevine.com
    Daily, year-round. Closest major market to Colleyville. Vendor applications on website.
  • 🌾
    Keller Farmers Market
    kellerfarmersmarket.com
    Saturdays, Mar–Nov. 400 Bear Creek Pkwy, Keller.
  • 🤝
    Colleyville Chamber of Commerce
    colleyvillechamber.org
    Networking, referrals, and local business community. Membership connects to office parks and corporate clients.
  • Cultivar Coffee — Local DFW Roaster
    cultivarcoffee.com
    High-quality local wholesale beans. Using a DFW roaster is a strong differentiator and local story to tell.
  • 📦
    Restaurant Depot — Supply Sourcing
    restaurantdepot.com
    DFW locations for bulk cups, lids, sleeves, syrups, and cleaning supplies at wholesale prices. Free membership with business license.
  • 🛡️
    Next Insurance — Small Business Insurance
    next.com
    Online-first insurer specializing in small mobile food businesses. Fast certificates of insurance for market applications.

Click items to mark them complete as you work through the launch process.

Business Formation — Crestline Partners Inc

  • Verify Crestline Partners Inc is in good standing with Texas Comptroller (no forfeiture)Free
  • Confirm Crestline's Sales Tax Permit covers food/beverage sales — add outlet or apply for new permit if neededFree
  • File DBA (Assumed Name Certificate) with Tarrant County Clerk if cart operates under a brand name~$14–$22
  • Open dedicated bank account or sub-account for coffee cart operation under CrestlineFree
  • Consult CPA on tax structure, Section 179 equipment deduction, and son's compensation structureVaries

Legal & Compliance — July 1 Launch (HB 2844)

  • Complete Food Handler Card for all operators (ServSafe / 360training, online)~$15/person
  • Complete ServSafe Manager certification (recommended)~$150
  • Monitor dshs.texas.gov weekly from May 15 for new MFV license portal launchFree
  • Submit DSHS statewide MFV license application under Crestline Partners Inc as soon as portal opens (~June 1)TBD by DSHS
  • Schedule and pass DSHS cart inspection (no commissary agreement required)
  • Bind general liability + product liability insurance under Crestline Partners Inc$600–$1,200/yr
  • Set up home base: food-grade hose for water fill, utility drain for wastewater, garage shelving for storage~$50–$200

Equipment & Setup

  • Purchase or build cart (verify sink/water requirements)$3K–$20K
  • Purchase commercial espresso machine$2K–$9K
  • Purchase commercial grinder$500–$1,500
  • Purchase generator (Honda EU2200i recommended)~$1,100
  • Purchase under-counter refrigerator$300–$600
  • Set up water system (potable tank + wastewater tank)Varies
  • Purchase initial inventory (beans, syrups, cups, milk)$500–$1,500

Branding & Tech

  • Commission logo and brand identity$50–$300
  • Get cart wrapped or signage installed$500–$1,500
  • Set up Square POS and configure menu + tippingFree
  • Create Google Business ProfileFree
  • Set up Instagram and TikTok accountsFree
  • Create simple booking form for event inquiriesFree

Locations & Revenue

  • Apply to 3+ farmers markets$0–$50 each
  • Pitch 10+ local businesses for private placementsFree
  • Secure at least 2 recurring weekly locations before launch
  • Run friends & family soft-launch day
  • Book first paid private event
  • Official opening day — announce publicly

Every equipment decision flows from the power budget. A standard coffee cart runs on a single 20-amp 120V circuit (2,400W maximum). The target is keeping total simultaneous draw under 2,200W to avoid tripping breakers, with peak draw under 2,400W. This constrains the espresso machine choice more than anything else.

⚠️ Critical: 110V vs 220V

Most cart-friendly espresso machines run on 110V/120V — non-negotiable for generator use without custom wiring. A few premium machines require 220V and a dedicated 30-amp circuit. Unless your cart has 220V wiring built in, stick to 110V machines. The good news: the best cart machines were designed for 110V.

Typical Simultaneous Load at a Busy Cart

ComponentRunning DrawPeak DrawNotes
Espresso machine (hold temp)200–400W1,400–1,800W (heat cycle)Heat cycles last ~10–30 sec, not continuous
Commercial grinder300–500W500WOnly runs during active grinding (~5 sec/drink)
Under-counter refrigerator100–150W300W (compressor start)Compressor cycles every few minutes
Water heater (propane)0W electrical0W electricalPropane = zero electrical draw — key advantage
Water heater (electric)0W (tank mode)1,200–1,500W (heat burst)Only when someone uses a sink
POS tablet + misc50–100W100WMinimal
✅ Strategy: Separate Your Energy Systems

Use a propane water heater (Eccotemp i12) so the sink system draws zero watts from the generator. This leaves the full electrical budget for the espresso machine, grinder, and refrigerator. A dual Honda EU2200i parallel setup (4,400W total) gives comfortable headroom for all systems. A single EU2200i (1,800W running) is tight but workable for lower-volume carts with careful load management.

The espresso machine is the business. Every other equipment decision is secondary. For a cart, the non-negotiable criteria are: 110V power, rotary (not vibratory) pump for all-day durability, dual-boiler or heat-exchange system for simultaneous brewing and steaming, and serviceability in DFW. Ranked on these criteria plus value and repairability.

🥇 #1 — Top Pick Nuova Simonelli Appia Life Compact (1-Group, 110V) $3,800–$4,800 new · $2,200–$3,000 refurb
110V Native Rotary Pump Dual Boiler Volumetric Dosing Direct Plumb Ready

The single best espresso machine for a serious Texas coffee cart. Nuova Simonelli built the Appia Life Compact specifically for mobile and tight-counter applications — it is the most compact commercial 2-group machine on the market while running on 110V. The internal rotary vane pump is commercial grade, rated for all-day use, runs quiet, and won't wear out the way a vibratory pump will. Volumetric dosing means consistent shot weight every time without manual timing. The 2.5L steam boiler delivers genuine steaming power for back-to-back lattes. This is the machine most DFW cart operators at the premium tier use.

Power110V / 1,250W
BoilerDual: 0.3L brew + 2.5L steam
PumpRotary vane (commercial)
Throughput20–40 drinks/hr
Water supplyDirect plumb or reservoir
DFW ServiceCavallini Coffee · MTX Espresso
Buy this. Cavallini Coffee is the local Nuova Simonelli dealer. Metroplex Espresso Tech (2669 Aero Dr, Grand Prairie) services, sells, and installs these with cart-specific setup appointments. If the budget allows one machine investment, this is it.
#2 La Marzocco Linea Mini R $5,500–$6,800 new · $3,000–$4,500 used
110V Native Rotary Pump 3.5L Steam Boiler Premium Brand

The most prestigious single-group cart machine. The R (reservoir) model works perfectly on-cart without plumbing. The 3.5L steam boiler at 1,600W can steam consecutive drinks without pressure drops — the #1 failure mode of cheaper machines during rushes. In the Colleyville/Southlake market, the La Marzocco name signals premium quality to customers who know coffee. Apparatus Inc. in DFW is a certified La Marzocco technician. Strong used market from café upgrades makes this attainable at $3,000–$4,500.

Power110V / 1,600W
Steam boiler3.5L — best in class
PumpRotary vane
DFW ServiceApparatus Inc. (certified)
Best for premium positioning. If brand identity is a priority for Southlake/Westlake corporate placements and the budget extends, the La Marzocco name pays dividends in perceived value. Buy used for best dollar-per-performance ratio.
#3 ECM Synchronika (with Rotary Pump Upgrade) $2,400–$3,200 new · $1,500–$2,200 used
110V Dual Boiler PID Temperature Control Best Used Value

The best prosumer-grade option for a budget-conscious launch. True dual boiler with PID temperature control. Specify rotary pump when ordering — the vibratory pump version is not suitable for cart use. At lower volume (under 40 drinks/day), this machine performs beautifully. Used Synchronikas are widely available in DFW. Key limitation: no volumetric dosing — manual timing required for shot consistency.

Power110V / ~1,300W
Best forUnder 40 drinks/day
PumpRotary or vibratory — specify rotary
DosingManual (no volumetric)
Smart budget start. For a launch where the Appia Life is out of reach, this machine performs at low-to-mid volume. Clear upgrade path when revenue supports it.
#4 Nuova Simonelli Oscar II $1,800–$2,400 new · $900–$1,400 used
110V Rotary Pump Single Boiler HX Mid-Volume

A heat-exchange machine with a commercial rotary pump — handles 30–50 drinks/day reliably. The HX system introduces temperature management complexity that the Appia Life's dual-boiler setup avoids, but the rotary pump gives it longevity the Breville cannot match. Same DFW service network (Metroplex Espresso Tech) as the Appia Life. A solid bridge machine at a lower price point.

