Cashew Nut Processing Startup Costs: $115M+ CAPEX Plan
Cashew Nut Processing Bundle
It costs at least $115M in listed CAPEX to start the modeled cashew nut processing business before raw nut inventory, payroll runway, deposits, insurance, and launch working capital That CAPEX includes a $450,000 raw cashew nut shelling line, $300,000 peeling and sorting, $180,000 roasting and seasoning equipment, and $220,000 packaging line automation Total funding depends on capacity, automation, food-grade buildout, raw cashew supply depth, and how many months of expenses you carry during ramp-up In Year 1, the plan produces 305,000 units and supports $322M in modeled revenue, so working capital matters as much as machinery
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Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a cashew nut processing plant, based on the main equipment and site buildout lines.
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CAPEX limits This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes raw nut inventory, payroll runway, rent deposits, debt service, marketing, working capital, and other operating costs.
Where does the CAPEX tab show startup costs?
This screenshot shows the CAPEX tab in the Cashew Nut Processing Financial Model Template, where startup costs and working capital sit. Check Month 1–6 timing, launch timing, depreciation or amortization, and cost amounts, then review the assumptions.
Screenshot highlights
Month 1–6 CAPEX timing
$115M equipment spend
Model period and launch
Depreciation and amortization
Utilization, yield, gross margin
305k Year 1 units
$322M Year 1 revenue
$815k wages
$21.2k monthly fixed
Validate quotes and supplier terms
Check inventory days
Find lender funding gaps
Cashew Nut Processing Financial Model
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How much money do I need to open a cashew processing plant?
For Cashew Nut Processing, start with the listed $115M CAPEX from Month 1 to Month 6, then add pre-opening cash, inventory, payroll runway, and working capital; don’t price this as equipment only. For KPI discipline while sizing that reserve, see What Is The Most Important Indicator Of Success For Cashew Nut Processing?. Here’s the quick math: $815,000 Year 1 payroll ÷ 12 + $21,200 monthly fixed overhead = ~$89,117/month, so a three-month runway is ~$267,000 before raw cashew inventory and packaging depth.
Funding Base
Start with $115M Month 1–6 CAPEX
Add facility deposits and setup cash
Fund compliance setup and insurance
Reserve ~$267,000 for three months runway
Working Capital
Buy initial raw cashew inventory
Stock packaging before first shipments
Cover payroll before revenue stabilizes
Size inventory by minimums, yield, ramp
What hidden costs do first-time cashew processors miss?
First-time processors usually miss the costs outside equipment: raw cashew inventory, yield loss, broken kernels, packaging, labels, pallets, sanitation supplies, lab testing, spoilage allowance, freight, utilities deposits, insurance, compliance setup, and working capital. For a quick benchmark, see How Much Does The Owner Of Cashew Nut Processing Business Typically Make? and use unit cost assumptions like $0.80 for Whole Cashew W240, $0.65 for Whole Cashew W320, $0.45 for Cashew Splits, $0.80 for Roasted Cashew, and $0.05 for raw shells. Year 1 outbound logistics at 30% of revenue plus sales commissions at 15% can tighten cash fast.
Cash costs people miss
Buy raw inventory before sales
Expect yield loss and broken kernels
Pay for packaging, labels, pallets
Cover sanitation, lab, compliance setup
Cash burn in year 1
Budget 30% for outbound logistics
Budget 15% for commissions
Hold cash for freight and utilities deposits
Keep spoilage and working capital reserves
What financials do lenders need for a cashew processing funding plan?
Lenders want a cash-first model: startup costs, Month 1–Month 6 CAPEX, depreciation, raw cashew yield, utilization, gross margin, working capital, payroll, and fixed overhead. For Cashew Nut Processing, base checks should tie to $322M Year 1 revenue, 305,000 units, $815,000 payroll, and $21,200 monthly fixed costs so they can see how spend turns into capacity and repayment ability. Here’s the quick math: annual fixed overhead is $254,400, and implied revenue per unit is about $1,056.
Bankable model checks
Startup costs by line item
CAPEX timing by month
Depreciation on equipment
Working capital needs upfront
Cash and debt proof
Raw cashew yield and loss rate
Capacity utilization ramp from Month 1
Gross margin after processing
Downside case for payback risk
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table splits startup spending into five CAPEX lines plus a separate non-CAPEX cash reserve for launch funding.
Highlighted CAPEX$1,250,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$637,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,887,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Raw Cashew Nut Shelling Line
$450,000
Shelling capacity and line automation
Yes
Cashew Kernel Peeling & Sorting
$300,000
Yield loss control and sorting throughput
Yes
Roasting & Seasoning Equipment
$180,000
Roast capacity and added flavor line
Yes
Packaging Line Automation
$220,000
Pack speed, labor reduction, and SKU handling
Yes
Cashew Shell Oil Extraction Unit
$100,000
By-product recovery and oil processing
Yes
Operating Reserve and Payroll Runway
$637,000
Raw nut inventory, payroll, and fixed overhead before breakeven
No
Cashew Nut Processing Core Five Startup Costs
Processing Machinery and Production Line Startup Expense
Core line cost
A cashew line is more than one machine. It includes roasters or steamers, shellers, dryers, peeling, grading, packing, conveyors, controls, tools, installation, and spare parts. Using the source CAPEX, the core set is $450,000 for shelling, $300,000 for peeling and sorting, $180,000 for roasting and seasoning, and $220,000 for packaging automation.
