Slush Machine Economics for Pools, Campgrounds & Snack Shacks (Canada)

2026 Jun 27th

Slush Machine Economics for Pools, Campgrounds & Snack Shacks (Canada)

Red commercial slush machine dispensing a bright blue slushy into a plastic cup at an outdoor Canadian concession stand
⚡ Quick Answer

A well-run slush program in Canada typically returns a gross profit margin of 70–80% per cup. With a selling price of CA 3–CA 5 and an all-in ingredient and consumable cost of roughly CA 0.30–CA 0.70 per serving (syrup plus cup, lid, and straw), profit per cup lands between CA 2 and CA 4. At seasonal venues such as pools, campgrounds, and snack shacks, equipment can pay for itself within a single Canadian summer. ChickenPieces.com ships 5:1 slush concentrates — Slush Puppie, Jolly Rancher, and McLean — Canada-wide from Calgary with no membership required.

Key takeaways

  • Gross profit margins on slush typically run 70–80%, with some sources citing up to 85–90% on multi-barrel commercial units.
  • All-in cost per serving (syrup + disposables) is approximately CA 0.30–CA 0.70; selling price is typically CA 3–CA 5.
  • A 4 L Slush Puppie jug at 5:1 dilution yields approximately 20 L of finished slush — around 55–70 servings at 10–12 oz.
  • Equipment ROI at seasonal venues is often 3–6 months, or less than one Canadian summer for high-traffic locations.
  • Canadian-made Slush Puppie concentrates and licensed-brand Jolly Rancher 5:1 syrups are in-stock and ship from Calgary.

Why are slush machines profitable for seasonal Canadian venues?

Slush drinks have one of the highest margins in the concession beverage category because the main cost driver — the 5:1 concentrate — is inexpensive per litre, and the finished product is mostly water and ice. Seasonal venues in Canada (pools, campgrounds, snack shacks, arenas, fairs) are particularly well-suited because demand peaks in summer when the weather creates a natural upsell opportunity. A cup of bright-coloured slushy is a high-impulse, low-consideration purchase, especially for children and families.

What profit margin can I expect from a slush machine in Canada?

Industry sources specialising in Canadian slush programs cite gross profit margins in the range of 70–80% for typical operations, with three-barrel commercial units achieving up to 85–90% under optimal conditions. The margin depends on three variables: the cost of your 5:1 syrup, the volume of finished slush it produces, and the price you charge. At a 5:1 dilution ratio (1 part syrup, 5 parts water), the syrup cost per cup is very low, even before any volume discount.

Cost-per-cup breakdown for a Canadian slush program

Cost componentEstimated CA per servingNotes
5:1 syrup (concentrate)~CA 0.15–CA 0.40Depends on brand, volume, and serving size
Cup~CA 0.05–CA 0.10Plastic slush cups, wholesale case
Lid and straw~CA 0.05–CA 0.10Dome lid + straw per serve
Total cost per serving~CA 0.30–CA 0.70Before labour and machine amortisation
Typical selling priceCA 3.00–CA 5.00Concession pricing, Canadian venues
Gross profit per cup~CA 2.30–CA 4.70Before labour and overhead

Costs are illustrative ranges based on publicly available Canadian concession data and should be verified against your actual supplier pricing. Volume discounts on syrup cases can meaningfully lower the per-serving ingredient cost.

What is a 5:1 slush concentrate, and how much does it yield?

A 5:1 concentrate means you mix 1 part syrup with 5 parts water before loading it into the slush machine. The machine then freezes and aerates the mixture into the slushy texture customers expect. At this ratio, one litre of concentrate produces 6 litres of finished slush.

Yield example — Slush Puppie 4 L jug:
  • 4 L concentrate × 6 = 24 L finished slush
  • At 355 mL (12 oz) per serving: approximately 67 servings
  • At 473 mL (16 oz) per serving: approximately 50 servings
  • At CA 4 per cup × 67 servings = approximately CA 268 revenue per jug

Jolly Rancher 5:1 syrups are also available in 1.89 L (64 oz) bottles for lower-volume or test programs. A 1.89 L bottle at 5:1 yields approximately 11.3 L of finished slush, or roughly 32 servings at 12 oz.

How long does it take a slush machine to pay for itself in Canada?

At a well-trafficked seasonal venue — a public pool, campground store, or fairground stand — industry sources cite an average ROI period of 3–6 months. At a very high-traffic location selling 100+ cups per day, the machine may recover its cost within a single season. Variables include daily cup volume, selling price, equipment purchase vs. lease cost, and staffing. Run the math with your own traffic estimates before committing to a machine purchase.

Which slush concentrate brands are available in Canada?