Power110V / ~1,300W
PumpRotary vane
BoilerSingle boiler HX
Best for30–50 drinks/day
Mid-tier entry point. Good used availability. Upgrade to Appia Life when daily volume consistently exceeds 50 drinks.
#5 Breville Dual Boiler BES920 $1,300–$1,700 new · $700–$1,000 used
110V Dual Boiler PID Vibratory Pump ⚠ Low Volume Only

The lowest-cost genuine dual-boiler machine worth considering for a cart launch. Proven capable of low-volume cart service (20–25 drinks/day) in real deployments. The vibratory pump is the critical limitation — louder, wears faster under continuous use, and struggles with sustained steaming. This is a true starter unit to validate the concept before investing in a commercial machine. Do not use for a farmers market expecting 100+ customers.

Power110V / 1,600W
PumpVibratory (limitation)
Best forUnder 25 drinks/day
Commercial lifespan1–2 years heavy use
Concept-testing only. Lowest capital risk if validating the business model before committing to commercial equipment.

Quick Comparison

MachinePrice NewPumpBoilerVolumetricMax Drinks/DayDFW Service
Appia Life Compact ✓$3,800–$4,800RotaryDualYes100+Cavallini + MTX
Linea Mini R$5,500–$6,800RotaryDualNo100+Apparatus Inc.
ECM Synchronika$2,400–$3,200RotaryDualNo~50General tech
Oscar II$1,800–$2,400RotaryHXNo~60MTX Espresso
Breville BES920$1,300–$1,700VibratoryDualNo~25Appliance stores
⚙️

The grinder is the most underestimated piece of equipment on a coffee cart. A mediocre grinder will make a great espresso machine produce mediocre espresso — inconsistently ground coffee cannot be extracted consistently. For a cart, you need a commercial-grade flat burr grinder with on-demand grinding, stepless adjustment, and a motor built for sustained daily use without overheating.

🥇 #1 — Top Pick Mahlkonig E65S GBW (Grind-by-Weight) $2,200–$2,600 new · $1,200–$1,600 used
Grind-by-Weight ±0.1g 65mm Flat Steel Burrs Fan Cooling Portafilter Detection

The gold standard for specialty coffee carts and small cafés. Doses to 0.1-gram accuracy using built-in load cell technology — every dose is precisely the same weight regardless of bean density or humidity, eliminating one of the most common sources of shot inconsistency. Fan cooling allows back-to-back grinding without heat degradation. Portafilter detection activates grinding automatically — no separate button press, shaving seconds off each drink during a rush. This is the grinder you'll find in the best specialty shops in Dallas and Austin.

Burrs65mm flat steel
Dose accuracy±0.1g grind-by-weight
Speed~2.5g/sec
CoolingActive fan — continuous use
Hopper1.2 kg / 2.6 lbs
Power310W
This is the grinder. If there's one upgrade to make from a cheaper alternative, it's this. Consistency directly translates to customer satisfaction and repeat visits. Pro Coffee Gear (Austin, ships statewide) sells renewed units with warranty at $1,200–$1,600.
#2 Mazzer Super Jolly V Pro (Electronic) $1,400–$1,800 new · $400–$700 used from auction
64mm Flat Burrs Best Used Value GFC Clump Crusher Massive Repair Ecosystem

The most widely deployed commercial espresso grinder in the world. Grind-by-time with microswitch portafilter activation — reliable and extremely durable. Mazzer's 64mm flat burrs deliver proven flavor clarity. At DFW auctions (Main Auction Services), the Super Jolly regularly appears as cafés upgrade, with used examples in excellent condition available for $400–$700. Any espresso technician in the country knows this machine inside and out.

Burrs64mm flat steel
Speed~2g/sec
Power420W
Used auction price$275–$700 (DFW auctions)
Buy this used. A Super Jolly V Pro at $500–$700 used from a café or Main Auction Services is the best value in the grinder category. New burrs (~$80) + a professional cleaning brings it to like-new performance.
#3 Eureka Zenith 65E $1,100–$1,400 new · $600–$900 used
65mm Flat Burrs Quietest in Class ACE Cooling System Compact Footprint

Eureka's commercial flagship for small cafés and carts. Delivers 65mm flat burr performance with notably quieter operation than Mazzer equivalents — a genuine advantage at a farmers market or office placement where noise matters. The ACE (Advanced Cooling & Ergonomics) system manages heat during sustained grinding. Excellent choice if you want professional results without the Mahlkonig price tag and quiet operation matters.

Burrs65mm flat
Special featureQuiet + ACE cooling
Speed~2.5g/sec
Power360W
Best for quiet locations. Corporate placements, salons, and upscale private events where grinder noise would be intrusive. Strong used market.
#4 Baratza Forte BG $700–$900 new
User-Serviceable Grind-by-Weight 54mm Ceramic Burrs Under $1,000

The best entry into commercial-tier grinding without breaking $1,000. Baratza designed the Forte with modular, user-replaceable components — virtually every part can be swapped by the operator, critical on a cart where you can't afford downtime waiting for a technician. Grind-by-weight at this price is exceptional value. Slightly slower throughput — suitable for up to 50 drinks per day. Baratza's customer support is outstanding.

Burrs54mm ceramic
Speed~1.5g/sec
Max daily~50 drinks
RepairabilityBest in class
Best starter grinder under $1,000. Pair with the ECM Synchronika or Oscar II for a quality lean-launch espresso station under $4,000.
#5 Mazzer Mini Electronic (Type B) $700–$900 new · $300–$500 used
Italian Commercial Build 58mm Flat Burrs Timed Dosing Compact

A compact Italian commercial grinder with proven durability and the full Mazzer repair ecosystem. The Mini Electronic's timed dosing is reliable and consistent once calibrated. 58mm burrs are smaller than the Super Jolly but perfectly adequate for up to 60 drinks/day. Good used availability from home baristas upgrading. A solid, proven choice as a starter grinder with clear upgrade path.

Burrs58mm flat
DosingTimed (electronic)
Speed~1g/sec
Used price$300–$500
Compact budget entry. Available used from home baristas upgrading. Good starting grinder that won't embarrass the espresso machine.
🔋

The generator is the cart's lifeline at markets and private placements without shore power. Inverter generators are mandatory — conventional generators produce voltage spikes that damage espresso machine electronics. Every farmers market with quiet-operation rules will specify inverter generators. Buy once, buy right.

⚠️ Inverter Only — No Exceptions

A conventional non-inverter generator will damage the electronics in your espresso machine over time. Always specify "inverter generator" — these produce clean sine-wave power (THD <3%) safe for sensitive electronics. Honda, Yamaha, and Westinghouse inverter units are the only acceptable choices for a coffee cart.

🥇 #1 — Top Pick Honda EU2200i — Buy a Parallel Pair $1,050–$1,200 each · $2,100–$2,400 for pair + parallel cable
48 dBA — Quietest Available Parallel Capable (4,400W combined) CO-Minder Safety Shutoff 8+ Hour Runtime

The industry standard for coffee carts nationwide — for good reason. At 48 dBA, quieter than a normal conversation and well under any farmers market noise ordinance. Each unit produces 1,800W running / 2,200W surge on a single gallon of gasoline lasting up to 8 hours at quarter load. Two units in parallel deliver 3,600W running / 4,400W surge — comfortably running the full cart simultaneously. Honda's reliability in commercial applications is unmatched. The CO-Minder auto-shuts down if carbon monoxide accumulates. Resale value after 3–4 years remains 60–70% of new.

Running watts (×2)1,800W · pair = 3,600W
Surge watts (×2)2,200W · pair = 4,400W
Noise @ 7m48 dBA — whisper quiet
Runtime per tankUp to 8.1 hrs at 25% load
Weight each47 lbs
AvailabilityHome Depot, Costco, Honda dealers
Buy the pair. The cost difference between one and two units is ~$1,100. The operational peace of mind — never having a power limitation at a busy event — is worth far more. Start with one, add the second before the first major event.
#2 Westinghouse iGen4500DF (Dual Fuel) $1,000–$1,200 new
Dual Fuel: Gas + Propane 3,700W Running — Single Unit Remote Start 52 dBA

The best single-unit alternative to the Honda pair. At 3,700W running and 4,500W surge, this single generator handles the full cart load without parallel operation. The dual-fuel capability (gasoline or propane) is a significant operational advantage — propane stores indefinitely and many Texas markets and venues prefer propane over gasoline for fire safety. Remote start is a convenience bonus. 52 dBA is slightly louder than Honda but still well within most market noise requirements.

