How Much Does a Water Refill Station Owner Make at 973 Gallons/Day?
Water Refill Station Bundle
A water refill station owner can make about $434k/month before reserves, debt service, and personal taxes in the Year 1 modeled case if the station reaches 973 daily gallon-fill equivalents Here’s the quick math: about $606k/month in revenue, 145% variable costs, $73k monthly payroll, and $11k fixed overhead leaves about $434k in operating profit This is a scenario-based estimate, not a promise Location, repeat customer behavior, price per gallon, maintenance uptime, and labor choices can move take-home sharply
Owner income$434kNet margin59%Revenue for target pay$737kBusiness difficultyHard
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Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate only. It is not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice.
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Owner-income model highlights
Owner pay and reserves
Revenue, margin, break-even
Low, base, high scenarios
How does owner involvement change water refill station income?
Owner involvement can improve take-home in a Water Refill Station if it replaces paid labor, but that gain is really an owner hourly return, not free profit. The Year 1 model already includes a $50k Station Manager, a Maintenance Technician at $20k, and a Customer Support Rep at $175k, so the labor load is material. Semi-automated or unattended sites can cut counter labor, but they still need cleaning, testing, monitoring, repairs, and customer support, so each new site only adds income if it clears its own labor and maintenance load.
Owner time changes the math
Replaces some paid counter labor
Raises take-home if time is free
Turns profit into hourly return
Fits smaller, owner-run sites
Sites still need hands-on work
Needs cleaning and water testing
Requires monitoring and repairs
Still needs customer support
Scaling works only site by site
What is the water refill station profit margin?
Water Refill Station profit margin can look strong at the gallon level, but the real margin gets squeezed fast once you count monthly fixed costs. If you’re sizing the setup, How Much Does It Cost To Open A Water Refill Station? matters because year 1 water and electricity alone are 50% of revenue in the figures provided. At low volume, $1,080 fixed overhead plus $7,292 payroll can wipe out the margin, so cheap water does not mean high profit.
Gross margin view
50% of revenue goes to water and electricity.
Payment fees and host share still reduce take-home.
Gallon margin looks strong before payroll.
Low volume makes the math fragile fast.
True profit drivers
$1,080 fixed overhead hits every month.
$7,292 payroll cuts total profit hard.
Rent, labor, and insurance need cash monthly.
Sanitation and maintenance still add cost.
Can a water refill station make money?
Yes, a Water Refill Station can make money under the modeled Year 1 volume, but it’s not automatic; What Is The Current Customer Engagement Level At Water Refill Station? shows why repeat behavior matters. Here’s the quick math: 36 visitors/day at 30% conversion, with 70% repeat customers, 12-month repeat life, and 2 repeat orders/month, builds to about $606k monthly revenue and $434k operating profit before reserves, debt, and taxes.
Profit Drivers
Convert 30% of daily visitors
Keep 70% as repeat customers
Drive 2 repeat orders/month
Maintain 12-month repeat life
Main Risks
Weak household refill habits
Poor location convenience
Station downtime during peak hours
Payroll and host share creep
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Want the six income drivers that matter most?
1
Daily Volume
973/day
More daily fills lift sales fast, and Year 1 volume is the biggest swing in take-home.
2
Repeat Rate
70%-85%
Repeat buyers add steady orders, so clean water, working filters, and quick service matter a lot.
3
Refill Price
$0.50
A small price lift moves revenue fast because the ticket is low and the model runs on volume.
4
Labor Load
$7.3K/mo
Payroll runs $7.3K a month, so automation and lean staffing protect owner pay.
5
Purification Cost
5.0%
Water and power stay near 5.0% in Year 1, so every point saved drops straight to margin.
6
Site Overhead
$1.08K/mo
Fixed site costs run $1.08K a month, so they shape how fast the station clears breakeven.
Water Refill Station Core Six Income Drivers
Daily refill volume
Daily Refill Volume
Volume is the main income engine here. Year 1 uses 36 average visitors/day, 30% conversion, 70% repeat customers, and 2 repeat orders/month, which lifts output to 973 gallon-fill equivalents/day after repeat demand. If traffic is high but conversion is weak, revenue, margin absorption, and owner take-home all lag.
This driver includes walk-ins, repeat households, and refill frequency. Track visitors/day, conversion rate, repeat share, and orders per household per month. Weekly or twice-monthly refills matter more than one-time visits because they spread fixed costs over more gallons and support faster cash recovery.
Lift Repeat Refill Volume
Measure refill volume by site and by household, not just foot traffic. A station can look busy and still miss profit if people do not convert into refills. The best signal is repeat demand, because that is what turns traffic into steady owner pay.
Track visits, fills, and repeat orders.
Compare conversion to the 30% model.
Watch households hitting 2 orders/month.
Fix weak conversion before chasing more traffic.
