In January 2024, I raised my SS wash price from $3 for 5 minutes to $4 for 5 minutes. 33% increase. I'm in the process of selling my car wash and the potential buyers and my real estate agent are telling me that this 33% price increase should be showing at least 33% increase on the Total Income on my P&L (compared to last year). And, it's not. So, far I'm showing a 17% increase over last year ($50K). But they're telling me that my business went down 16% (33% - 17%). I disagree! My car wash is beautiful, modern and busier than ever. I'm not an accountant and waiting to hear back from my CPA. I know the 33% price increase is going to increase the Total Income on my P&L, but I don't think it's going to directly correlate to a 33% increase in Total Income. Your thoughts??
The missing part of this equation is a car count imho.
As an example: (pretending you only wash cars and there's no vacs or vend) If you washed 100,000 cars last year and made $300,000 (100,000 x $3) and raised your prices to $4 this year, your buyers are expecting to see $400,000 in sales this year (100,000 x $4) and if you miss that mark it means less cars washed than the previous year. Yes, you may be showing an increase in sales but to them, they see the reduction in wash volume (car count).
There's no question you did the right thing because of your increased gross.
Fwiw, and understanding everybody's circumstances are different,
I've flipped a bunch of condos and houses and the one thing I've learned is don't let anybody instill FUD in your mind. Be willing to walk away from any deal that makes you uncomfortable or doesn't meet your expectations. Be gracious, thank everybody for their time and consideration and move on. The buyer wants a deal and will exploit any weaknesses they can find to achieve that goal and your realtor doesn't get paid unless you close so they will try to apply pressure too, albeit more subtly than a buyer would. Whenever I've had trouble selling a property I have raised the price on the listing to show strength and confidence in my position and it's worked every time.
You have a beautiful operation, the equivalent of an In-N-Out Burger, be willing to pass on a less than optimal deal if at all possible.
Good luck Kim!