Running watts3,700W gas / 3,400W propane
Surge watts4,500W
Noise52 dBA
Runtime18 hrs at 25% load (gas)
Best single-unit solution. If carrying two generators is impractical, this covers everything in one unit. Check that your specific markets allow gasoline/propane generators before purchasing.
GeneratorRunning WattsNoisePriceBest For
Honda EU2200i × 2 ✓3,600W combined48 dBA (quietest)~$2,200 pairFull cart — best overall
Westinghouse iGen4500DF3,700W52 dBA~$1,100Single unit, dual fuel
Yamaha EF2200iS × 23,600W combined57 dBA~$1,800 pairHonda alternative, cheaper
Honda EU3000iS2,800W52–58 dBA~$2,400Trailer installs, electric start
Champion 2500W Dual Fuel1,850W58 dBA~$600Backup unit only
❄️

A coffee cart's refrigeration need is modest — milk, alternative milks, cold brew concentrate. Key requirements: front-breathing ventilation (critical in an enclosed cart where rear clearance is zero), low power draw for all-day generator operation, NSF commercial rating, and a compressor built to handle vibration from transportation. Never use a residential refrigerator on a cart — not rated for vibration and fails quickly.

🥇 #1 — Top Pick True TUC-27F-HC Undercounter Refrigerator $1,800–$2,400 new · $700–$1,200 used from auction
NSF / UL Certified Front-Breathing Made in USA R290 Hydrocarbon Refrigerant 15+ Year Commercial Life

True Manufacturing is the benchmark against which all commercial refrigeration is measured. The TUC-27F-HC front-breathing design means zero clearance requirements on sides or rear — perfect for an enclosed cart. R290 hydrocarbon refrigerant is more energy-efficient and environmentally superior. True's forced-air cooling maintains ±2°F temperature consistency even with the door opened repeatedly during a busy rush. The 16-gauge stainless exterior and aluminum interior are built for 15+ years of commercial service. True refrigerators hold exceptional resale value — a 5-year-old True often sells for 40–50% of new price.

Width27"
Capacity6.5 cu ft
Power draw~115W running
VentilationFront-breathing (no clearance needed)
RefrigerantR290 hydrocarbon
Temp stability±2°F
Buy used without hesitation. A used True TUC from a café auction or Main Auction Services (DFW) at $700–$900 is one of the best purchasing decisions in the equipment budget. You're buying 10+ more years of reliable service at a fraction of new cost. Search Main Auction Services (mainauctionservices.com) weekly — True units cycle through regularly.
#2 Turbo Air M3R19-1-N Undercounter (19") $1,200–$1,600 new · $400–$700 used
Self-Cleaning Condenser Compact 19" Width Digital Temperature Control NSF Certified

Turbo Air's self-cleaning condenser is a genuine cart advantage — on a busy cart with limited maintenance time, a condenser that auto-cleans 2–3 times daily eliminates a common failure point. The 19-inch width is perfect for tight cart buildouts where a 27" True won't fit. Turbo Air sits just below True in quality but represents 8–12 years of commercial service life. Very common in DFW restaurant supply channels.

Width19" — fits tight spaces
Capacity3.5 cu ft
Power draw~100W running
Special featureSelf-cleaning condenser
Best compact option. If cart space constrains refrigerator width below 24 inches, the Turbo Air 19" is the answer. Self-cleaning condenser reduces maintenance burden meaningfully.
UnitWidthPrice NewUsed ValueKey FeatureRecommend Used?
True TUC-27F-HC ✓27"$1,800–$2,400$700–$1,200Best build quality, front-breathing✅ Best used buy
Turbo Air M3R19-1-N19"$1,200–$1,600$400–$700Self-cleaning condenser, compact✅ Good used buy
Beverage-Air UCR27AHC27"$1,000–$1,400$350–$600USA-made, front access✅ Good used buy
Hoshizaki HR-24B24"$1,400–$1,800$500–$900Stainless interior, lowest power draw✅ If found
Atosa MGF840327"$600–$900AvoidLowest entry price❌ Buy new only
💧

The cart's water system has three components: fresh water supply (pump + tank), hot water for the handwash and 3-compartment sink (heater), and wastewater retention. The espresso machine uses its own internal water supply separately. Under HB 2844 launching July 1, the cart's water system requirements remain in full effect — the commissary requirement is gone but the cart's tanks and sinks still need to meet Texas Food Establishment Rules.

Water Heater — Top 5

🥇 #1 — Top Pick Eccotemp i12 Indoor Propane Tankless $150–$200 new — Buy new, always
Zero Electrical Draw Instant Hot Water Industry Standard for Carts Under $200

The most popular water heater for food trucks and coffee carts in the country. Runs on liquid propane and draws zero watts from the electrical system — a critical advantage since the generator is already running the espresso machine, grinder, and refrigerator. On-demand heating delivers instant hot water. Produces up to 1.58 GPM at 77°F rise — more than sufficient for handwashing and 3-compartment sink use. Propane connection ties into the same tank used by any other propane system on the cart. Compact enough to mount directly on a cart wall. Over 30,000 installations in food trucks and carts across the US.

Power sourcePropane — 0W electrical
Output1.58 GPM @ 77°F rise
BTU80,000 BTU/hr
Temp range80–125°F adjustable
MountWall mount — compact
Buy used?No — mineral scale risk
This is the standard choice — always buy new. At $150–200, mineral scale buildup in a used tankless heater represents too much risk for the price. Install fresh, descale annually with Eccotemp's descaling kit, and it lasts 5–8 years.
HeaterFuelElectrical DrawPriceBest Use Case
Eccotemp i12 LP ✓Propane0W$150–$200All cart types — standard choice
Bosch ES4 Mini-Tank (4 gal)Electric1,500W burst$200–$280Shore-power locations
Monsam NS-009T (all-in-one)Electric~800W$1,200–$1,600Push-cart without plumbing
Rinnai V65iNNatural gas / LP0W$350–$500Permanent trailer with gas connection
Camco Portable PropanePropane0W$80–$120Emergency backup only

Water Pump — Top 3

PumpVoltagePressurePriceBest Use
Aquatec CDP-8800 Series ✓12V DC60–80 PSI$100–$180All cart types — direct plumb capable; cart community standard
Flojet BW4000A115V AC~25–30 PSI$60–$90Sinks only — not for direct-plumb espresso
SHURflo 2088-554-14412V DC45 PSI$55–$80Backup replacement — available at RV/hardware stores
💡 Water Tank Minimum — Texas DSHS

Under Texas Food Establishment Rules (which still apply under HB 2844): minimum 15-gallon potable water tank under pressure, wastewater tank must be at least 15% larger than the fresh water tank. A 15-gal fresh tank requires a minimum 17.25-gal (18-gal in practice) wastewater tank. Use NSF-certified polyethylene or stainless tanks only.

🥄

Every item in this list determines workflow speed and drink quality on a busy day. Buy quality smallwares once — most are inexpensive and the investment pays back immediately in consistency and speed.

ItemRecommendationPriceWhy It MattersBuy Used?
Espresso tamper (58mm)Normcore V4 Spring-Loaded$65–$80Spring-loaded at calibrated 15–30 lbs — eliminates tamp pressure as a shot variableOnly if verified calibration
Milk pitchersMotta Europa or Rattleware (12oz + 20oz)$18–$35 eachWide spout for latte art, good pour geometry — buy 4 minimum✅ Stainless lasts indefinitely
Knock boxRhinowares Compact (mounted)$35–$55Heavy rubber bar absorbs impact, holds a full shift of pucks before emptying
Portafilter (spare)Match your machine brand exactly$40–$90Two portafilters means one in the machine, one rinsed and ready — doubles rush throughput✅ Verify group head compatibility
Pitcher rinserKrowne 24-175 (counter-mount)$60–$110High-pressure water blast rinses pitchers in 1 second — non-negotiable for latte workflow speed
Brew scaleAcaia Pearl (waterproof)$120–$180Verifies volumetric dosing and espresso yield — use during dial-in, keep on cart⚠ Verify electronics condition
WDT / distribution toolNucleus Coffee WDT$35–$55Eliminates channeling in espresso puck — a $40 tool with measurable shot quality impact❌ Buy new
Shot glasses (2oz double-spout)Rattleware heavy base$4–$6 each × 6Heavy base resists tipping; double-spout extracts into both pitchers simultaneously❌ Cheap, buy new
Milk thermometerCDN DTT450X (clip-on)$18–$25 × 2Reads in 2 seconds, 0–220°F range — buy two, one always clipped to a pitcher❌ Buy new
Cleaning suppliesUrnex Cafiza + Rinza$15–$25Cafiza for daily grouphead backflushing; Rinza for milk protein buildup in steam wands❌ Consumables
Bar mat (counter)Espresso Parts or Rattleware$20–$35 × 2Protects grouphead area, catches drips — buy 2, one washing, one in use❌ Buy new
Blender (if adding frappes)Vitamix Drink Machine Advance$1,200–$1,600 new · $500–$800 usedCommercial rated, 3-second blend time, quiet enclosure. Vitamix used market is excellent — 10+ year expected life✅ Excellent used value
ℹ️ Where to Buy Smallwares in DFW

Prima Coffee (prima-coffee.com) for best selection and expertise. WebstaurantStore for bulk pricing. Restaurant Depot (1171 Bridgewood Dr., Fort Worth — 7am open, free membership with business license) for cups, lids, sleeves, syrups, and cleaning supplies at wholesale prices. Metroplex Espresso Tech for anything machine-specific.

