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PRIVACY
Commercial Property

Expanding Devon pasty business on market for £425k

The Original Pasty House already has outlets in Plymouth and Tavistock but another six potential locations have been identified

The Original Pasty House outlet in Plymouth(Image: Penny Cross / Plymouth Live)

The £2m pasty empire responsible for some of Plymouth’s favourite oggies has gone on the market because the couple who founded it are looking to retire. Nigel and Janet Eadie are mulling the sale of the Original Pasty House, with its two outlets in Plymouth and Tavistock.

The and expanded into Britain’s Ocean City in 2011. It went on to see turnover hit £2.29m and an annual profit of £195,000, which is “rising”.

The firm was also named producer of and regularly appears in lists of the best pasty makers. But its owners are now looking for someone else to take on the business so they can put their feet up.

The business is being , the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's largest Business and franchise marketplace, with a leasehold price of £425,000. It is being described as “an outstanding investment and expansion opportunity”.

Mr Eadie told PlymouthLive that he and his wife were exploring options. He said: “Yes, we are considering a sale of The Original Pasty House including both shops in Plymouth and Tavistock - as we wish to retire in the next couple of years.”

The Original Pasty House opened its independent café in the heart of Tavistock in 2003, and expanded into Plymouth city centre’s Armada Way eight years later “providing a warm and welcoming atmosphere to enjoy a delicious cup of coffee and a traditional Cornish pasty ever since”.

The company provides an extensive eat-in and takeaway menu, including a range of pasties, from the traditional steak to the cheese and bacon and the vegan Mexican bean. It also sells sandwiches, baguettes, jacket potatoes, salads, wraps, paninis, cakes, hot drinks, milkshakes, smoothies, frappes, and serves breakfasts every day until 11am.

Daltons Business described The Original Pasty House as a “a highly profitable food business, trading from two sites in Devon, with exceptional growth and expansion prospects”. It points out that the Plymouth outlet was very successfully “modelled” on the initial Tavistock business and has demonstrably proved the genuine scalability of this “blueprint”.