Test what lifts cadence: faster service, easy access, and simple refill reminders. The 70% repeat customer base is the lever to grow; more weekly and twice-monthly refills improve cash flow and make fixed overhead easier to absorb.
1
Price per gallon
Price per gallon
$0.50 per refill gallon in Year 1 and $0.45 for prepaid gallons later set the core revenue rate. Here’s the quick math: a 10% price lift from $0.50 to $0.55 can move profit fast, but only if customers already trust taste, cleanliness, and convenience.
5-gallon jugs at $12 and 3-gallon jugs at $9 lift ticket size and help cover fixed costs. The risk is simple: raise price too early, and volume can slip before repeat behavior is built, which hits cash flow and owner pay faster than the price increase helps.
Test price against repeat demand
Track gallons sold, prepaid share, and jug mix every week. That shows whether price is raising revenue or just shrinking traffic. Use the mix to estimate revenue quality: refill gallons, prepaid gallons, and jug sales each pull cash differently.
5 gallons at $12 = $2.40 per gallon
3 gallons at $9 = $3.00 per gallon
$0.45 prepaid supports retention
If customers refill weekly, protect the base price first. If trust is still forming, hold the $0.50 refill price and use prepaid gallons or jug sales to lift basket size before you ask for more per gallon.
2
Unit purification cost
Purification Cost per Gallon
Unit purification cost includes the water supply and the electricity used to purify each gallon. In Year 1, water supply is 20% of revenue and electricity is 30%, so direct purification cost is 50% before overhead. By Year 5, that improves to 16% and 26%, or 42% total.
That gap matters for owner pay. If the station makes $10,000 in sales, Year 1 direct purification cost is about $5,000, not counting payroll or maintenance. The real risk is calling high gross margin net profit; payroll, maintenance, and other fixed costs still pull cash out, so take-home income depends on what is left after all of that.
Cut Water and Power Waste
Track the inputs that move this cost: source water quality, filter life, wastewater ratio, and utility usage. Here’s the quick math: if each gallon sold needs too much reject water or power, margin drops fast even when sales look strong. Measure cost per gallon weekly so you see drift before it hits owner draw.
Log gallons sold per kWh
Watch reject water ratio
Replace filters on schedule
Test source water changes
If utility rates rise or filter life shortens, update the forecast right away. That keeps the owner from overpaying themselves from a margin that is really being eaten by water loss, power use, or slower purification throughput.
3
Location overhead
Location overhead
This driver is the monthly cost to keep the station open at a site: $1,080 in fixed overhead for maintenance, filters, UV bulbs, ads, digital tools, insurance, software, accounting, and supplies, plus any host site revenue share. The key test is break-even gallons; traffic only helps if repeat fills cover those costs and still leave cash for owner pay.
At $0.50 per gallon, an 80% revenue share means the site keeps only $0.10 per gallon before other direct costs. That puts break-even for the fixed $1,080 cost at about 10,800 gallons per month. What this estimate hides: purification, labor, and downtime can push the real break-even higher.
Break-even site test
Track monthly gallons, repeat fills, and the site's take rate, then compare them with the fixed bill. The best site is not the busiest one; it is the one that clears break-even after revenue share. If a location brings walk-ins but weak repeat use, it can look busy and still drain cash.
Monthly gallons per location
Repeat fills per household
Host revenue share percent
Fixed overhead dollars
Average price per gallon
Downtime and repair days
Use a simple gate before signing or renewing a site: forecast gallons must cover $1,080 fixed overhead, the 80% revenue share, and still leave margin for owner draw. High visibility helps only when repeat demand is steady enough to pay the bill every month.
4
Labor and automation
Labor and Automation
A refill station can run lean, but labor still eats cash. The model says Year 1 payroll is $875k annually, or about $73k/month, with a $50k Station Manager, a $20k half-time Maintenance Technician, and a $175k half-time Customer Support Rep. Automation can cut counter work, but it does not remove cleaning, testing, restocking, or service calls.
The key test is owner income per hour, not just profit on paper. If unpaid owner labor keeps the site open, that time is still a cost because it caps growth and raises burnout risk. Here’s the quick math: compare owner draw and operating profit against owner hours, then price staffing so the station can run without depending on the owner for daily fixes.
Track owner hours, not just payroll
Measure how many hours automation actually removes from counter work, then compare that with the hours still needed for cleaning, testing, restocking, and repairs. The goal is simple: make sure each labor dollar supports more refill volume, better uptime, or lower complaint load. If not, it is just overhead with a nicer label.
Log owner hours weekly.
Separate counter work from field work.
Track calls, cleanings, and restocks.
Watch payroll against refill volume.
