How Much It Costs to Open a Home Goods Store: $178K CAPEX
Home Goods Store Bundle
This outline separates $178,000 of identified CAPEX from inventory, deposits, pre-opening expenses, and working capital for the first operating year The model shows a $613,000 minimum cash need in Month 23, 15 months to breakeven, Year 1 EBITDA of -$146,000, and Year 2 EBITDA of $44,000 Financing costs, debt service, and owner salary should be modeled separately
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a home goods store, before inventory, payroll runway, and other funding needs.
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What this excludes This calculator excludes sellable inventory, rent deposits, payroll runway, marketing spend beyond launch assets, debt service, and working capital. Use it for capitalized startup assets only; total funding need will be higher once those non-CAPEX items are added.
What should the CAPEX tab show?
The Home Goods Store Financial Model Template CAPEX tab should map the $178,000 asset schedule by month. It should show each cost, launch timing, and whether it is depreciated or amortized; then review assumptions against Month 15 breakeven, Month 23 minimum cash, and 33-month payback.
Key screenshot highlights
$60,000 build-out
$45,000 display furniture
$35,000 vehicle
Home Goods Store Financial Model
5-Year Financial Projections
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How to fund a home goods store startup?
To fund a Home Goods Store startup, ask for at least $613,000 and frame it in four buckets: $178,000 CAPEX, opening inventory, pre-opening expenses, and working capital runway. Here’s the quick math: the model shows a -$146,000 EBITDA loss in Year 1, then $44,000 EBITDA in Year 2, with 15-month breakeven and 33-month payback. Use the operating assumptions in the ask too: visitor traffic, 35% Year 1 conversion, 20% repeat customers, and 16 products per order.
Funding buckets
$178,000 for CAPEX
Opening inventory for first sales
Pre-opening expenses before launch
Runway to Month 23 cash need
Investor points
-$146,000 EBITDA in Year 1
$44,000 EBITDA in Year 2
15-month breakeven target
33-month payback period
How much inventory does a home goods store need to open?
A Home Goods Store should open with inventory sized to the Year 1 sales mix, not booked as CAPEX. Use the mix as your buy plan: sofa 15% at $1,200, dining table 10% at $850, floor lamp 25% at $150, throw pillow 40% at $35, and design session 10% at $250.
Opening mix
Stock to the Year 1 mix.
Keep sofas at 15%.
Keep pillows at 40%.
Use design sessions as a service.
Cash tied up
Cover vendor minimums.
Plan freight-in at 80% of sales.
Budget inspection and assembly at 30%.
Hold display stock, safety stock, and shrinkage.
What are the hidden costs of opening a home goods store?
The hidden cost of a Home Goods Store is that cash leaves before sales do: inbound freight, supplier fees, damaged goods allowance, assembly labor, vendor deposits, receiving space, permits, training payroll, and grand opening spend all hit early. Monthly overhead can then add $1,200 for utilities, $450 for insurance, $250 for office supplies, and $300 for security and maintenance, while payment processing can take 25% and delivery and packaging can run 35%. If you want the owner-income context, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Home Goods Store Typically Make Annually? because these costs can hit before revenue stabilizes.
Before Open
Inbound freight adds upfront cash strain.
Supplier fees and deposits come early.
Damaged goods need a cash reserve.
Training payroll starts before sales.
Monthly Burn
Utilities: $1,200 per month.
Insurance: $450 per month.
Office supplies: $250 per month.
Security and maintenance: $300 per month.
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
Shows the main startup assets and excluded cash reserve needed to open a home goods store.
Highlighted CAPEX$160,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$613,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$773,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Store Build-out & Renovation
$60,000
Scope of construction, fixtures, and finish work
Yes
Initial Display Furniture & Decor
$45,000
Amount of showroom furniture and display pieces
Yes
Delivery Vehicle
$35,000
Vehicle type, condition, and outfitting
Yes
POS Hardware & Software Setup
$12,000
Registers, terminals, and setup for sales systems
Yes
Signage & Exterior Branding
$8,000
Storefront sign size, materials, and installation
Yes
Working Capital Reserve
$613,000
Minimum cash need peaks near Month 23; breakeven lands at Month 15
No
Home Goods Store Core Five Startup Costs
Lease, Buildout, and Showroom Readiness Startup Expense
Lease Costs
$60,000 of buildout and renovation is CAPEX, and $8,000 of exterior signage is CAPEX too. Keep the rent deposit and prepaid rent outside CAPEX. Use $10,000 per month as the lease anchor, then price minor construction, flooring, lighting, paint, wall finishes, checkout flow, and code or accessibility work from that base.
