LiveSwell Pathway · Brand House

Launch a brand
before a brewery.

Private label — sometimes called contract brewing — is the recommended entry point for LiveSwell. Skip the $500K facility, hire an existing brewery to make the beer, and put a real, shelf-ready LiveSwell product in the market in 3–6 months.

Snapshot

The numbers at a glance

$15–40K
Capital to launch
3–6 mo
From contract to first case
12–18 mo
Faster than a full brewery
1–4% ABV
Low-ABV positioning

How it works

Four steps from concept to shelf

01

Partner brewery

Contract with an established California brewery with spare capacity. They handle brewing, packaging, and TTB compliance on their license.

02

Recipe & brand

Co-develop one or two recipes from the LiveSwell lineup (start with the Lager and Sol Swell). Lock in label artwork, COLAs, and SKUs.

03

Distribution

Choose self-distribution under CA ABC Type 17 (more margin, more work) or sign with a regional distributor (less margin, faster reach). Most brand houses start hybrid.

04

Build the brand

Focus capital on packaging, accounts, and storytelling — not steel. Every dollar earned validates demand for the eventual taproom.

Per-unit economics

Per-case and per-keg contribution

Indicative figures for a contract-brewed low-ABV lager at modest volume. Real numbers vary by partner, packaging, and channel — these represent the moderate case used in the feasibility study.

UnitWholesale priceProduction costContribution
1/2 BBL keg (15.5 gal)$180$95$85
1/6 BBL keg (5.2 gal)$75$42$33
24-pack 12oz cans (case)$32$22$10
4-pack 16oz cans$11$7.20$3.80

Distribution

Self vs. third-party — pick your trade-off

Self-distribution

CA ABC Type 17

Keep ~30% more margin per case. Direct relationships with accounts. You handle the truck, the cold chain, the invoices, the rejections. Realistic for 5–25 local accounts.

Third-party distributor

Faster reach, less margin

Scales to hundreds of accounts quickly. Distributor takes 25–30%. You lose direct buyer relationships and franchise law makes the contract hard to exit. Right answer once volume justifies it.

The hybrid play

Brand house → proven demand → taproom

Private label is not a consolation prize — it's a derisking sequence. Two years of contract-brewed sales generate the three things a taproom investor wants to see: actual revenue, brand recognition, and a customer list.

By the time the taproom decision window opens in 2028–31, LiveSwell either has the traction to justify a $500K+ build or the data to walk away — without ever risking the capital.

Go deeper

The full private-label section in the feasibility study covers TTB permits, distributor contracts, slotting fees, and the 36-month revenue model. Jump to that section →