HIIT Studio Startup Costs: $154K CAPEX And $825K Cash Need
HIIT Studio Bundle
It costs $154,000 in listed startup CAPEX to open the HIIT studio in this planning model, before separate cash runway and funding buffers The largest upfront items are $75,000 for fitness equipment, $50,000 for studio build-out and decor, and $15,000 for sound system and AV Total funding need can be much higher because the model also carries $11,450 in monthly fixed overhead, $260,000 in Year 1 salaries, and a $825,000 minimum cash position in Month 2 Treat these figures as researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed vendor quotes
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Startup CAPEX
Estimates the capitalized startup assets needed to open a HIIT studio in Month 1 to Month 3.
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What's excluded This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes initial merchandise or inventory, working capital, payroll runway, rent deposits, debt service, and monthly operating expenses.
For a HIIT Studio, plan funding with a sources-and-uses schedule, starting with $154,000 in capital spending (CAPEX) plus startup costs, deposits, payroll runway, marketing, operating cash, and contingency. Here’s the quick math: the model also has $11,450 in monthly fixed overhead, $260,000 in Year 1 salaries, 190% combined Year 1 revenue-linked costs, and a minimum of $825,000 cash in Month 2. Fund it with owner equity, outside investors, bank debt, or an SBA loan if the founder qualifies, then test every line against signed lease terms, vendor quotes, class capacity, membership ramp, and lender debt service.
Uses
$154,000 CAPEX
Startup expenses and deposits
Payroll runway and marketing
Operating cash plus contingency
Funding
Owner equity first
Outside investors for growth
Bank debt if cash flow fits
SBA loan if eligible
What hidden costs should I budget for when opening a HIIT studio?
Budget working capital outside CAPEX, or capital spending: before opening, a HIIT Studio still has to cover $8,000 rent, $1,200 utilities, $500 software, $300 insurance, plus cleaning, music licensing, office supplies, security, instructor onboarding, trial classes, and launch ads; see How Much Does The Owner Of HIIT Studio Typically Make? for revenue context. In Year 1, plan on $260,000 for trainer and staff salaries, trainer class pay at 80% of revenue, and launch marketing at 60% of revenue.
Before Opening
$8,000 monthly rent
Pay deposits before launch
$1,200 utilities setup
$500 software and $300 insurance
Year 1 Cash Drains
$1,000 cleaning costs
$150 music licensing
$260,000 trainer and staff salaries
Trainer pay at 80% of revenue and marketing at 60%
This table summarizes startup equipment, build-out, tech, branding, and the excluded cash buffer needed before operations begin.
Highlighted CAPEX$149,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$825,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$974,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Fitness Equipment Initial
$75,000
Equipment mix, brand tier, and installed quantity
Yes
Studio Build-out & Decor
$50,000
Leasehold improvements, flooring, lighting, and finish level
Yes
Sound System & AV
$15,000
Speaker quality, screens, and install scope
Yes
POS System & Hardware
$5,000
Checkout hardware, tablets, and booking setup
Yes
Signage & Branding
$4,000
Exterior signs, interior branding, and print scope
Yes
Opening Cash Buffer
$825,000
Fixed monthly overhead, Year 1 salaries, and launch runway
No
HIIT Studio Core Five Startup Costs
Buildout And Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense
Build-Out CAPEX
Treat this as capital expenditure (CAPEX), not day-to-day spend. Model $50,000 across Month 1–Month 3 for build-out and decor: reception, training zones, storage, restrooms, showers if included, Americans with Disabilities Act access, HVAC, electrical, lighting rough-in, occupancy requirements, and local inspections.
What It Covers
This line pays for the space to function as a studio: finishes, utilities, and code work. Ask for quotes on square feet, plumbing tie-ins, ceiling height, flooring substrate, sound transfer, and any prior fitness use. A second-generation studio can trim construction. Raw retail space usually pushes more dollars into permits, utilities, and compliance.
Control the Spend
Start with the landlord’s delivered condition, then price only what’s missing. Compare one quote for a fit-out after fitness use and one for raw retail, so you can see the gap. The biggest mistake is undercounting Americans with Disabilities Act, HVAC, and inspection work. If the space already had showers or restrooms, the build budget can stay much tighter.