What it covers
This CAPEX covers the production line, not rent or inventory. The modeled machinery total is $1.15M before conveyors, controls, installation, and spare parts. Pricing is capacity-dependent and assumption-based, so the estimate changes with line throughput, target product mix, automation level, and installation scope.
Ask for throughput first.
Lock the product mix.
Define install scope early.
Cost control
Right-size the line to the first launch SKU set, because extra automation in roasting, sorting, or packing can sit idle at startup. Keep installation and spare parts in a separate line item so the quote stays clean. The fastest mistake is buying for full future capacity before you know real throughput.
Sizing inputs
To price this correctly, I need line throughput, target product mix, automation level, and installation scope. A basic shelling line costs very differently from one that adds roasting, seasoning, and full packing. Without those inputs, this budget stays assumption-based, not quote-ready.
Facility Buildout and Utility Infrastructure Startup Expense
Buildout Scope
Set buildout apart from rent. A food-grade cashew plant needs production space, receiving, dry storage, finished goods storage, sanitation zones, ventilation, electrical service, plumbing, compressed air, flooring, drainage, and waste handling. Keep $15,000 monthly rent and lease deposits outside permanent buildout and utility capital spending. One clean line: fit-out buys compliance and flow, not occupancy.
Cost Drivers
Estimate from square footage, utility loads, and trade quotes. Break out washable walls, drains, electrical panels, plumbing, compressed air, ventilation, and waste handling. Roasting and shell oil work can push costs up because they add ventilation, fuel, and waste needs. One clean line: site layout drives spend.
Quote each trade separately
Separate process and storage zones
Model first-year utility loads
Utility Control
Keep factory utilities at 3% to 6% of revenue. Use the low end for simpler lines and the high end when roasting or shell oil handling adds load. Save money with right-sized ventilation, short pipe runs, and phased finishes. Don’t bury rent in the buildout number.
Right-size exhaust early
Phase noncritical finishes
Track utilities by line
Hidden Gaps
What this estimate hides is permit timing, code upgrades, and any landlord work that the lease makes your problem. Build for year-one throughput and product mix, then add capacity later if demand holds. Buying too much idle infrastructure up front drains cash fast.
Regulatory, Food Safety, and Quality Control Startup Expense
Compliance Costs
For cashew processing, this bucket covers FDA food facility registration, state and local food manufacturing permits, Food Safety Modernization Act (FSMA) preventive controls, sanitation SOPs, allergen controls, lab tests, and early consulting, legal, and accounting setup. Budget it as a mix of one-time startup work and ongoing QA, with 0.1% of revenue reserved for quality control overhead.
Unit Costing
The clean way to price it is by unit and overhead. Use $0.02 per unit for W240 and W320, $0.01 per unit for Cashew Splits, then add 0.1% of revenue for QC overhead. This also needs lab quotes, inspection prep, and documentation time, so ask for volume by SKU, test frequency, and months of coverage.
Trim Risk
Save money by scoping only the tests your buyer and facility need, then reuse one documented SOP set across shifts. Don’t skip allergen controls or registration to save a few hundred dollars; rework and delays cost more. Get quotes by location and sales channel, and compare fixed setup fees with the 0.1% QC reserve.
Site Checks
Requirements change by facility location and sales channel, so verify state, county, and customer specs before you sign leases or buy equipment. A plant selling through retail, foodservice, and B2B channels may face different paperwork, test plans, and label checks. That site-by-site review keeps compliance spend tied to the real route to market.
Raw Cashew Inventory and Packaging Startup Expense
Inventory, Not Equipment
This cost is working capital and launch spend, not machinery CAPEX. Price it from units × unit cost for each SKU: $0.80 for W240 and roasted cashew, $0.65 for W320, $0.45 for splits, and $0.05 for raw shells used for oil.
Packaging Stack
Budget packaging by format: $0.10 premium, $0.08 standard, $0.06 bulk, $0.15 specialty, plus $0.03 container cost. Add bags, pouches, cartons, labels, pallets, sanitation supplies, and a production loss allowance. One clean rule: package to the channel, not to the dream.
Use SKU-specific pack costs
Keep labels and cartons separate
Track loss by batch
Cash Timing
Supplier minimums and import timing can make this the biggest cash tie-up at launch. Buy only what supports the first sales window, then refill against orders. If packaging grades differ by customer, split buys by channel so you don’t sit on slow-moving bags or cartons. That cuts waste without hurting quality.