🔍

The used equipment market for coffee and restaurant gear in DFW is robust. The decision is not simply "new vs. used" — it's about which items offer genuine value used (long-lived equipment where condition is verifiable) vs. which items carry hidden risk or simply aren't worth the hassle at their price point.

Espresso Machine
⚠ Caution — Buy from Tech Only

High risk if buying blind. Seals, solenoids, boiler elements, and pump wear are invisible externally. A refurbished machine from Metroplex Espresso Tech or Apparatus Inc. — professionally reconditioned with warranty — is an excellent purchase. Save $1,000–$2,000. Facebook Marketplace with unknown history is a gamble. Only buy used from a shop that services espresso machines and offers at least a 90-day warranty.

Grinder
✅ Buy Used — Best Value

Burrs are consumables, cheap to replace ($80–$200). The housing, motor, and adjustment mechanism last decades with proper maintenance. A used Mazzer Super Jolly V Pro or Mahlkonig E65S from a café that upgraded is an exceptional purchase at $400–$900 vs. $1,400–$2,600 new. Check burr hours, inspect the adjustment collar for play. Main Auction Services in DFW runs these regularly.

Generator
⚠ Caution — Verify Hours

A used Honda EU2200i with documented low hours (under 200) and recent oil change is a reasonable purchase ($650–$750 vs. $1,100 new). Buy from a Honda dealer or equipment rental company that tracks maintenance. Never buy a used conventional (non-inverter) generator for an espresso machine — the power quality risk is not worth any cost savings.

Refrigeration
✅ Best ROI — Buy Used

Commercial refrigeration from True, Turbo Air, or Beverage-Air is engineered for 12–20 years of commercial service. A 5-year-old True TUC from a café that upgraded still has 10+ years left. Inspect: compressor runs without rattling, door gasket seals, temperature holds, condenser cleanable. Main Auction Services DFW auctions True and Turbo Air units regularly. A True TUC at $700–$900 used vs. $2,200 new — one of the best equipment purchasing decisions available.

Water Heater
❌ Buy New Always

The Eccotemp i12 is $150–200 new. A used tankless heater from unknown history carries real mineral scale buildup risk — invisible externally, reduces performance to near-useless, and is expensive or impossible to fully remediate. At this price, the risk-adjusted case for buying new is overwhelming.

Water Pump
❌ Buy New Always

Aquatec CDP-8800 is $100–$180 new. Used pump seal wear means potential water intrusion into the motor and sudden mid-service failure. At this price, always buy new with a fresh warranty. Keep a brand-new spare in the truck at all times.

Cart / Trailer
✅ Best Dollar Savings

A used cart saves $5,000–$12,000 vs. a new custom build. Inspect: water tank integrity, sink configurations meet DSHS requirements, structural integrity of frame and counter surfaces, electrical wiring condition. Have a food cart builder evaluate before buying. MobileFood Alliance (mobilefoodalliance.com) lists Texas cart sales including DFW. A turnkey coffee trailer with commercial equipment already installed eliminates many build headaches.

Smallwares
⚠ Item by Item

Pitchers, knock boxes, portafilters: buy used from the same brand/machine family. Tampers: only if calibration verified. Blender (Vitamix): excellent used market, 10+ year life, buy used without concern. Cleaning supplies, bar mats, thermometers: always buy new. Scales: electronics — test accuracy before purchasing.

DFW Used Equipment Sources

SourceWhat They CarryContactBest For
Metroplex Espresso TechPre-owned espresso machines (inspected, warranted), grinders, cart installationsmtxespressotech.com · (214) 677-0688 · 2669 Aero Dr, Grand PrairieEspresso machines, grinders
Apparatus Inc.New & used La Marzocco, Slayer, Bunn — certified techsapparatustx.com · DFW-basedLa Marzocco used, certified service
DFW Coffee TechCommercial sales, service & cart-specific advicedfwcoffeetech.comCart-specific equipment & guidance
Main Auction ServicesWeekly restaurant equipment auctions — True, Turbo Air, Hobart, all major brandsmainauctionservices.com · 682-252-4020 · DFWRefrigeration, sinks, prep tables
Pro Coffee Gear (Austin)Renewed espresso machines with warranty — NS, La Marzocco, ECMprocoffeegear.com · ships statewideBest online used espresso market
Mobile Food AllianceUsed coffee carts and trailers — searchable by state/citymobilefoodalliance.com/marketplaceComplete cart/trailer purchases
Facebook Marketplace DFWIndividual sellers — inconsistent quality, negotiate hard, inspect everythingfacebook.com/marketplace/dallasIndividual items at negotiated prices
💵

Three realistic equipment configurations for a DFW coffee cart launching under HB 2844 in summer 2026, from lean startup to premium positioning. All assume a July 1 post-HB 2844 launch with no commissary cost.

ItemLean Launch (~$18K total)Smart Launch (~$28K total)Premium Launch (~$42K total)
Cart / TrailerUsed push-cart ~$2,500Used coffee trailer ~$8,000New custom trailer ~$16,000
Espresso MachineBreville BES920 ~$1,600Oscar II used ~$1,200 or Appia Life refurb (MTX) ~$2,500Appia Life Compact new ~$4,500
GrinderBaratza Forte BG ~$850Mazzer SJ V Pro used (auction) ~$600Mahlkonig E65S GBW ~$2,400
GeneratorHonda EU2200i ×1 ~$1,100Honda EU2200i ×2 ~$2,200Honda EU2200i ×2 + parallel ~$2,400
RefrigerationAtosa new ~$750True TUC used (auction) ~$800True TUC-27F new ~$2,000
Water heaterEccotemp i12 ~$175Eccotemp i12 ~$175Eccotemp i12 + Bosch mini-tank ~$400
Water pumpFlojet BW4000 ~$75Aquatec CDP-8800 ~$150Aquatec CDP-8800 ~$150
SmallwaresBasic package ~$400Standard package ~$700Full package ~$1,200
POS (Square + iPad)iPad used ~$200 + Square freeiPad new ~$329 + Square freeiPad + Square + receipt printer ~$500
DSHS License (July 1)~$258~$258~$258
Insurance (annual)$600$900$1,200
Equipment Total~$8,300~$17,500~$31,000
Operating reserve (3 mo)$4,500$6,000$8,000
Total Capital Needed~$13,000~$24,000~$39,000
Best forTesting concept, max flexibility, low volumeSerious launch — 60–80 drinks/day targetPremium positioning, 100+ drinks/day
✅ Recommendation for Colleyville / Southlake Market

Given the high-income demographic of the mid-cities market and the premium pricing it supports, the Smart Launch scenario is the minimum recommended — specifically with the Appia Life refurbished from Metroplex Espresso Tech as the centerpiece. The cost difference between Smart and Lean is ~$11,000, but the ability to serve 80+ drinks/day cleanly pays back that delta in 3–4 weeks of operation at a busy farmers market. The machine IS the business — do not undercapitalize it.

🗺️

Before investing time in applications, it's important to distinguish between different types of venues that use similar language. Several well-known "Farmers Markets" in the area are actually retail stores, not vendor markets, and won't accept coffee cart applications.

⚠️ "Farmers Market" Name ≠ Vendor Market

Farmers Market of Grapevine (520 S. Main St.) is a retail grocery store with an in-house coffee bar — not a vendor stall market. Dallas Farmers Market (The Shed) is a mixed retail/food hall. Neither accepts outside mobile food vendor applications. The real vendor-market opportunities are the Keller Farmers Market, Saint Michael's Market, Saginaw Farmers Market, and Lola's Local Market.

Three Types of Events — Different Strategies

TypeExamplesHow to Get InRevenue ModelLead Time
Major Organized FestivalsGrapeFest, Main Street Fest, Oktoberfest, Art in the Square, FuelFestFormal online application portal + jury/reviewPay booth fee, sell direct to attendees6–9 months
Community Markets & EventsKeller Farmers Market, Colleyville Car Show, Plaza Concerts, Nash FarmDirect outreach + waitlist$40–$100 booth fee, sell direct1–6 months
Private / Corporate EventsOpen houses, office parks, dealerships, HOA events, weddingsDirect pitch to property owner or event organizerFlat catering rate OR sell direct — no booth fee1–8 weeks

Grapevine Artisans Market — Recurring Weekly Opportunity

Often overlooked: Grapevine hosts a recurring Grapevine Artisans Market held most weekends from early spring through late summer in Liberty Park or at the Town Square Gazebo — right in the same corridor as Main Street Fest and GrapeFest. Smaller than the major festivals but consistent weekly foot traffic in an excellent location. Check current vendor application status at grapevinetexasusa.com/partnership/vendors/.

