

#Pa wine store code#
To prevent a municipality from being inundated by liquor licenses, the Pennsylvania Liquor Code also established a population-based municipal quota that limits the number of retail liquor licenses allowed in a municipality the issuance or transfer of any additional licenses beyond that quota requires prior municipal approval.įine Wine & Good Spirits store in Horsham, PennsylvaniaĪs of November 2016, there were about 20,000 active liquor licenses in Pennsylvania.

#Pa wine store license#
Under the law, the PLCB may grant one retail license for every 3,000 inhabitants of a county and one wholesale license for every 30,000 inhabitants of a county (with a minimum of five wholesale licenses allowed per county). On-premises retail licenses and off-premises wholesale licenses are apportioned through a quota system (see below) established by the Pennsylvania Liquor Code. The agency has its headquarters in the Northwest Office Building in Harrisburg. Governor Gifford Pinchot is often inaccurately quoted as having stated that the purpose of the Board was to "discourage the purchase of alcoholic beverages by making it as inconvenient and expensive as possible," while in reality he believed that state control was the best way to move forward from Prohibition. In 1933, just four days before the sale of alcohol became legal in Pennsylvania, the Board was officially organized.

The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board was established in conjunction with the 21st Amendment and the repeal of prohibition. It is responsible for licensing the possession, sale, storage, transportation, importation and manufacture of wine, spirits and malt or brewed beverages in the commonwealth, as well as operating a system of liquor distribution (retailing) and providing education about the harmful effects of underage and dangerous drinking. The Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board (PLCB) is an independent government agency that manages the beverage alcohol industry in Pennsylvania by administering the Pennsylvania Liquor Code.