Match buys to launch dates
Separate premium from bulk
Hold sanitation stock lean
Launch Budget Control
For a tight launch budget, treat raw cashews, shells, packaging, pallets, and cleaning supplies as inventory spend that must turn fast. The key check is simple: if a purchase won’t sell or ship within the first production cycle, it’s too early. That keeps cash free for the next import and the first customer orders.
Staffing Readiness, Training, and Insurance Startup Expense
Year 1 payroll
Your staffing load starts with payroll, not just hiring. Based on one plant manager at $110,000, two production supervisors at $70,000 each, eight technicians at $45,000 each, one QC specialist at $60,000, one sales manager at $95,000, and one admin assistant at $50,000, Year 1 base pay totals $815,000, or about $67,917 per month.
Launch setup costs
Keep one-time pre-opening payroll and training separate from the ongoing runway. Add hiring, operator training, food safety training, launch admin, workers’ compensation, liability insurance, initial utilities, and security. Use actual start dates and trainer hours to price it. Ongoing setup costs include $2,500/month insurance and $1,000/month security.
Quote insurance before hiring
Track training hours by role
Start QC before production
Runway math
Here’s the quick math: base payroll plus setup costs equals about $857,000 a year, before benefits, overtime, and taxes. That is $71,417 per month once you include insurance and security. Don’t bury pre-opening labor inside the operating budget; separate it so launch cash needs stay clear.
Load hires in launch order
Delay roles until go-live
Keep compliance staff early
Control staffing burn
The cleanest way to protect cash is to stagger hiring so payroll starts with production, QC, and supervision first. If you carry the full team one month before revenue, that’s about $67,917 in payroll plus $3,500 in insurance and security. That gap matters when food safety training and operator readiness still need time.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario Table
Costs rise as this plant moves from a small line to a larger, more automated facility. Lean limits capex; Base matches the model; Full funds higher volume, deeper stock, and stronger compliance.
Lean, Base, and Full cashew processing launch setups
Scenario
Lean LaunchLower-capital test
Base LaunchFundable base case
Full LaunchExpansion-ready facility
Launch model
Open a smaller plant with limited automation and thinner inventory to test demand and supply flow.
Run the modeled plant at 305,000 Year 1 units and the full equipment set.
Build for the Year 5 scale of 825,000 units with deeper automation and more storage.
Typical setup
Use a smaller facility, basic sorting and packaging, a tighter QA process, and fewer staff.
Use the shelling, peeling, roasting, packaging, and shell oil lines, plus the full Year 1 payroll and $21.2k monthly fixed costs.
Use a larger facility, higher inventory, more technicians, stronger QA, and fuller compliance coverage.
Cost drivers
Shelling line
basic sorting
thin inventory
small crew
limited QA
Full equipment set
305k Year 1 units
815k payroll
$21.2k fixed costs
QA stack
Deeper automation
larger warehouse
higher inventory
more technicians
stronger compliance
Planning rangeCAPEX only
Lower-capital buildSmall plant
$1.46M modeled capexModel build
Expansion buildoutScale build
Best fit
Best for owners who want a lower-capital test before a larger build.
Best for a fundable base case with clear operating scale and enough compliance depth to launch cleanly.
Best for operators ready to fund a bigger plant and push volume hard.
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Planning note: These scenario bands are researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes or fixed bids.
The modeled equipment CAPEX is at least $115M It includes $450,000 for raw cashew nut shelling, $300,000 for peeling and sorting, $180,000 for roasting and seasoning, and $220,000 for packaging automation This is a planning assumption, not a vendor quote, and excludes inventory, payroll runway, rent deposits, and working capital
The listed CAPEX is scheduled across Month 1 to Month 6 The shelling line runs Month 1 to Month 3, peeling and sorting Month 2 to Month 4, roasting Month 3 to Month 5, and packaging automation Month 4 to Month 6 Buildout, hiring, compliance setup, and supplier onboarding can extend the practical ramp-up period
Yes, and it can be material The model carries $815,000 in Year 1 wages and $21,200 per month in fixed costs before raw nut purchases, freight, packaging, insurance timing, and receivables float Three months of payroll plus fixed overhead is about $267,000 before inventory, so equipment-only budgeting is risky
Start with the volume you can sell and fund, not the largest line a vendor offers The base model assumes 305,000 Year 1 units across W240, W320, splits, roasted cashews, and shell oil By Year 5, it reaches 825,000 units, so the base equipment plan should allow growth without forcing too much unused capacity early
Update it whenever supplier quotes, facility terms, or product mix change A small shift in raw cashew cost matters because Year 1 includes 100,000 W240 units, 150,000 W320 units, and 20,000 roasted units Refresh the budget after equipment quotes, lease terms, compliance review, supplier minimums, and any change to launch timing
About the author
Brian Fox
Local Business Observer
Brian Fox writes for Financial Models Lab with a focus on simple cash flow planning for early-stage founders turning a service idea into a real business. As a local business observer, he explains business costs in plain language and uses startup budget examples to show how revenue, expenses, and profit fit together. His practical, realistic style helps readers understand the numbers behind starting small and building with clarity.
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