How Much It Costs To Open A Barber Shop: $1745k CAPEX Plan
Barber Shop
You’re planning a barber shop before the first customer walks in, so the budget needs to cover more than chairs and clippers This guide frames a US barber shop startup budget around $174,500 in planned CAPEX, plus pre-opening expenses and working capital for the first operating year The model assumes 35 visits per day, first-year EBITDA of -$185,000, and break-even in Month 26 these are researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes or guarantees
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Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a barber shop, including build-out, equipment, technology, inventory setup, and signage/branding.
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CAPEX only This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It includes initial inventory setup, but excludes working capital, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, financing costs, and recurring monthly operating expenses.
What does this Barber Shop CAPEX screenshot show?
This Barber Shop Financial Model Template CAPEX tab shows startup costs, timing, depreciation, fixed costs, payroll, cash, and runway. Open it to test assumptions.
Key screenshot highlights
CAPEX at $174,500
35 visits/day
300 operating days
Year 1 EBITDA -$185k
Break-even Month 26
Barber Shop Financial Model
5-Year Financial Projections
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How much does it cost to start a barber shop?
A Barber Shop costs about $374,500 to fund through break-even: $174,500 one-time CAPEX plus $200,000 to cover negative EBITDA, or profit before interest, taxes, depreciation, and amortization; track the main operating driver here: What Is The Most Important Indicator For The Success Of Your Barber Shop?. This model assumes 35 visits/day, 300 operating days, and break-even in Month 26.
Budget Base
Plan $174,500 base one-time CAPEX
Cover -$185,000 Year 1 EBITDA
Cover -$15,000 Year 2 EBITDA
Expect $58,000 EBITDA in Year 3
Cost Drivers
Adjust for shop size and city
Check lease condition and plumbing needs
Model chair count and staffing type
Price service mix, not equipment alone
What hidden costs of opening a barber shop should I budget for?
If you’re opening a Barber Shop, budget the hidden startup cash first: rent deposits, permit delays, insurance binders, and pre-opening payroll can hit before the first haircut. For a quick owner-income reference, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Barber Shop Typically Make? Monthly fixed costs in the model are $10,000 total, with $7,500 rent, $1,000 utilities, and $300 insurance. Year 1 also carries 50% marketing spend and 25% payment fees, so cash reserve matters.
Startup cash hits
Rent deposit plus first month’s rent
Utility deposits before opening
Booking software setup and payment setup
Launch photography and opening supply buffer
Monthly run rate
$7,500 lease each month
$1,000 utilities plus $300 insurance
$500 cleaning and $250 software
50% marketing and 25% payment fees
What drives barber shop buildout cost and equipment cost?
Barber Shop buildout cost is driven by renovation scope: code work, plumbing, electrical, flooring, lighting, wall finishes, mirrors, cabinetry, and general construction. The source figure is $100,000 for buildout, while equipment is separate and moves with chair count, wash bowl count, landlord delivery condition, finish level, and whether you buy used or new.
Buildout cost
$100,000 for renovation
Code work changes the scope
Plumbing runs add cost fast
Finish level pushes the total
Equipment cost
$24,000 for chairs and stations
$7,500 for professional tools
$4,000 for washer, dryer, sinks
$12,000 for waiting area decor
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table shows the main barber shop startup assets and the separate cash reserve needed before breakeven.
Highlighted CAPEX$147,500Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$512,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$659,500CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Shop Build-out & Renovation
$100,000
Leasehold finishes and construction scope
Yes
Barber Chairs & Stations
$24,000
Number and quality of barber workstations
Yes
Waiting Area Furniture & Decor
$12,000
Seating count, finish level, and decor quality
Yes
Professional Barber Tools
$7,500
Starter tool sets and replacement grade
Yes
POS & Booking System Hardware
$4,000
Registers, tablets, and booking setup
Yes
Operating Reserve Through Breakeven
$512,000
Negative EBITDA through breakeven and month 36 cash trough
No
Barber Shop Core Five Startup Costs
Location Buildout And Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense
Buildout Budget
Plan on about $100,000 for the shop buildout and leasehold improvements. That covers construction, plumbing for wash bowls and utility sinks, electrical for tools and dryers, lighting, flooring, wall finishes, mirrors, cabinetry, code work, inspections, and contingency. This is a startup cash need, not a monthly expense.
Space And Scope
Ask if the landlord delivers vanilla shell, second-generation salon space, or raw space. Then refine the estimate by square footage, chair count, wash bowl count, permit scope, and finish level. Treat any tenant improvement allowance or landlord work letter as an assumption, not a sure offset, until it is signed.