Price Inputs
Start with square footage, then add landlord allowance, local permits, utility upgrades, and any structural work. If the space only needs cosmetic finish work, the $60,000 budget may hold; if it needs code or accessibility fixes, the number moves fast. One clean rule: ask what must be built before you price what looks nice.
Trim Waste
Cut cost by getting three bids, asking for a landlord allowance, and reusing any sound floors or walls. Don’t strip out required code or accessibility work just to save cash; that only delays opening and can trigger rework. The fastest mistake is mixing lease items, prepaid rent, and CAPEX in one bucket.
Lease Check
The lease set drives the opening cash plan: $10,000 monthly rent, deposit size, prepaid months, permit timing, and utility scope. Confirm square footage and whether the space needs structural work before you lock the budget. If those inputs are fuzzy, the showroom date and the CAPEX total will both slip.
Initial Merchandise and Opening Inventory Startup Expense
What It Covers
Sellable inventory is separate from the $45,000 display furniture and decor CAPEX. This startup cost covers furniture, decor, kitchenware, textiles, seasonal items, and replacement stock. Size it with units × unit cost, vendor minimum orders, freight-in at 80%, assembly and inspection at 30%, plus shrinkage and damaged goods.
Mix and Price
The Year 1 buy mix is 15% sofas, 10% dining tables, 25% floor lamps, 40% throw pillows, and 10% design sessions. Price anchors run from $35 throw pillows to $1,200 sofas, so the first open-to-buy should reflect both low-ticket impulse items and bigger room anchors.
Quote each SKU before ordering
Check vendor minimums early
Budget for damaged goods
Keep Cash Tight
Keep the first order shallow on bulky pieces and heavier on fast-turn items like pillows and lamps. That protects cash, cuts storage pressure, and lowers damage risk. The common mistake is overbuying sofas before demand is proven; use reorder points and receiving checks to keep replacement stock tight.
Start with smaller minimums
Inspect every inbound case
Separate display from inventory
Cash Timing
This cost is working capital, not just inventory on paper. Cash leaves the business when vendor minimums are paid, then sits in stock until sale, so the budget must cover the buy plus freight, inspection, shrinkage, and damages before any customer revenue lands.
Fixtures, Displays, and Retail Equipment Startup Expense
Display Package
$45,000 covers shelving, wall displays, lifestyle vignettes, display tables, racks, checkout counter, carts, tags, scanners, backroom storage, receiving gear, and visual merchandising tools. Keep sellable inventory out of this line. Use vendor quotes and units × unit price to build the total, then add freight or install only if the bid includes them.
Sizing Inputs
Size it from store square footage, product size mix, room setups, backroom capacity, and whether displays are custom-built or modular. More floor area means more fixtures and more storage. Modular pieces usually cost less and move faster. Tie ongoing updates to the $750 monthly visual merchandising budget after opening.
Count room setups first.
Separate backroom storage needs.
Price custom work last.
Keep It Lean
Cut cost with modular shelves, standard rack sizes, and reusable tags. Ask for one quote across tables, racks, and checkout pieces, then compare it with custom millwork only where the layout demands it. Don’t buy décor as fixtures if it will be sold to customers or replaced often.
Reuse pieces across seasons.
Buy scanners and tags once.
Refresh visuals monthly, not weekly.
Budget Fit
For this store, the display package should be sized against the assortment, not the wish list. A well-bought $45,000 setup supports the first open, and the $750 monthly refresh keeps it sharp without turning the floor into a constant rebuild.
POS, Technology, Security, and Omnichannel Startup Expense
POS Stack
The POS and omnichannel stack needs $25,000 in CAPEX: $12,000 for POS hardware and software, $7,000 for office computers, and $6,000 for security and surveillance. Keep $600 monthly subscriptions, $300 security and maintenance, and 25% payment processing fees outside the one-time build.
What It Covers
This line covers barcode scanners, card readers, payment setup, inventory software, website or ecommerce catalog setup, Wi-Fi, cameras, alarms, and surveillance. Build the estimate from vendor quotes and check how many devices, users, and locations need licenses. One-time gear goes in startup CAPEX; monthly tools do not.
Use vendor quotes, not estimates.
Count devices and software users.
Separate CAPEX from monthly fees.
Keep It Lean
Cut waste by buying standard equipment, not custom gear, and matching software to the store’s actual SKU count and sales channels. The biggest mistake is blending the $25,000 setup with recurring costs. Watch the 25% processing fee, because it scales with sales and can hurt margin fast.
Month 3-9
Plan the rollout from Month 3 through Month 9, when hardware, software, Wi-Fi, and security get installed and tested. That six-month window keeps the store ready before steady traffic starts, and it helps avoid paying the $600 and $300 monthly charges before the system is live.
