Dad Ran a Food Cart, Said It's the 'Worst Business' but I Still Did It
NEWS | 08 December 2025
This story is available exclusively to Business Insider subscribers. Become an Insider and start reading now. This as-told-to essay is based on a conversation with Petey Stathopoulos, 29, owner of Peteys World Cafe, a coffee cart in New York City. It has been edited for length and clarity. I run a coffee cart in Midtown New York City, but it wasn't the life I'd planned for, nor a life I want to keep up long-term. My dad's been in the food truck business since before I was born and always told me, "Don't ever get into this business. This is the hardest and the worst business in the world. You'll destroy your life." During COVID, I was going through a major depression. I was out of a job, and I didn't know what I wanted to do with my life. I just stayed home at my parents' place with my wife and kid and was kind of being a dirtbag. Then, after about a year, my dad basically got fed up with me. He came to me one day and said he'd found a pushcart for sale, and he gave me a choice: either buy the pushcart or get out of the house. So, I bought the cart and the business for about $35,000. See how Petey and other food truck vendors earn a living on NYC streets in the BI video below: Living the life I was told to avoid I wake up around 4 a.m. each morning at my place in Long Island, rush to the garage in Long Island City where I store my cart, and drive an hour into Manhattan, where I set up shop in Midtown. I then drive it all back when I'm done around 11 a.m., and I do this five days a week. At first, the routine grounded me. Within a year, I began to feel like myself again. But now, four years in, I've realized that I don't want to do this anymore. Petey's cart in NYC. Business Insider The work is constant, and the customers can be unpredictable. I lost about half of my customer base when I raised my prices by $0.25. That sucks because I always try to give good customer service: I greet you, I try to remember you, and I try to be as good as possible. But the stress of keeping up with raising prices and maintaining a loyal customer base is unrelenting. Petey works on the corner of Park Avenue and E 32 St in NYC. Business Insider I pay $350 a month for the garage, $1,200 to $2,000 a month for baked goods, about $200 a month for propane, $50 a week for cleaning, and that doesn't include insurance, gas, and maintenance costs. At the end of the day, I earn enough to simply maintain, but that's not a way to live. Petey giving a customer cash back. Business Insider The only reason I stay in this job is because of my kids. I have a 7-year-old and a 2-year-old. But because of my work, I can only give my kids 20% of my battery, and I give everybody else 80%. I wish it could be the other way around. I know I sound negative, but there's so much positivity that has come from this experience. I had to go through this to grow and become the man I am today. Through this process, I've learned who I am and what I want. I think every man should go to war with themselves to truly find themselves. I want to start a coffee shop Petey making coffee in his pushcart. He hopes to have a different setup one day. Business Insider Whenever I get rid of this pushcart, I plan on working for a specialty coffee shop and getting an understanding of how the flow works, because it's all flow. Eventually, I would love to own my own coffee shop. Right now, though, the economy's pretty bad, and nobody really has money to buy a street business, so I'm stuck here for a while longer. In the meantime, I enjoy experimenting with various drinks at home using my espresso machine. One of my favorites is an iced Americano.
Author: Never Miss A Story. Jessica Orwig. Enter Your Email. Follow Authors.
Source