The three main brands stocked at ChickenPieces.com for Canadian operators are:

  • Slush Puppie (Canadian Made): the original Canadian brand, available in Cherry, Blue Raspberry, Lime, Cream Soda, and Arctic Grape in 4 L/135 oz jugs. Produced in Canada.
  • Jolly Rancher 5:1: a licensed candy-brand concentrate with intense fruit flavour recognition — Cherry and Blue Raspberry are top sellers. Available in 1.89 L (64 oz) and bulk 64 oz/6-per-case formats.
  • McLean: Canadian-made concentrate available in flavours including Bubble Gum in 4 L format.

All three are available through ChickenPieces.com slushy syrups and ship Canada-wide from Calgary.

Slush machine options: what size do you need?

For pools, campgrounds, and snack shacks, a 2–3 barrel countertop commercial machine is the most practical starting point. Single-barrel units limit you to one flavour; two- and three-barrel units let you run complementary flavours (e.g., Cherry and Blue Raspberry) that increase per-visit spend. Machine capacity should be matched to your expected peak-hour demand — a machine that runs empty constantly will lose sales; one that never fills up is unnecessary capital. A new commercial slush machine in Canada ranges from approximately CA 6,000 to CA 20,000+ depending on capacity; rental or lease programs are available through equipment suppliers.

How it works in Canada

ChickenPieces.com is a Calgary-based wholesale supplier carrying 30+ slush flavours in 5:1 concentrates including Slush Puppie Cherry 4 L and Jolly Rancher Cherry 1.89 L. Orders ship across Canada in 2–5 business days with no membership required and free shipping on most orders over CA 199. For operators running a full concession program, cups, lids, straws, and other disposables are available in the same order.

Stock up at ChickenPieces.com

Frequently Asked Questions

What profit margin can I expect from a slush machine in Canada? +
Industry sources specialising in Canadian slush programs cite gross profit margins of 70–80% for typical operations, with three-barrel commercial units achieving up to 85–90% under optimal conditions. At a selling price of CA 3–CA 5 and all-in ingredient and consumable costs of CA 0.30–CA 0.70, gross profit per cup is approximately CA 2.30–CA 4.70.
What is the cost per cup for a slush machine? +
All-in ingredient and consumable costs (syrup, cup, lid, straw) run approximately CA 0.30–CA 0.70 per serving, depending on the syrup brand, serving size, and volume purchased. Syrup is the largest single cost component at roughly CA 0.15–CA 0.40 per serving at standard wholesale pricing.
What does 5:1 slush concentrate mean? +
A 5:1 slush concentrate is mixed at a ratio of 1 part syrup to 5 parts water before loading into the machine. This produces 6 litres of finished slush per litre of concentrate. At this ratio one 4 L jug yields 24 L of slush, or approximately 67 servings at 12 oz.
How many servings does a 4 L Slush Puppie jug make? +
A 4 L Slush Puppie jug at the standard 5:1 dilution ratio yields approximately 24 L of finished slush. That is around 67 servings at 12 oz (355 mL) or approximately 50 servings at 16 oz (473 mL).
How long does slush concentrate last once opened? +
Unopened 5:1 slush concentrates have a shelf life of typically 12–24 months when stored in a cool, dry location. Once opened, reseal and refrigerate; most manufacturers recommend using opened concentrate within 30 days. Always check the specific product label for storage and use-by guidance.
Do I need a commercial slush machine, or can I use a residential one? +
For any commercial service setting — pool, campground, cafe, arena — a commercial slush machine is required. Commercial units are designed for continuous operation, high throughput, and temperature consistency, which is essential for food safety and product quality. Residential or countertop blender-style units are not designed for the volumes or duty cycles of even a modest concession stand.
What are the best slush flavours to sell in Canada? +
Cherry and Blue Raspberry consistently rank as the top two slush flavours in Canadian concession settings. Lime, Cream Soda (a Slush Puppie staple), and fruit punches are also strong sellers. Running two complementary flavours side by side on a two-barrel unit increases per-visit spend and customer satisfaction.
Where can I buy slush concentrate in bulk in Canada? +
ChickenPieces.com stocks Slush Puppie (Canadian Made), Jolly Rancher 5:1, and McLean concentrates and ships Canada-wide from Calgary in 2–5 business days. No membership is required and free shipping applies to most orders over CA 199. Pallet pricing is available on selected Jolly Rancher formats for high-volume operators.

Stock Up on Slush Concentrate Before the Summer Rush

Order Slush Puppie, Jolly Rancher, and McLean 5:1 concentrates from ChickenPieces.com. Calgary-based, ships coast-to-coast in 2–5 business days, no membership needed. Free shipping on most orders over CA 199.

21,000+ SKUs · Operating since 2017 · Calgary-based · Ships across Canada · Free shipping on most orders over CA 199

This article is operational information for foodservice buyers. Profit margin estimates, costs per cup, and yield figures are illustrative ranges drawn from publicly available Canadian concession industry sources and should be verified against your own supplier pricing, machine specifications, and operating costs before making investment decisions. Sources: TFI Canada slush business guides; VEVOR ROI analysis; Snowshock profit calculator; Restaurant Warehouse 3-bowl slush guide; DSL Inc. Canadian slush profitability.