📅

Every significant event within driving distance of Colleyville where a coffee cart can apply as a food vendor, ordered by month. Events marked ⭐ are priority targets based on attendance, demographic fit, and coffee sales potential.

April

EventDateLocationAttendanceBooth FeeRatingContact
Colleyville Annual Car ShowApr 25 (annual)City Hall South Lot, 100 Main St, Colleyville2,000–3,000TBD (city event)⭐⭐⭐kflynn@colleyville.com
FuelFest DFWApr 25 (annual)Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth10,000–20,000~$400–$1,000⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐info@fuelfest.com
Art in the Square — SouthlakeLast wknd Apr (Apr 24–26, 2026)Southlake Town Square30,000–50,000~$500–$1,200⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐artinthesquare.com
Colleyville Lions Club Easter Egg FestivalEarly April (Apr 4, 2026)Colleyville500–1,500Varies⭐⭐⭐colleyvillelions.com
Grapevine Spring Wine TrailMid AprilGrapevine Main Street1,000–5,000Varies⭐⭐⭐grapevinetexasusa.com
Nash Farm — Spring Into NashApr 25Nash Farm, Grapevine500–2,000Low (community)⭐⭐⭐grapevinetexasusa.com/nash-farm

May

EventDateLocationAttendanceBooth FeeRatingContact
Grapevine Main Street FestMay 15–17, 2026 (42nd annual)636 S. Main St., Grapevine50,000–100,000~$800–$1,500 (3-day)⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com · 817-410-3184
KFM Mother's Day MarketMay 9Bear Creek Park, Keller800–2,000$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
KFM Berries & BlossomsMay 23Bear Creek Park, Keller800–2,000$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
📅 Main Street Fest 2026 — Applications Closed

Applications closed March 17, 2026. For 2027, contact Gisele Garibay (GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com) in October 2026 to get on the early notification list. This is the highest single-event revenue opportunity in the region and worth building toward from day one.

June – August

EventDateLocationAttendanceBooth FeeRatingContact
KFM Father's Day MarketJun 20Bear Creek Park, Keller800–2,000$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
Southlake Stars & StripesJuly 3 (annual)Southlake Town Square20,000–40,000~$300–$600⭐⭐⭐⭐specialevents@ci.southlake.tx.us · 817-748-8919
KFM July 4th Market — "Stars, Stripes & Summer Bites"Jul 4Bear Creek Park, Keller1,000–2,500$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
KFM Ice Cream DayJul 18Bear Creek Park, Keller800–2,000$40⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
Grapevine Artisans Market (weekly)Most weekends spring–summerLiberty Park / Town Square Gazebo, Grapevine300–1,500Varies⭐⭐⭐⭐grapevinetexasusa.com/partnership/vendors

September

EventDateLocationAttendanceBooth FeeRatingContact
GrapeFest (40th Annual)Sept 17–20, 2026 (4 days)Historic Main Street, Grapevine50,000–150,000~$600–$1,500 (4-day)⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com · 817-410-3184
KFM Family Fun Farm DaySept 19Bear Creek Park, Keller1,000–2,500$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
Celebrate SouthlakeEarly Sept (Sept 6, 2025)Southlake Town Square5,000–15,000Varies⭐⭐⭐cityofsouthlake.com special events
☕ GrapeFest — Coffee is Explicitly Permitted

GrapeFest food vendor rules specifically list coffee and tea as permitted non-alcoholic beverages. Four days of 50,000–150,000 wine festival attendees in the morning before the wine tastings open is prime specialty coffee territory. Apply as soon as the vendor portal opens (typically May–June for September event). Contact: GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com · 817-410-3184.

October

EventDateLocationAttendanceBooth FeeRatingContact
Southlake Oktoberfest (25th Annual)Oct 16–18, 2026 (3 days)Southlake Town Square100,000+~$500–$1,200 (3-day)⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐oktoberfest@southlakechamber.com · 817-481-8200
KFM Pumpkins & Pooches MarketOct 31Bear Creek Park, Keller1,000–2,500$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
🍂 Oktoberfest — #1 Fall Priority

100,000+ attendees over 3 days, free admission, Southlake Town Square, perfect October coffee weather, affluent demographic. This is the single highest-attendance event on the calendar after GrapeFest and is considered the top fall priority. Contact the Southlake Chamber immediately at oktoberfest@southlakechamber.com — vendor spaces are competitive and fill months ahead.

November – December

EventDateLocationAttendanceBooth FeeRatingContact
KFM Thanksgiving MarketNov 21 (1pm–5pm)Bear Creek Park, Keller1,000–3,000$40⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
KFM Christmas MarketsDec 5, 12, 19 (9am–1pm)Bear Creek Park, Keller1,500–4,000$40⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
KFM "Warm Up Winter" — Santa, Cocoa, Coffee & CarolsDec 19Bear Creek Park, Keller1,500–4,000$40⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐lovemykfm@gmail.com
Southlake Home for the Holidays / Christmas in SouthlakeMultiple dates Nov–DecSouthlake Town Square5,000–20,000Varies⭐⭐⭐⭐specialevents@ci.southlake.tx.us

Year-Round Recurring

MarketScheduleLocationBooth FeeStatusContact
Keller Farmers MarketSaturdays year-round (8am–Noon Apr–Oct; 9am–1pm winter)400 Bear Creek Pkwy, Bear Creek Park, Keller$40/SaturdayFull — join waitlistkellerfarmersmarket.com · lovemykfm@gmail.com · 817-707-8904
Saint Michael's Farmers MarketSaturdays, seasonal8011 Douglas Ave, Dallas$25 approval + weekly feeApplications open Novsaintmichaelsmarket.com
Saginaw Farmers Market2nd & 4th Saturdays752 S. Knowles, SaginawVariesContact directlysaginawmarket.org
Grapevine Artisans MarketMost weekends spring–summerLiberty Park / Town Square Gazebo, GrapevineVariesCheck portalgrapevinetexasusa.com/partnership/vendors
Colleyville Plaza Concert SeriesSelect Fri–Sat spring/summerColleyville Plaza, 100 Main St.Varies / contact cityContact citycolleyville.com/residents/special-events
Lola's Local Farmers Market2nd Sundays, 11am–4pm, Mar–Dec2735 W. 5th St., Fort WorthVariesContact directlylolasfw.com/farmers-market

The single biggest mistake new cart operators make is showing up to apply for a fall festival in September. These events book 6–9 months in advance. The timeline below maps every action to the right month.

Now — April 2026 (Immediate)
Join Keller Farmers Market waitlist at kellerfarmersmarket.com/vendor-application/ — the waitlist is open and real; get on it today.
Email GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com about GrapeFest 2026 food vendor availability (September event — applications open May–June).
Email oktoberfest@southlakechamber.com about Southlake Oktoberfest 2026 vendor availability — 100K+ attendance, fills fast.
Check Grapevine Artisans Market at grapevinetexasusa.com/partnership/vendors/ for current availability.
May 2026
Submit GrapeFest food vendor application when portal opens (typically May–June).
Submit Southlake Oktoberfest vendor application.
Prepare full vendor kit: cart photos, menu PDF, insurance certificate, W-9. Have it ready to send in minutes.
June 2026
Apply for DSHS MFV license — portal expected to open ~June 1, 2026. Submit immediately for Crestline Partners Inc (or DBA).
Contact Southlake Stars & Stripes (July 3) about last-minute food vendor availability: specialevents@ci.southlake.tx.us.
July 2026 — Open for Business
Launch under HB 2844. Begin operating at any approved events already booked.
Contact Nash Farm and Colleyville Plaza Concerts for remaining summer dates.
Begin direct outreach pitches to local businesses for recurring placements.
August 2026
Apply for Keller Farmers Market Christmas Markets (Dec 5, 12, 19) once on vendor list — contact Sheri Almond directly.
Contact Southlake Home for the Holidays events coordinator about November–December vendor opportunities.
October 2026
Email Main Street Fest 2027 contact (GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com) for early notification — applications open November.
Email Art in the Square 2027 (artinthesquare.com) food vendor contact for early notification.
Email FuelFest DFW 2027 (info@fuelfest.com) to register interest for April 2027 slot.
November 2026
Submit Main Street Fest 2027 food vendor application when portal opens — do not wait, category fills fast.
Submit Art in the Square 2027 food vendor application.
Re-apply for Keller Farmers Market 2027 season.
December 2026
Contact Colleyville Car Show 2027 organizer (kflynn@colleyville.com) — flag your interest, ask about food vendor process given the Lions Club arrangement.
Submit FuelFest DFW 2027 food vendor application (email info@fuelfest.com — food vendors do not use the standard portal).
Apply for GrapeFest 2027 food vendor early notification list.
ℹ️ DSHS Single Event Permit — Backup Option

While the full DSHS MFV license covers all events after July 1, 2026, Texas DSHS also offers a Single Event Permit ($52) valid for one booth at one event for up to 14 days — and a Multiple Event Permit ($200) for several events. If an event comes up between now and July 1 and you want to test operations, these temporary permits are the legal path. Apply through the DSHS Regulatory Services online licensing system.

