Restaurants (bars, taverns), eating place licensees (places selling beer only), and clubs are generally subject to the quota, while licenses granted to public venues, performing arts facilities, continuing care retirement communities, airport restaurants, municipal golf courses, hotels, privately-owned public golf courses, racetracks, non-primary pari-mutuel wagering locations and national veterans' organizations are not subject to the quota.
Most Pennsylvania counties have more retail liquor licenses than the quota allows because many licenses date back to before the quota was established in 1939. The PLCB can’t issue new retail liquor licenses in counties that exceed their quotas, but it doesn’t refuse to renew licenses simply to meet the quota.
If a license in a county over its quota is revoked by the Office of Administrative Law Judge or not renewed by the PLCB, the license ceases to exist, and a new license can’t be issued to replace it.
As a general rule, licenses cannot be transferred between counties.
Act 39 of 2016 created a Restaurant Liquor License Auction, through which the PLCB auctions off "dead" or "zombie" expired licenses dating back to 2000. This was the first introduction of "new" licenses in decades, and the PLCB generally conducts 3 or 4 auctions a year offering 25 to 35 licenses in counties across the state.
Quota Frequently Asked Questions
Wet & Dry Municipalities
Learn more about Wet & Dry municipalities, "dry" being those where local voters opted to ban the sale of alcohol, in all or in part.