Pre-Opening Staffing, Permits, and Launch Marketing Startup Expense
Opening Team
Pre-opening staffing covers hiring, training payroll, permits, insurance binders, bookkeeping setup, legal review, store supplies, launch content, and the opening event. Budget the Year 1 team at $182,500 per year, or about $15,208 per month, using one store manager at $75,000, two sales associates at $40,000 each, and one visual merchandiser or buyer at $55,000.
Budget Inputs
Estimate this line with headcount × salary, plus quotes for permits, legal, bookkeeping, insurance binders, and launch support. Keep the $5,000 launch asset CAPEX separate from paid launch media, because media hits Month 1 operating costs. That split keeps startup cash clear and stops one-time spend from getting buried in payroll.
Use salary by role
Get permit quotes early
Separate ads from CAPEX
Cost Control
The cleanest way to control this cost is to stage spend by date and need. Get permits and insurance in hand before the opening push, then hold paid ads until the store can convert traffic. One-line rule: if it isn’t needed to open or sell, it waits.
Hire to match opening date
Book one legal review
Delay nonessential ad spend
Launch Split
Keep the $5,000 launch asset CAPEX on the startup budget, and treat paid launch media as operating expense. That means the opening event, local ads, and launch content can be tracked without mixing them into payroll or pre-open setup. Clean separation makes Month 1 cash burn easier to read.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Smaller launches cut build-out and inventory needs, while a full launch adds fixtures, deeper stock, and delivery assets. The base case anchors to the model's $178,000 CAPEX and $613,000 cash need by Month 23.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison for a home goods store
Scenario
Lean LaunchSmallest setup
Base LaunchModeled plan
Full LaunchLargest setup
Launch model
Keeps the opening small with a tighter build and no owned delivery vehicle at launch.
Uses the source model CAPEX of $178,000 and carries the modeled $10,000 lease, $13,550 fixed overhead, and $182,500 Year 1 payroll.
Builds a larger showroom with deeper inventory, more fixtures, and owned delivery capability from the start.
Typical setup
Curated showroom, lower inventory depth, and fewer fixtures.
Standard showroom, normal inventory depth, and owned delivery setup included.
Larger floor set, more display pieces, and higher working capital needs.
Cost drivers
Smaller build-out
fewer fixtures
lower inventory depth
no owned delivery vehicle
lighter working capital
Store lease
fixed overhead
Year 1 payroll
opening inventory
delivery vehicle
Larger showroom
deeper inventory
more fixtures
owned delivery capability
higher working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only
Lower funding bandLowest cash need
$178,000 to $613,000Base case
Higher funding bandHighest cash need
Best fit
Founders testing a smaller store with tight cash control.
Operators who want the modeled opening plan and runway logic.
Teams with stronger backing that want a bigger opening footprint.
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Planning note: Ranges reflect researched planning assumptions from the model, not exact vendor quotes or lender terms.
The model points to a $613,000 minimum cash need by Month 23, so the reserve should cover more than opening week Plan for $178,000 of identified CAPEX, $13,550 in monthly fixed overhead, and about $15,208 in Year 1 monthly payroll Inventory, deposits, and debt payments sit on top of that if they are not already funded
This researched model reaches breakeven in Month 15 That timing depends on traffic, conversion, and average ticket size Year 1 assumes 1,160 weekly visitors, a 35% visitor-to-buyer conversion rate, and 16 products per order If conversion lags or inventory turns slowly, cash need rises before the store stabilizes
Not always, but the base plan includes a $35,000 delivery vehicle in CAPEX A lean launch could outsource delivery first and test demand, especially if large items like sofas and dining tables are a smaller share of early sales Just compare delivery savings against the 35% local delivery and packaging cost assumption
Start with the largest controllable asset lines: $60,000 build-out, $45,000 display furniture and decor, and the $35,000 delivery vehicle Negotiate landlord work, use modular fixtures, delay owned delivery, and buy tighter inventory depth Do not cut the POS, inventory control, or receiving process too far, because stock errors hurt cash quickly
Slow inventory turn increases cash need because money sits in sofas, tables, lamps, pillows, and seasonal items before customers buy them Year 1 assumes 35% conversion, 20% repeat customers, and product prices from $35 to $1,200 If opening stock is too deep, you may need more than the modeled $613,000 cash requirement
About the author
Oscar Bryant
Startup Planning Writer
Oscar Bryant is a startup planning writer at Financial Models Lab, where he helps early-stage founders make a business idea easier to evaluate through simple financial projections. He breaks down revenue, expenses, and profit in a clear, practical way, with a focus on cost and income assumptions that help readers understand the numbers behind everyday business ideas.
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