West Palm Beach is getting a serious sugar rush as GOAT Foods opens a new 68,000-square-foot headquarters that the company says will fuel a big hiring push of about 150 positions, a move it says will nearly triple its workforce. The facility brings production, packaging and order fulfillment for the company’s online confection and snack brands under one roof and marks GOAT Foods’ largest footprint in Palm Beach County so far.
The expansion was first reported by South Florida Business Journal, which detailed the lease, hiring goals and photos of the new space. The outlet’s reporting on head count and square footage has since been confirmed by local brokers and the company.
A bigger hub for online sweets
The new West Palm Beach address will serve as GOAT Foods’ hub for its portfolio, which includes Licorice.com, Chocolate.com and Pretzels.com, and the company now lists 205 Sansburys Way as its corporate address. A broker listing shows GOAT Foods leased a roughly 68,000-square-foot unit at the Southern Way Business Center, confirming the size reported in earlier coverage. GOAT Foods lists the brands and West Palm contact on its site, while Biscayne Advisors has posted the leasing details.
Hiring push could triple staff
According to the South Florida Business Journal, GOAT Foods plans to add about 150 positions at the West Palm site, a ramp-up that would roughly triple its current head count. Recent job listings point to openings in industrial maintenance, order picking and other warehouse roles, a sign the company is staffing up on both the production and fulfillment sides of the operation. A posting on Glassdoor outlines responsibilities tied to packaging systems and automation support.
Why West Palm?
The deal lands at a moment when South Florida’s industrial market has cooled from its pandemic-era frenzy but still looks tight for infill and small to mid-bay space, which makes a lease this size stand out in Palm Beach County. Brokers and market reports show vacancy and asking rents settling into more stable territory, even as demand for well-located logistics space hangs on. The Real Deal recently highlighted a lull in leasing velocity alongside what it described as solid fundamentals for industrial landlords…