Lease Drivers
Lease condition sets the budget. Existing plumbing, ceiling height, flooring, and sound isolation all change the scope fast. If the suite was already used for fitness, expect less demo and fewer trades. If not, keep extra cash for permits and utility upgrades. This is the first line that can swing the whole opening cash plan.
HIIT Equipment Startup Expense
Equipment Budget
The biggest startup CAPEX line is usually $75,000 for initial fitness equipment. That covers the station mix your class format needs: treadmills or bikes if used, rowers, sleds, racks, dumbbells, kettlebells, medicine balls, benches, battle ropes, mats, storage, and a replacement reserve. More stations and heavier daily use push the budget up fast.
Size The Floor
Ask for planned class capacity, average occupancy, and billable days before you price gear. The model assumes 550% Year 1 occupancy and 22 average billable days per month, rising to 850% and 26 days by Year 5. That tells you whether a tight station count works or the floor needs more equipment.
Buy For Wear
Buy for repeated group use, not one-off gym traffic. Get quotes on commercial-grade gear, then add a replacement allowance from day one. Avoid cheap home units that fail under daily class cycles. The clean savings move is matching durability to actual attendance, station count, and workout style, not chasing the lowest sticker price.
Control The Mix
Keep the equipment list tight: only buy what the class format uses every week. One-line rule: if it won’t be used across most sessions, it’s probably not a startup buy. Compare vendor quotes on the same station list, and include freight, install, tax, and replacement reserves when you judge the real cash need.
Flooring, Sound, Lighting, And Signage Startup Expense
Safety and feel
Flooring, sound, lighting, and signage shape class safety and first impressions. Use $15,000 for sound system and AV, plus $4,000 for signage and branding. Flooring, turf lanes, mirrors, lighting, cubbies, screens, and front-desk flow may sit in the $50,000 build-out line unless a vendor prices them separately.
What to budget
Estimate this line from vendor quotes for sound system, AV, signage, and any separate finish work. The key inputs are square footage, lane layout, ceiling height, street visibility, and whether mirrors, screens, or lobby fixtures are priced inside build-out. One clean rule: safety first, brand second.
Quote hardware and install separately
Check if build-out covers finishes
Split one-time and recurring costs
How to keep it tight
Put durable items in CAPEX and avoid double-paying for the same finish. A second-generation space can absorb mirrors, lighting rough-in, and front-desk flow inside the $50,000 build-out. Don’t let screens, music licensing, or service plans hide in the install quote if they repeat monthly. That’s where budgets drift.
Reuse a fitness-ready shell
Bundle install with one vendor
Separate recurring software fees
CAPEX and recurring
CAPEX: flooring, turf lanes, mirrors, lighting, cubbies, screens, AV, and signage. Recurring: music licensing, software subscriptions, and any maintenance plan tied to screens or sound gear. The clean split keeps the startup budget honest and stops operating costs from being buried in the launch spend.
Software And Technology Startup Expense
Split the stack
Treat the point of sale (POS) system and hardware as one-time CAPEX at $5,000. Then carry recurring operating costs of $500 a month for software, $100 for security, $150 for music licensing, plus payment processing fees at 25% in Year 1. That split keeps launch cash and monthly burn honest.
What it covers
The software stack should cover scheduling, payment setup, customer relationship management, website, waivers, access control, display screens, and optional heart-rate tracking. Size it by class booking volume, membership billing rules, drop-in packs, workshop sales, integrations, staff permissions, and cancellation policy. More complexity means more setup time and higher admin load.
Count class booking slots
Map billing rules first
Test cancellation edge cases
Price workshop sales separately
Keep it lean
Start with the few tools you need for bookings, billing, waivers, and access control, then add tracking or extra integrations after demand is clear. The common mistake is paying for features before class volume proves them out. One clean stack is cheaper than patching five systems later.
Delay optional heart-rate tracking
Limit staff permissions
Review processor fees monthly
Quick budget test
Here’s the quick math: $5,000 is upfront CAPEX, while $750 a month covers software, security, and music before payment fees. So the real test is whether your membership volume can absorb that fixed run-rate and the 25% Year 1 payment cost without squeezing margin.
Pre-Opening Readiness Startup Expense
Launch Spend
Pre-opening readiness is startup expense, not pure CAPEX. It covers instructor hiring, certifications, trial classes, pre-open payroll, liability insurance, licenses, permits, legal and accounting, photography, local partners, and launch marketing. This budget funds the months before the first membership dollar lands, so it should sit next to build-out and equipment in the launch plan.
