BBQ Trucks
Pre-equipped with smokers, grills, and holding warmers. High-demand at events and festivals. Great resale value and loyal customer base.
View listingsNashville runs at a different pace than the rest of Tennessee. The sheer volume of tourists, events, and foot traffic on Broadway alone puts it in a different category from every other food truck market in the state. If you are buying a truck to operate here, you are stepping into real competition but also real demand.
The listings below are food trucks for sale in Nashville and the surrounding Davidson County area, posted directly by sellers with full equipment details and asking prices.
Nashville food trucks range widely in price. Starter trucks older builds with working kitchens and some wear can be found in the $20,000 to $35,000 range. Mid-range trucks with newer equipment and reasonable mileage typically list between $40,000 and $65,000. Well-equipped newer builds with low mileage push above $70,000 and sometimes beyond $90,000 in this market.
The demand is real and prices reflect it. Nashville sellers know what their trucks are worth, so expect less room to negotiate than you might find in Memphis or Murfreesboro.
"2005 Workhorse P42 25ft - 2026 kitchen installation, stainless interior, deep freezer, backup camera, Nashville"
A 2005 Workhorse P42 diesel step van stretching 25 feet, outfitted with a 2026 kitchen…
Metro Nashville requires food trucks to obtain a Metro Nashville Health Department food service permit, a Metro Nashville business license, and if you plan to operate on public streets or in Metro parks a separate mobile food vendor permit through Metro Nashville Public Works.
Commissary kitchen costs in Nashville are the highest in the state, typically running $400 to $800 per month depending on facility and usage. Budget carefully before purchasing. The permit process here is more involved than in smaller Tennessee cities and can take several weeks.
Other Cities in Tennessee: memphis · knoxville · chattanooga
Browse the most common food truck categories available across the US. Each type comes with different equipment requirements, startup costs, and market demand — use this guide to find your best fit.
Pre-equipped with smokers, grills, and holding warmers. High-demand at events and festivals. Great resale value and loyal customer base.
View listingsOne of the most popular and profitable food truck categories. Usually equipped with flat tops, steam tables, and high-volume prep space.
View listingsLow food prep overhead with high margin drinks. Ideal for morning routes, office parks, and weekend markets. Often includes commercial espresso machine and generator.
View listingsClassic concept with broad appeal. Equipped with flat-top grills, fryers, and refrigerated prep tables. Strong performance at fairs and sporting events.
View listingsSeasonal but high-margin. Includes refrigeration systems, soft-serve machines, or baking equipment. Great for events and parks.
View listingsFast-growing category featuring sushi burritos, Korean BBQ, Thai bowls, and more. Popular in urban markets and college towns.
View listingsWood-fired or gas pizza ovens on wheels. Increasingly popular at weddings, breweries, and corporate events. Commands premium pricing.
View listingsGrowing demand in fitness communities, farmers markets, and city centres. Often lower equipment cost with simple prep requirements.
View listingsBroadway and the Lower Broad corridor draw consistent foot traffic from morning to late night, but street permits in that zone are competitive and not guaranteed. The Gulch and 12 South neighborhoods attract a more local crowd willing to spend more per transaction. Nissan Stadium and Bridgestone Arena events are some of the highest single-day revenue opportunities in the state, though access usually requires advance coordination with event management.
Corporate catering has grown significantly in Nashville's Midtown and SoBro areas. Operators who build reliable catering routes alongside street vending often report more consistent income than those chasing foot traffic alone.
Explore commissary kitchens, commercial parking, and food truck parks near Nashville, Tennessee to get your business running quickly.
Finding the right food truck isn't just about price — it's about equipment condition, seller transparency, and business readiness. FaithAI Food Truck was built to make that process clearer, faster, and more informed for buyers everywhere.
We focus on connecting serious buyers with verified sellers — no spam listings, no bait-and-switch pricing.
Each listing includes equipment details, mileage, service history, and asking price so you can compare before reaching out.
From starter trucks under $20K to fully equipped custom builds, we list trucks at every budget level.
Browse trucks in your city, state, or nationwide — our directory covers all 50 states with city-level filtering.
Hot chicken is Nashville's own concept and the trucks doing it well have built loyal followings. Beyond that, the market here rewards anything visually distinctive upscale burger builds, loaded fries, craft desserts concepts that photograph well and generate repeat social media exposure.
Bachelorette groups and tourist traffic respond well to novelty. Operators who understand that segment and position accordingly tend to do better than those selling the same menu you can find anywhere in the state.
If you are buying a truck to launch in Nashville, go in with your eyes open about overhead. Commissary fees, permit costs, insurance, fuel, and parking add up faster here than in any other Tennessee city. The volume supports it but only if you have the right location, the right concept, and enough runway to get established.
Nashville food trucks typically sell between $20,000 and $95,000. Older working trucks start around $20,000 to $35,000. Mid-range builds with newer equipment run $40,000 to $65,000. Well-equipped newer trucks push above $70,000. Nashville sellers generally price higher than other Tennessee markets because demand supports it.
You need a Metro Nashville Health Department food service permit, a Metro Nashville business license, and a Metro Nashville Public Works mobile food vendor permit for public street operation. All trucks must operate out of a licensed commissary kitchen. The Metro Nashville permitting process typically takes several weeks.
Commissary kitchen fees in Nashville typically run $400 to $800 per month the highest in Tennessee. Some facilities charge by the hour rather than monthly. Factor this into your budget before purchasing a truck.
Nissan Stadium and Bridgestone Arena events are the highest single-day revenue opportunities, though access requires advance coordination. Broadway and Lower Broad offer volume but are highly competitive. Corporate catering routes in Midtown and SoBro provide more consistent income for operators who establish them.
Hot chicken is Nashville's own category and performs consistently. Beyond that, visually distinctive concepts that work on social media do well with the tourist and bachelorette market. Corporate catering rewards reliability over novelty.
It is harder than people expect. High overhead, strong competition, and an involved permit process make Nashville a tougher launch market than Murfreesboro or Knoxville. First-time operators with limited capital often do better starting in a smaller Tennessee market and expanding to Nashville once established.
FaithAI Food Truck lists Nashville trucks from private sellers, operators scaling up or stepping back, and fleet liquidations across Davidson County. Browse the full Tennessee directory if you want to compare Nashville listings against what is available statewide.