🚗

Car shows are an underutilized opportunity for coffee carts. The demographic (35–65, disposable income, patient dwell time of 2–3 hours) and the morning timing align perfectly with specialty coffee sales. Here is the full analysis of the local car show landscape and how to approach each one.

Colleyville Annual Car Show — Specific Analysis

⚠️ Conflict: Lions Club Free Coffee

The Colleyville Car Show is an excellent event conceptually, but the Colleyville Lions Club serves free coffee, donuts, and breakfast items at this event. A paid coffee vendor competing against free drip coffee is a losing position without clear differentiation. The strategic approach:

  • Differentiation: Free Lions Club coffee is drip/basic. A specialty espresso cart producing fresh lattes and cold brews is a meaningfully different product. Position as "premium upgrade" not direct competition. Many attendees will pay $6 for a proper latte even when free drip is available — Starbucks has proven this for 30 years.
  • Positioning: Set up away from the Lions Club table, not adjacent. Near check-in/registration at 7am (before the Lions Club setup at 9am) captures the early car registration crowd — the most serious, most coffee-inclined attendees.
  • Partnership angle: Contact kflynn@colleyville.com and propose donating a percentage of proceeds to the Lions Club or another Colleyville charity. This turns a potential conflict into a collaboration and gets city buy-in.
  • Apply by: October 2026 for the April 2027 show.

FuelFest DFW — Top Car Show Priority

DetailInfo
DateApril 25, 2026 (5th year at Texas Motor Speedway, annual)
LocationTexas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth, TX
Attendance10,000–20,000+ (international tour, major production event)
Event typeMassive curated car show + live music + drift shows + fan thrill rides + themed zones (Taste of Tokyo JDM section, People's Choice Paddock)
CrowdAutomotive enthusiasts 20–45, affluent, event-experienced, specialty-coffee-literate
Timing1pm–8pm — afternoon/evening shift; iced drinks, cold brew, and shaken espresso dominate
Food vendor processEmail info@fuelfest.com directly — food vendors do NOT use the standard vendor portal on Eventbrite
Estimated booth fee$400–$1,000 (event-negotiated; not publicly listed)
Apply for 2027Email info@fuelfest.com in November–December 2026. Ask specifically about "coffee/specialty beverage vendor" category and exclusivity terms.

DFW Car Show Circuit — Beyond These Two

DFW runs dozens of car shows every weekend April through November. The best ongoing resources for finding them:

  • Eventbrite DFW car shows: eventbrite.com/d/tx--fort-worth/car-show/ — filter for upcoming events with vendor registration open
  • AllEvents.in Colleyville/DFW: allevents.in/colleyville/car-shows
  • DFW Facebook car show groups: Search "DFW car shows" — active community pages announce upcoming shows weeks in advance with vendor contact info in post descriptions
  • Streetside Classics DFW: Active local club hosting regular shows — contact via Facebook group for vendor inquiries

The general approach for any car show: find the event organizer's contact (usually in the Eventbrite listing or Facebook event description), send Template 2 from Section 33 below, and ask about food vendor spots. Most small-to-mid car shows do not have a formal application process — a phone call or email is sufficient.

Is a Car Show Good for a Coffee Cart? — The Bottom Line

FactorAssessment
Dwell time✅ Excellent — attendees stay 2–4 hours examining cars
Morning timing✅ Excellent — most shows run 8am–Noon (prime coffee window)
Demographic✅ Strong — 35–65, car enthusiast = premium product buyer
Weather (DFW)⚠️ Variable — April shows in perfect weather; summer shows require iced drink focus
Competition⚠️ Check each show — some have existing food vendors including coffee
Booth fee✅ Generally low ($0–$200 at smaller community shows)
Revenue potential⭐⭐⭐–⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ depending on show size (100-person community show vs. FuelFest 15,000+ person event)
📣

Three templates covering the three event types. Customize the bracketed fields before sending. Keep emails under 200 words — event coordinators receive dozens of vendor inquiries. Short, professional, with an attachment offer wins more responses than detailed essays.

Template 1 — Major Festival Food Vendor Application

Use for: GrapeFest, Main Street Fest, Oktoberfest, Art in the Square, FuelFest

📧 Subject: Food Vendor Application — [DBA/Business Name] — Specialty Coffee Cart

Hi [Name],

I'd like to apply as a food vendor for [Event Name] [Year]. We operate a specialty coffee cart under Crestline Partners Inc, based in Colleyville, TX.

What we serve: Espresso drinks (lattes, cappuccinos, americanos), cold brew, iced matcha, and seasonal specials. Beverages only — no food prep.

Setup: Self-contained cart, [X ft × Y ft] footprint. Own generator (Honda EU2200i, inverter, 48 dBA). No shore power required. Full water system on-board. Setup in 45 minutes, cleanup complete in 30.

Compliance: Texas DSHS MFV License [#]. General liability insurance $1M/$2M — certificate available immediately with your organization named as additional insured.

Why we fit: [Event name]'s audience values quality. We use locally roasted Texas beans and our cart photographs well for social media. We're a local Colleyville business.

Attachments: menu, cart photos, insurance cert, DSHS license, W-9, Sales Tax Permit.

Happy to answer questions or provide samples. Thank you for your consideration.

[Your name] · Crestline Partners Inc · [phone] · [email] · [Instagram @handle]

Template 2 — Community Event Direct Outreach

Use for: Colleyville Car Show, Plaza Concerts, Nash Farm, church/HOA/neighborhood events

📧 Subject: Local Coffee Cart — Available for [Event Name] — No Cost to You

Hi [Name],

I'm a Colleyville resident operating a specialty coffee cart under Crestline Partners Inc. I noticed [Event Name] doesn't currently have a specialty coffee vendor and wanted to reach out.

I'm fully self-contained — own generator, water system, and cart. I handle all setup, breakdown, and cleanup with zero burden on your team. Attendees purchase directly from me, so there's no cost to you.

I'm fully licensed (DSHS MFV) and insured ($1M liability). I can name your organization as additional insured at no charge.

Happy to discuss whether there's a spot and bring a few complimentary drinks for your team so you can taste what we serve.

[Your name] · [phone] · [email] · [Instagram @handle]

Template 3 — Private / Corporate Event Catering

Use for: Auto dealerships, office parks, real estate open houses, gyms, salons, HOA events, corporate team meetings, weddings

📧 Subject: Specialty Coffee Service for [Business Name] — Local Colleyville Operator

Hi [Name],

I operate a specialty coffee cart (Crestline Partners Inc, Colleyville) serving the DFW mid-cities area. I'm reaching out because [Business Name] is exactly the environment where a coffee service creates genuine value for [customers / employees / clients].

Two options:

Recurring placement: I set up in your parking lot or entry area 2–3 mornings per week. Customers purchase directly from me — no cost to you, no coordination required. I handle setup, service, and cleanup completely.

Private event catering: Flat-rate service for team meetings, client appreciation events, open houses, and celebrations. Starting at $[X] for a 2-hour service window. Custom-branded cups available with your logo at no extra charge.

Both options require only a parking space and your permission. I'm fully licensed, insured, and self-contained.

Available to discuss anytime — happy to bring sample drinks to the conversation.

[Your name] · Crestline Partners Inc · [phone] · [email] · [Instagram @handle]

Private Event Pricing Framework

When quoting private catering, use this structure as a starting point. Adjust based on complexity, travel distance, and event premium.

PackageDurationGuestsSuggested RateIncludes
Tasting1 hourUp to 30$250–$350Espresso drinks, cold brew, 1 barista, setup/breakdown
Standard2 hoursUp to 75$450–$650Full menu, cold brew, cold foam, 1 barista, setup/breakdown
Premium3 hoursUp to 150$700–$1,100Full menu, seasonal specials, 1–2 baristas, branded cups available
Full Day / Event4–6 hours150+$1,200–$2,000+Full menu, 2 baristas, branded cups, social media content

For vending model events (attendees pay individually, no client fee), the question to ask is "Is there any other coffee vendor at this event?" — if no, a vendor-pays-nothing arrangement works. If yes, you need the booth fee to justify the slot. Always confirm exclusivity or near-exclusivity for coffee before committing to a paid booth fee.