Match cost to square footage.
Count chairs and wash bowls.
Price permits and inspections.
Keep It Tight
Get itemized bids before you lock design choices, so you can separate code work from cosmetic upgrades. The fastest way to overspend is to price the look before the permit scope. Keep a real contingency, and do not count landlord help until it is written into the lease or work letter.
Budget Check
This line item sits at the center of startup funding, because it funds the space you need before the first haircut is sold. If the shop needs more bowls, more electrical load, or more code work, the budget moves fast, so tie every quote back to the exact layout and permit scope.
Barber Chairs, Stations, Wash Bowls, And Furniture Startup Expense
Core Equipment
A basic floor setup starts around $40,000 for chairs, stations, waiting furniture, and laundry support. The source split is $24,000 for barber chairs and stations, $12,000 for waiting area furniture and decor, and $4,000 for washer, dryer, and utility sinks. Cost moves with chair count, new versus used gear, and the service mix.
What It Covers
Price this line by unit and by quote: chairs, stations, mirrors, wash bowls, cabinetry, storage, waiting chairs, reception desk, decor, installation, and delivery. Add the count of chairs, the number of wash bowls, and whether dryers or steamers are part of the plan. That keeps the budget tied to service capacity, not style alone.
Count each chair and station.
Quote install and delivery.
Match bowls to service volume.
How To Trim Cost
Keep the core work area first and treat premium decor as optional. Used chairs and stations can lower the upfront bill if condition is solid. A larger waiting area and extra lounge pieces add cost fast, so size them to traffic. Don’t cut the wash setup if hot shave or rinse-heavy service is part of the model.
Buy used only with a warranty.
Right-size the waiting area.
Delay nonessential decor.
Essential Vs Premium
$24,000 in chairs and stations and $4,000 in washer, dryer, and utility sinks are the functional base. The $12,000 waiting-area line is where premium design can creep in, so tie it to foot traffic and dwell time. If the shop offers hot shaves, mirror, bowl, and sink layout matter more than lounge decor.
Licenses, Permits, Insurance, And Compliance Startup Expense
License stack
State barber board rules, individual barber licensing, a shop license, business registration, local permits, occupancy approval, and sanitation rules all sit on the opening path. Exact fees vary by state and city, so treat this as a timing and compliance cost first. If a permit runs late, opening rent keeps ticking before revenue starts.
Insurance cash
Model $300 per month for business insurance once operating. That should cover general liability and property insurance, with workers’ compensation added where the staffing model requires it. Budget for insurance binders before opening, because the policy date has to line up with lease start, inspections, and the first day you take clients.
Match coverage to employees
Get binder before opening
Confirm city permit timing
Timing risk
The real risk is delay, not the sticker price. If the shop uses employees or independent chair renters, the license path can change, and so can the permit sequence. One clean way to budget is: fees + insurance binders + extra pre-opening rent days. That keeps you from undercounting cash burn before the first haircut.
Check staffing rules early
Track inspection dates
Allow one delay month
Permit clock
Ask the city for the full sequence up front: business registration, local permits, occupancy approval, then final sanitation sign-off. If any step slips, pre-opening rent can extend another month, and that usually matters more than the permit fee itself. Build the budget around the slowest approval, not the best-case date.
Tools, Supplies, And Initial Inventory Startup Expense
Core Kit
$7,500 covers durable barber tools, while $12,000 covers initial inventory. That bucket should include clippers, trimmers, razors, shears, combs, brushes, capes, towels, disinfectants, neck strips, shaving products, hair products, and retail stock. Separate long-life tools from consumable supplies so your startup budget reflects replacement timing, not just opening day purchases.
Stock Mix
Here’s the quick math: model backbar supplies at 20% and retail product inventory at 50% of retail value. That means you need pricing, unit counts, and expected shelf depth before you buy. Retail is meaningful, but it doesn’t need the same depth at every launch, so start with the products clients will use most often.
Keep It Tight
Control this cost by buying only the tools that serve booked services on day one, then layer in extra retail after demand shows up. Avoid paying full price for slow-moving product lines or duplicate tools. One clean rule: stock for service first, display for retail second. That keeps cash tied up in items that earn back fast.
Budget Check
These startup buys sit inside the full opening budget, so track them as separate lines: durable tools, consumable supplies, and retail inventory. That split makes reorders easier, shows what wears out fast, and keeps early cash planning honest when service volume is still ramping.
