Branded lighters at a bar counter or restaurant host stand do something most retail items can’t โ they walk out of the venue with the customer and keep promoting the brand for weeks afterward.
Across the venues we work with, a well-merchandised counter lighter program adds $200โ600/month in pure-margin revenue at a typical neighborhood bar, and 2โ4x that at high-volume cocktail spots, dispensaries, and hotel bars. This piece breaks down the playbook we’ve seen work, in order of operations.
1. Choose one anchor design
The first order should be a single design that matches your venue’s primary brand palette โ not three colorways, not a seasonal variant. You’re testing whether the program works at all. A single SKU lets you read sell-through cleanly and gives staff one clear thing to upsell at point of sale.
2. Price for repeat purchase
A custom lighter at $5โ8 retail with $1.40โ2.40 unit cost is a 3โ4x markup that customers actually buy as an impulse add-on. Anything above $10 starts to feel like a souvenir and the velocity collapses. Stay in the impulse zone.
3. Merchandise at point-of-sale, not on a back wall
Lighters move when they’re within reach of the register or POS tablet. The single biggest predictor of sell-through is physical placement within an arm’s length of where the customer pays. A small acrylic counter display or branded tin holds 30โ50 units and replenishes weekly.
4. Reorder cadence
Bars that stock 50 units typically reorder every 6โ10 weeks. Hotels with multiple bars and amenity placement reorder every 4โ6 weeks. Build the reorder trigger into your inventory routine โ when you’re down to 15 units, fire the reorder. We hold artwork on file and ship reorders in 2 weeks.

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