Use the staffing plan as a stress test. If the site only works when the owner fills gaps, treat that as a margin warning, not free labor. The real benchmark is whether the station can keep service steady, cover the $73k/month payroll load, and still leave enough cash for owner pay after routine labor and automation savings.
5
Maintenance and retention performance
Maintenance and retention performance
Maintenance and retention protect both uptime and trust. The model includes $300/month for maintenance and $200/month for filter and UV bulb replacements, so the base upkeep cost is $500/month. That spend is worth it only if clean facilities, reliable taste, and fast repairs keep refill behavior steady and prevent lost gallons.
Repeat buyers are 70% of new customers in Year 1 and rise to 85% by Year 5. That lifts lifetime value and smooths cash flow, because fewer customers need to be replaced each month. The risk is simple: downtime cuts volume, and repair bills can rise at the same time, which squeezes owner pay.
Track uptime, repeats, and repair speed
Measure uptime, repeat share, complaint count, and repair time every month. Here’s the quick math: if the station goes down often, refill volume falls first, then repeat rates weaken, and the owner feels it in cash flow and draws. Visible testing habits and quick fixes help keep trust high and repeat refills intact.
Use a simple control list: replace filters on schedule, log water tests, and fix taste or equipment issues fast. Track whether repeat customers stay near 70% in Year 1 and move toward 85% by Year 5. If those numbers slip, the station may still have traffic, but income quality drops.
Log daily uptime and downtime.
Track repeat share monthly.
Replace filters on schedule.
Fix taste issues fast.
Record every repair cost.
6
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Compare lean, base, and high owner-income scenarios
Owner income scenarios
Lower traffic, weaker repeat buying, and fee drag keep owner income thin in the downside case. As conversion and prepaid mix improve, margins rise and breakeven gets easier.
Low, base, and high cases show how traffic and retention change owner income.
Scenario
Low CaseDownside case
Base CaseBase case
High CaseUpside case
Launch model
This downside case keeps traffic and repeat buying weak, so owner income stays under breakeven pressure.
This modeled middle case follows the core plan and moves through breakeven around Month 13.
This upside case assumes later-year lift in traffic, conversion, repeat buying, and prepaid use, which pushes owner income much higher.
Typical setup
The station sees fewer visitors, lower conversion, and little prepaid volume, while payroll, host share, and maintenance stay fixed.
The station runs near the Year 1 plan at about 36 visitors a day, 30% conversion, 70% repeat customers, 5 units per order, and a $0.50 refill price.
The station reaches stronger Year 5 style demand with more visitors, 50% conversion, 85% repeat customers, 3 orders per month, and a 28% prepaid mix.
Cost drivers
Lower visitor conversion
weak repeat behavior
low prepaid mix
fixed payroll
host revenue share
36 visitors/day
30% conversion
70% repeat customers
5 units/order
$0.50 refill price
Later-year visitor lift
50% conversion
85% repeat customers
3 orders/month per repeat customer
28% prepaid mix
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves
-$44k to $0Below breakeven
$109kModeled middle
$1.38M - $2.74MStrong upside
Best fit
Use this to stress-test a slow launch, weak site traffic, or softer customer retention.
Use this as the core operating plan and the main breakeven reference.
Use this to test a strong site, better retention, and higher prepaid adoption.
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Planning note: Scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions.
The model includes $54,500 in listed startup capex: $30,000 for purification equipment, $15,000 for one dispensing kiosk, $5,000 for storage tanks, $2,000 for initial reusable containers, and $1,500 for POS hardware Startup cost is separate from owner income because equipment cash leaves before monthly profit starts
Break-even depends on volume and payroll Using Year 1 assumptions, $84k in monthly payroll plus fixed overhead and $04275 contribution per gallon gives about 196k gallons/month, or 653 gallons/day If repeat demand builds slowly, the station may need more months of cash cushion
You should plan for permits, testing, and local health or water rules, but requirements vary by city, county, and state The financial model includes $80/month for insurance, $200/month for filter and UV bulb replacements, and $300/month for maintenance Confirm legal and sanitation requirements with local authorities before opening
Payroll is the largest modeled monthly expense Year 1 payroll is about $73k/month, compared with $1,080 in fixed overhead and 145% variable costs The biggest pressure points are staffing, host revenue share, maintenance, filter replacements, payment fees, and whether the owner personally covers manager duties
A second location makes sense only after the first site proves repeat demand, uptime, and owner pay Watch for stable refill volume, strong customer retention, and cash flow after reserves In the model, repeat customers rise from 70% in Year 1 to 85% by Year 5, which is the kind of trend that can support expansion
About the author
Owen Clarke
Small Business Consultant
Owen Clarke is a small business consultant at Financial Models Lab who writes about everyday business finance and business plan basics for founders building a simple plan before investing money. He focuses on realistic assumptions and startup costs, bringing a practical founder perspective to help readers make grounded, real-world decisions.
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