💡 The One Question That Matters Most

Before agreeing to any vending event, ask: "Will there be any other coffee vendor at this event?" Shared coffee vendor slots at smaller events split the market and can make an event unprofitable. Exclusivity — or being the only specialty coffee option — is the single biggest predictor of strong event revenue. Build it into your pitch as a request: "We'd love to be your exclusive specialty coffee partner for the event."

📦

Every event application moves faster when you can respond to any request within minutes. Build this kit before submitting any applications. Store all files in a shared Google Drive folder so you can send a link instantly from your phone.

  • Cart/setup photos — 3–5 high quality photos showing: (1) full cart from front, (2) full cart from side, (3) drinks being made, (4) finished drink presentation, (5) cart in an event setting if available. Good photos are a competitive advantage — event organizers are curating a visual experience.Get professional photos day 1
  • Menu PDF — One-page, branded PDF with all drinks, prices, and a note about allergens (dairy alternatives available). Should visually match the cart's aesthetic.Design in Canva — free
  • Certificate of Insurance — From your insurer, naming [EVENT] as additional insured. Contact your insurer once per application — they generate this in 5 minutes. Keep a blank template version ready to customize.Free from insurer
  • DSHS MFV License copy — PDF of the Texas DSHS Mobile Food Vendor license (available July 1, 2026). Carry a physical copy in a laminated sleeve at every event.Free — print from DSHS portal
  • Texas Sales Tax Permit copy — Required by most major festivals alongside W-9.Free — already obtained
  • W-9 Form — Pre-filled with Crestline Partners Inc EIN and address. Download from IRS.gov, complete once, save as PDF. Required by all major Texas festivals for IRS 1099 reporting.Free from IRS.gov
  • Setup footprint sheet — Simple one-pager showing cart dimensions (length × width in feet), tent/canopy size if applicable, generator placement, and power requirements. Event coordinators need this for site mapping.Draw in 30 minutes
  • One-paragraph business bio — "Crestline Partners Inc operates a specialty coffee cart based in Colleyville, Texas, serving the DFW mid-cities market with locally roasted espresso drinks, cold brew, and seasonal specialty beverages." Adapt per event. Used in applications and press materials.Write once, reuse always
  • Instagram profile — actively maintained — Event organizers check Instagram before accepting food vendors. A feed showing the cart, drinks, and events signals professionalism. Set this up before submitting any applications.Free — but requires consistent posting
  • Google Drive shared folder — All of the above in one link you can share from your phone in 10 seconds: "Here's our vendor kit: [link]." This alone sets you apart from 80% of applicants.Free

Event Day Operations Checklist

Once booked, use this checklist for every event to avoid the most common day-of failures.

  • Confirm setup time and location with event coordinator the day before
  • Fill fresh water tank at home — do not arrive and look for water on-site
  • Start generator and test espresso machine 30 minutes before gates open
  • Pull a test shot and steam milk before first customer
  • Physical copies of: DSHS license, insurance certificate, Sales Tax Permit — in a laminated folder on the cart
  • Square POS loaded with full menu, tipping configured (18/22/25%)
  • Sufficient milk, beans, and syrups for 150% of expected volume (never run out)
  • Post Instagram story with your location before opening — "We're at [Event] today!"
  • After event: export Square sales report, note which drinks sold best and at what time
  • Send thank-you email to event coordinator within 24 hours — ask about next year's application timing
🏎️

Car shows are genuinely excellent coffee cart opportunities when approached correctly. The crowd is overwhelmingly 30–60, affluent, and present for 2–4 hours — long dwell time translates directly to multiple drink purchases. The issue is knowing which shows to target and which to skip.

✅ FuelFest DFW — The Priority Car Show Target

FuelFest DFW is held annually at Texas Motor Speedway, Fort Worth. The 2026 event was April 25 (already passed). The 5th annual event drew an estimated 10,000–20,000 attendees and featured a massive car show, themed zones including "Taste of Tokyo," live drifting with ride-alongs, live music, and VIP experiences. This is in a completely different category from a community car show — it's a festival with a car show at its center. Food vendors email info@fuelfest.com directly (they do not book through the standard Eventbrite vendor portal). Apply for FuelFest DFW 2027 in November–December 2026.

The Colleyville Annual Car Show — Strategy Nuance

The City of Colleyville's annual car show (April 25, 2026, City Hall south lot, 9am–Noon) has one important constraint: the Colleyville Lions Club provides free coffee, donuts, and breakfast items as a city sponsor contribution. This doesn't mean the cart has zero opportunity — it means the positioning must be right.

  • Free drip coffee vs. specialty espresso are different products — a meaningful share of the crowd will pay $5–7 for a freshly pulled latte, cortado, or iced cold brew even when free drip is available nearby
  • Positioning matters: Set up away from the Lions Club table, not next to it. Market as "specialty espresso" not "coffee"
  • The smarter play for 2027: Contact kflynn@colleyville.com in October 2026 and propose a formal vendor agreement. Offer to donate 10–15% of proceeds to the Lions Club or Colleyville Foundation — this turns a potential conflict into a community partnership and gives the city a reason to welcome you
  • Networking value: Regardless of vending status, attending the car show puts you in front of Colleyville's homeowner community in your backyard. Bring business cards for private event bookings — the people at this show are the same people planning corporate events, HOA parties, and neighborhood gatherings

DFW Car Show Circuit — Beyond Colleyville

EventScaleTimingCart FitHow to Apply
FuelFest DFW — Texas Motor Speedway10,000–20,000+April annually⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Email info@fuelfest.com (Nov–Dec for following April)
Springfest Food Festival & Car Show — DFW2,000–5,000Spring⭐⭐⭐⭐Search Eventbrite for current year listing
Streetside Classics — DFW area500–2,000Monthly meets⭐⭐⭐Contact organizers via Instagram @streetsideclassics
Colleyville Annual Car Show — City Hall lot2,000–3,000April 25 annually⭐⭐⭐ (with strategy)kflynn@colleyville.com — apply Oct prior year
Historic Mesquite Vintage Car Show1,000–3,000Spring⭐⭐⭐Search Eventbrite annually for vendor application
✉️

Three distinct scenarios call for three different tones and structures. Copy, customize, and send. Replace all bracketed fields with actual details before sending — event organizers spot a generic template immediately.

Template 1 — Major Festival Food Vendor Application Cover Letter

Use for: GrapeFest, Main Street Fest, Southlake Oktoberfest, Art in the Square. These events have formal vendor applications — this letter accompanies the application form.

📧 Template 1: Festival Application Cover Letter

Subject: Food Vendor Application — [Cart Brand Name] Specialty Coffee Cart — [Event Name] [Year]

Hi [First Name],

I'd like to apply as a food/beverage vendor for [Event Name] [Year]. We operate [Cart Brand Name], a specialty coffee cart based in Colleyville, TX, under Crestline Partners Inc.

What we serve: Handcrafted espresso drinks (lattes, cappuccinos, flat whites, americanos), cold brew, iced matcha, and event-specific seasonal specials. All beverages made fresh to order. Non-alcoholic beverages only.

Setup: Self-contained cart, [X ft × Y ft] footprint. We bring our own Honda EU2200i inverter generator (48 dBA — meets any quiet-operation requirement). Full water system on-board. Shore power available as backup. Setup under 45 minutes, full teardown and cleanup within 30 minutes post-event.

Licensing & insurance: Texas DSHS Mobile Food Vendor license [#]. General liability at $1M per occurrence / $2M aggregate — certificate issued same-day with your organization named as additional insured.

Why we're a fit for [Event Name]: [One sentence specific to the event — e.g., "GrapeFest's morning sessions before wine tastings open are an untapped specialty coffee window, and our crowd demographic is identical — wine-literate, quality-conscious, and mid-cities affluent."]

We use [DFW Roaster name] beans, a Texas-based roaster, and our presentation is polished — the cart photographs well and contributes positively to event aesthetics.

Attached: completed application, menu, cart photos, COI, DSHS license, W-9, and Sales Tax Permit.

Happy to answer any questions or provide samples in advance. Thank you for your time.

[Your full name]
Crestline Partners Inc — [Cart Brand Name]
[Phone] · [Email] · [Instagram handle] · [Website if available]

Template 2 — Community Event Direct Outreach

Use for: Colleyville Plaza Concerts, Nash Farm events, Keller Farmers Market inquiry, church festivals, HOA events, neighborhood gatherings. Shorter, warmer, personal tone.

📧 Template 2: Community Event Direct Outreach

Subject: Local Coffee Cart — Available for [Event Name]

Hi [Name],

I'm [Name], a Colleyville resident operating [Cart Brand Name], a specialty coffee cart, under Crestline Partners Inc. I noticed [Event Name] and wanted to reach out about whether there's an opportunity for a coffee vendor.

