I'm curious to know what sort of agreements get worked it in this sort of situation.
Can anyone shed some light on how this works?
Can anyone shed some light on how this works?
WARLOCK said:Interesting question. I have a few OP friends who may know.
Maybe they will post, or I could ask and find out for you.
thewebexpert said:I am not an operator, but have asked a local pizza joint that had a machine in their shop. They do it for free, basically it gets customers to stay longer and spend more money. The operator pays for the game, maintenance and empties the money regularly ....
thewebexpert said:Just my 2cents worth. Someone on PBR was doing commercial coin -op as a hobby and was sharing his adventures ... he would be a perfect person to contact if you are trying to get into the business....
SMOKEDOG. He hasn't updated the thread in a while. Too bad, it's a topic I'm interested in, too.Do you recall his handle?
Vengeance said:As a an example, lets say in the freak off chance your machine catches fire and burns down whatever establishment its in. Your on the hook for that, so you'll need special business insurance to protect yourself.
There are risks, and are the risks really worth the maybe $40 a week the machine might pull in.
Luckydogg420 said:Vengeance said:As a an example, lets say in the freak off chance your machine catches fire and burns down whatever establishment its in. Your on the hook for that, so you'll need special business insurance to protect yourself.
There are risks, and are the risks really worth the maybe $40 a week the machine might pull in.
I'm curious how much that special insurance would be annually? Could you just tack it onto your home policy or would you need to start a company?
Vengeance said:I know every time I've told my insurance company i have pinballs, their first question is, am I using them to take in revenue.
Luckydogg420 said:Vengeance said:As a an example, lets say in the freak off chance your machine catches fire and burns down whatever establishment its in. Your on the hook for that, so you'll need special business insurance to protect yourself.
There are risks, and are the risks really worth the maybe $40 a week the machine might pull in.
I'm curious how much that special insurance would be annually? Could you just tack it onto your home policy or would you need to start a company? If income from a game on location is only ~$500 a year could you claim it as extra personal income, or do you have to run it as a business? If you did have to create a company, then you could write off the purchase/ maintenance cost of the game and be running as a business loss for years.
I think most pinball owners have dreamed of this at one time or another.