Lease Deposits, Pre-Opening Rent, And Launch Readiness Startup Expense
What It Covers
Keep pre-opening cash separate from buildout CAPEX and monthly operating costs. This bucket covers security deposit, first month’s rent, utility and signage deposits, pre-opening payroll, contractor setup help, launch marketing, photos, website setup, local listing prep, and opening supplies. Treat it as cash spent before revenue starts, not an asset.
How To Estimate
Start with the lease inputs: $7,500 monthly rent, $1,000 utilities, $6,000 website development and branding, and $5,000 exterior signage and awning. Then add deposit quotes, payroll for setup time, and a supplies buffer. Use months of delay × monthly carry, plus one-time launch work.
Count opening-delay months
Get landlord deposit terms
Quote payroll and contractor help
Delay Risk
If permits or buildout slip, every extra month can add at least $8,800 in rent, utilities, and insurance, before payroll. Lock permit scope early, push website and signage work in parallel, and tie landlord work letters to dates. One missed month can burn cash fast.
Launch Buffer
Build the buffer around the slowest path to opening, not the best case. If the shop is not ready on time, the cash burn keeps going while revenue stays at zero, so the launch reserve should cover the extra month of carry plus the setup spend that still has to happen.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Startup cost scenarios
Startup costs move with chair count and space quality. Lean cuts build-out and inventory, Base matches the researched $174,500 plan, and Full adds premium finishes, more plumbing, and heavier launch spend.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost bands for a barber shop
Scenario
Lean LaunchOwner-operator
Base LaunchNeighborhood shop
Full LaunchPremium multi-chair shop
Launch model
A smaller owner-operator shop with fewer chairs, tight square footage, used equipment, and lighter launch marketing.
This is the researched base case at $174,500 CAPEX, 35 visits per day, about $10,000 monthly fixed overhead before payroll, and Month 26 break-even.
A premium multi-chair shop with more chairs, a larger waiting area, premium finishes, more wash bowls, higher inventory, and heavier launch marketing.
Typical setup
Compact layout with limited finish upgrades, basic stations, and a lean opening inventory.
Standard shop layout with the planned build-out, barber chairs and stations, and the base inventory and booking setup.
Larger footprint with upgraded finishes, extra wash capacity, and more stock on hand at opening.
Cost drivers
smaller build-out
used equipment
limited finishes
lower inventory
lighter marketing
lease build-out
plumbing
chairs and stations
branding and signage
opening inventory
bigger lease
extra plumbing
premium finishes
more chairs
heavier launch marketing
Planning rangeCAPEX only
$110,000 - $150,000Lowest cash need
$170,000 - $180,000Model anchor case
$230,000 - $325,000Highest build cost
Best fit
Best for an owner-operator testing demand in a smaller space with tighter cash limits.
Best for founders who want the model's core setup and a path to Month 26 break-even.
Best for operators backing a premium neighborhood shop where lease terms and plumbing already support a bigger footprint.
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Planning note: These ranges use researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or signed bids.
Monthly fixed overhead in the model is $10,000 before payroll: $7,500 lease, $1,000 utilities, $300 insurance, $250 software, $500 cleaning, $250 website and IT support, and $200 supplies Payroll is larger, with Year 1 wages of $297,500 annually, or about $24,792 per month before taxes and benefits
This model reaches break-even in Month 26, with the same 26-month payback period The ramp starts at 35 visits per day in Year 1 and rises to 45 in Year 2 EBITDA is -$185,000 in Year 1, -$15,000 in Year 2, then turns positive at $58,000 in Year 3
Yes, because the $174,500 CAPEX plan does not cover operating losses during ramp-up The model shows first-year EBITDA of -$185,000 and Year 2 EBITDA of -$15,000 before positive EBITDA in Year 3 Working capital should also cover payroll timing, rent deposits, payment fees, inventory replenishment, and permit delays
The model uses an employee structure, not chair rental: 1 owner/shop manager, 3 senior barbers, 1 junior barber, 1 receptionist, and 05 shop assistant in Year 1 That creates $297,500 in annual wages before taxes and benefits Chair rental can lower payroll risk, but it changes revenue control and service standards
With 35 visits per day and 300 operating days, Year 1 volume is 10,500 visits The modeled prices are $35 for haircuts, $45 for hot shaves, $25 for beard sculpting, and $30 for retail products, plus $6 in membership and package sales per visit Actual revenue depends on mix, capacity, and repeat bookings
About the author
Martin Fletcher
Founder Support Writer
Martin Fletcher is a founder support writer at Financial Models Lab, focused on practical profit planning for founders writing a business plan. He helps small business owners understand how profit works, with clear guidance on startup cost estimates and the numbers to check before money is invested. His writing keeps the focus on useful figures and realistic expectations.
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