Budget Inputs
Use hard inputs, not guesses: $300 monthly business insurance, $150 monthly music licensing, and $500 monthly software. Add Year 1 payroll for a $60,000 studio manager, $55,000 lead trainer, 25 full-time-equivalent certified trainers at $40,000 each, and 15 front desk staff at $30,000 each.
Control It
Keep costs tight by staging hiring, certifying trainers before classes start, and using trial classes to test schedules before payroll ramps. Book only the permits and insurance months you need, then match ad spend to presales. The common mistake is locking in staff too early; that can trap cash before occupancy is proven.
Open Timing
Timing matters on permits, licenses, and insurance. Order occupancy permits, business licenses, and liability coverage before the first class, then line up photography and neighborhood partners once the space is ready. Launch marketing and digital ads run at 60% of Year 1 revenue, so presales and local buzz need to start before opening day.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Startup cost scenarios
Startup cost swings with equipment count, build quality, and launch spend. Lean keeps the studio basic, Base matches the model, and Full adds premium buildout, more tech, and more cash buffer.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison for a HIIT studio
Scenario
Lean LaunchCash-light fit
Base LaunchModel-fit plan
Full LaunchPremium fit
Launch model
Open with a smaller second-generation fitness space, fewer stations, basic AV, and a tight launch spend.
Open with the model's standard package: $75,000 equipment, $50,000 buildout, $15,000 AV, $5,000 POS, $4,000 signage, $3,000 furniture, and $2,000 opening merchandise.
Open with a premium buildout, more training stations, upgraded tech, a larger launch campaign, and extra working capital.
Typical setup
Use a simpler layout, fewer amenities, and limited marketing while you test class demand.
Match the core studio package and launch with staffing and marketing that support the forecast.
Add higher-end finishes, optional showers or premium amenities, and a stronger pre-open push.
Cost drivers
Reduced equipment count
simpler buildout
basic AV
tighter launch marketing
lean working capital
Equipment
buildout
AV and POS
signage and furniture
opening merchandise
Premium buildout
added stations
upgraded tech
launch marketing
extra working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only
$110,000 - $135,000Low cash need
$154,000Core budget
$210,000 - $275,000Highest cash need
Best fit
Best for founders whose main constraint is cash and who can accept a smaller footprint.
Best for founders who want the model setup and clear vendor quotes before launch.
Best for founders who want a premium club feel and can fund a wider cash cushion.
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Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions for early budgeting, not exact vendor quotes. Use them to frame bids, cash needs, and lender talks.
Plan beyond the visible buildout number This model shows $154,000 of listed startup CAPEX, including $75,000 for equipment and $50,000 for build-out and decor It also shows a $825,000 minimum cash position in Month 2, which reflects the need to fund payroll, rent, marketing, and runway separately from equipment
The modeled CAPEX spend runs from Month 1 through Month 3 During that startup period, the plan funds $75,000 of fitness equipment, $50,000 of build-out and decor, and $15,000 of sound system and AV The actual schedule depends on permits, lease condition, contractor timing, and whether the space already meets occupancy requirements
No, showers are not always required, but they can raise buildout and operating costs The model includes $50,000 for build-out and decor, plus $1,200 in monthly utilities and $1,000 in monthly cleaning If showers are part of the concept, test whether higher membership pricing or retention offsets the added plumbing, cleaning, and maintenance burden
Match equipment to the class format before buying The model carries $75,000 for initial fitness equipment and assumes 550% Year 1 occupancy across 22 average billable days per month Buying can make sense for durable core items, while leasing may help cash flow if the format needs costly cardio stations or frequent upgrades
Yes, plan for insurance, occupancy approval, and local licenses before the first paid class The model includes $300 per month for business insurance, $150 per month for music licensing, and $500 per month for software subscriptions Permits are not separately priced in the data, so confirm them with the local authority and landlord before signing
About the author
Aaron Bell
Business Plan Writer
Aaron Bell is a business plan writer at Financial Models Lab who helps new founders make founder-friendly business numbers easier to understand. He focuses on choosing realistic business ideas, explaining startup planning without heavy finance jargon, and building practical operating expense plans. His work is aimed at people evaluating whether an idea makes sense before launch, with a clear emphasis on smart, practical decisions that support a stronger start.
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