We're fully self-contained — our own generator, water system, and cart. Full setup and teardown with no coordination burden on your team. Attendees purchase directly from us, so there's no cost to your event.

We're fully licensed under the Texas DSHS Mobile Food Vendor program and carry $1M liability insurance. Happy to name your organization as additionally insured at no charge.

Could we find 10 minutes to talk? I'm also happy to drop off a few complimentary drinks for your team beforehand — happy to let the product speak for itself.

Thank you — [Name]
[Phone] · [Instagram]

Template 3 — Private & Corporate Event Catering Pitch

Use for: auto dealerships, office parks, real estate open houses, law firms, gyms, salons, corporate team events, weddings, birthday parties. This pitch has two tracks — recurring placement vs. one-time event catering.

📧 Template 3: Private / Corporate Booking Pitch

Subject: Specialty Coffee Cart — Available for Private Events & Weekly Service · [Business Name]

Hi [Name],

I operate [Cart Brand Name], a specialty coffee cart based in Colleyville under Crestline Partners Inc. I'm reaching out because [Business Name] is exactly the kind of environment where a quality coffee service creates real value — [for your clients while they wait / for your team on busy mornings / as a memorable touch at your events].

Option 1 — Recurring weekly service: I set up in your [parking lot / lobby area / entry] two or three mornings per week. Employees and clients get freshly made lattes, cold brews, and espresso drinks without leaving the property. No cost to you — guests purchase directly from the cart. I handle everything: setup, service, cleanup.

Option 2 — Private event catering: Flat-rate for team lunches, client appreciation events, open houses, milestone celebrations, and corporate meetings. Starting at $[X] for a 2-hour service window, all drinks included for up to [Y] guests. Custom-branded cups with your logo available.

Both options require only a designated space and your permission. I'm fully licensed (Texas DSHS MFV), insured at $1M liability, and completely self-contained — no power or water requirements from your facility if needed.

Can I bring a few sample drinks by this week so you can see what we offer? No commitment — just a cup of coffee.

[Your name] · Crestline Partners Inc
[Phone] · [Email] · [Instagram] · [Booking link]

Vendor Kit — What to Have Ready Before You Apply

DocumentWhat It IsWhere to Get ItTiming
Certificate of Insurance (COI)1-page proof of your liability policy with event named as additionally insuredYour insurance carrier — takes 5 minutes to generateAvailable after binding your policy — July 2026
DSHS MFV License copyYour Texas statewide mobile food vendor license under HB 2844dshs.texas.gov — apply ~June 1, 2026Available July 1, 2026
Texas Sales Tax PermitProof you collect and remit Texas sales taxAlready obtained via Crestline — verify it covers food/beverage salesAvailable now
W-9 FormFederal tax ID form required by most festivals for IRS reportingIRS.gov — pre-fill with Crestline Partners Inc EINAvailable now
Cart photos (3–5 images)High-quality photos of the cart in operation — event organizers use these to visualize their eventTaken during your soft launch or dial-in practice sessionsBefore first application submission
One-page vendor overviewBrand name, menu, cart dimensions (footprint), power requirements, brief business bioCreate in Canva or Google Docs — keep to one pageBefore first application submission
Instagram profile linkEvent organizers check social media to evaluate visual quality and brand presenceSet up account before applying to any eventBefore first application submission
🗓️

The single biggest mistake new cart operators make is showing up to apply for a fall festival in September. Major DFW events book their vendors 3–6 months in advance. This calendar tells you exactly what to do each month to never miss a window.

April 2026 — Right Now
Join Keller Farmers Market waitlist — kellerfarmersmarket.com/vendor-application/ (currently full; waitlist is how you get in)
Email Gisele Garibay at GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com — ask about GrapeFest 2026 food vendor application status and whether window is still open
Email Southlake Chamber at oktoberfest@southlakechamber.com — ask about Oktoberfest 2026 food vendor availability
Email Jaime Ingram at JIngram@GrapevineTexasUSA.com — ask about Grapevine Artisans Market 2026 availability (season runs April–September)
Email Colleyville Special Events at kflynn@colleyville.com — ask about Plaza Concert Series food/beverage vendor slots
May 2026
Confirm GrapeFest food vendor application submitted before deadline closes
Submit Southlake Oktoberfest vendor application if accepted to apply
Research Southlake Stars & Stripes (July 3) — contact Lauren Kimberly at lkimberly@ci.southlake.tx.us
Begin building your vendor kit: one-page overview, cart dimensions, W-9, menu PDF
June 2026
Apply for DSHS MFV license — portal expected to open approximately June 1 at dshs.texas.gov. Submit immediately — your application needs time to process before July 1
Bind liability insurance if not already done — get COI immediately after binding
Submit Southlake Stars & Stripes vendor application
Begin private business placement pitches — 10 businesses per week minimum using Template 3
July 2026 — Launch Month
DSHS license active July 1 — begin operating
First farmers market or event appearance
Tag every event on Instagram — build follower base before fall festival season
Apply to Keller Art Walk (October) — kellertx.gov special events
Follow up on any pending applications (Keller FM waitlist, GrapeFest, Oktoberfest)
August 2026
Contact Keller Farmers Market about Christmas Market slots (December 5, 12, 19) — especially Dec 19 "Warm Up Winter: Santa, Cocoa, Coffee & Carols"
Contact Southlake for Home for the Holidays events (November–December)
Begin fall event bookings — corporate holiday parties typically book in August–September
September 2026
GrapeFest runs September 17–20 — operate if accepted as vendor
Begin planning for 2027 major applications: start building relationships with event coordinators now, before application windows open
Contact FuelFest (info@fuelfest.com) to inquire about DFW 2027 food vendor applications — ask what documentation they need, confirm timeline
October 2026
Southlake Oktoberfest runs October 16–18 — operate if accepted
Contact kflynn@colleyville.com about Colleyville Car Show 2027 vendor opportunities — offer partnership with Lions Club
Apply to Art in the Square 2027 — food vendor applications monitored at artinthesquare.com
Begin researching new 2027 events: Bedford Blues & BBQ, Keller Crawfish Krawl, Roanoke events calendar
November 2026
Submit Main Street Fest 2027 application — GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com (window typically opens November for May festival)
Confirm Keller FM Christmas Market vendor status for December
Submit FuelFest DFW 2027 food vendor inquiry via info@fuelfest.com
Begin corporate holiday event catering push with Template 3 — companies booking January 2027 team events are planning now
December 2026
Operate Keller FM Christmas Markets (Dec 5, 12, 19) — high foot traffic, holiday mood, premium drink opportunity
Review year-one metrics: which events, which locations, and which drinks performed best
Plan 2027 calendar based on actual revenue data — commit to the 3–4 highest-performing events early

Priority Matrix — All Events Ranked

EventDateAttendanceBooth Cost (est.)Revenue Potential/DayPriorityApply By
Southlake OktoberfestOct 16–18, 2026100,000+$600–$1,200$1,500–$3,500⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Email now
GrapeFestSep 17–20, 202650,000–150,000$600–$1,500$1,200–$3,000⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Email now
Main Street FestMay 202750,000–100,000$800–$1,500$1,500–$3,500⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Nov 2026
Keller Farmers MarketWeekly Sat500–1,500$40/week$300–$700⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐Join waitlist now
FuelFest DFWApril 202710,000–20,000$500–$1,000$800–$2,000⭐⭐⭐⭐Nov/Dec 2026
Art in the SquareApr 202730,000–50,000$400–$800$800–$2,000⭐⭐⭐⭐Nov 2026
Grapevine Artisans MarketWeekly Sat Apr–Sep300–800$50–$75/week$200–$500⭐⭐⭐⭐Email now
Southlake Stars & StripesJuly 320,000–40,000$400–$800$700–$1,500⭐⭐⭐⭐May/June 2026
KFM Christmas MarketsDec 5, 12, 191,000–3,000$40/week$500–$1,200⭐⭐⭐⭐Aug 2026
Colleyville Car ShowApril 25 annually2,000–3,000Negotiate$300–$800⭐⭐⭐Oct 2026 (for 2027)
Colleyville Plaza ConcertsSpring/Summer200–600Free–$50$150–$400⭐⭐⭐Email now
Nash Farm EventsSpring/Fall500–2,000Negotiate$200–$600⭐⭐⭐Rolling
💡 The 3-Email Rule — Do This Week

Three emails sent this week can secure the highest-value opportunities for the rest of 2026. Email 1: GGaribay@GrapevineTexasUSA.com — GrapeFest food vendor inquiry. Email 2: oktoberfest@southlakechamber.com — Oktoberfest 2026 vendor availability. Email 3: Join the Keller Farmers Market waitlist at kellerfarmersmarket.com. These three actions take under 30 minutes and represent the highest-potential revenue targets in the entire mid-cities calendar for a cart launching in July 2026.