Summer Camp Startup Costs: $138K CAPEX And $876K Cash Need
Summer Camp Bundle
Key Takeaways
Facility readiness needs $8,000 rent plus $30,000 improvements.
Licensing and insurance model at $1,000 monthly.
Equipment starts with $45,000 durable spending.
Year 1 staffing run-rate totals $297,500 before taxes.
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates the capitalized startup assets needed before opening a summer camp.
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What's excluded This block counts only capitalized pre-opening assets. It excludes payroll runway, rent after opening, deposits, debt service, working capital, inventory runway, launch marketing, food service operating costs, and other recurring operating expenses.
To start Summer Camp, plan around the full cash need: $138,000 in CAPEX and a $876,000 minimum cash need in Month 2, not just equipment; for performance tracking, see What Is The Most Important Measure Of Success For Summer Camp?. The model reaches Month 1 breakeven and $478,000 Year 1 EBITDA using 65 total places, 550% occupancy, 20 billable days/month, $1,200–$1,500 monthly tuition, and $1,500/month extended care income.
Startup cash need
$138,000 CAPEX budget
$876,000 Month 2 cash need
65 total camper places
20 billable days per month
Main cost drivers
Capacity and leased site
Program type and licensing
Insurance and staff plan
Transportation and working capital
How do you fund a summer camp startup?
Fund Summer Camp by tying the raise to the model: $138,000 CAPEX for startup buildout and $876,000 minimum cash to cover ramp-up. Here’s the quick math: 30 ages 6-8 places at $1,200, 25 ages 9-12 places at $1,350, and 10 specialty workshop places at $1,500, all paced through 20 billable days per month. Use the Month 1 breakeven view, plus the stated 550% Year 1 occupancy input, to show lenders when cash comes in and what staff level the plan can carry.
Funding math
$138,000 CAPEX starts the raise.
$876,000 covers cash timing.
Month 1 breakeven supports the model.
20 billable days shape tuition intake.
Lender packet
Include the CAPEX schedule.
Show the payroll plan.
State licensing and insurance assumptions.
Add the refund policy and cash flow forecast.
How much does a summer camp facility cost?
If you’re starting a Summer Camp, budget around $30,000 upfront for facility improvements and about $11,200 per month for space plus utilities, security, cleaning, and maintenance; that total comes from $8,000 rent, $1,500 utilities, $700 security, $600 cleaning, and $400 maintenance. School, community center, park district site, and church facility options usually fit best for startup planning because they can work with short-term use agreements, while private property and dedicated camp property usually need more cash and control.
Best startup sites
School space: classrooms, restrooms
Community center: low-friction access
Park district site: outdoor use
Church facility: short-term agreements
Budget what matters
$30,000 for improvements
$8,000 monthly rent
$3,200 monthly ops costs
Skip major construction and purchase
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup Cost Summary
This table summarizes opening equipment, setup, and launch costs for a summer camp, plus the non-CAPEX cash reserve needed before operations stabilize.
Highlighted CAPEX$125,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$876,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,001,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Facility Improvements
$30,000
Site build-out and room prep
Yes
Program Equipment
$25,000
Activity gear and instructional materials
Yes
Office Furniture & IT
$15,000
Front-office setup and computers
Yes
Outdoor Play Equipment
$20,000
Outdoor play setup and safety layout
Yes
Vehicle Van
$35,000
Fleet purchase for transport
Yes
Operating Reserve
$876,000
Month 2 cash runway for ramp-up
No
Summer Camp Core Five Startup Costs
Facility And Site Readiness Startup Expense
Site Setup Cost
$8,000 monthly rent and $30,000 in facility improvements cover the camp shell: classrooms, activity rooms, outdoor space, restrooms, shade, storage, signage, and accessibility. Add deposits and short-term lease or use agreements. Build the estimate from site type, rent months, and quote-based buildout work.
Operating Setup
Budget monthly site ops at $1,500 utilities, $700 security, $600 cleaning, and $400 maintenance. These costs depend on camp months open and what the site already includes. Here’s the quick math: the more turnkey the space, the less you spend before day one.
Site Type Check
Ask if the site is a school, community center, park district site, church facility, private property, or dedicated camp property. That answer drives lease terms, required upgrades, and utility load. Keep land purchase and large construction out of the base startup budget; they are separate projects, not opening costs.
Cut Setup Waste
Use an existing site with usable rooms and outdoor areas, then spend only on gaps you must fix for safety or access. Negotiate summer-only use, ask for utilities in the lease, and avoid cosmetic work. The biggest mistakes are overbuilding and paying for space you can’t use at full capacity.
Licensing, Insurance, And Compliance Startup Expense
Compliance Costs
Licensing and insurance can start at $1,000 per month in this model. That line covers state registration, local permits, health and safety rules, background checks, liability, abuse and molestation coverage, workers’ compensation, legal setup, and policy documents. Real cost depends on state, city, and whether the camp handles food, swimming, transport, or field trips.
What Drives It
Here’s the quick math: start with months of coverage, then add quote-based premiums and filing fees. Ask if the site is a day camp or overnight camp, since rules differ. A camp that serves meals, uses buses, or offers swimming needs more checks and more insurance. Keep this cost inside opening cash, not working payroll.
State rules set the base.
Activities change the price.
Timing can delay opening.
How To Control It
Get quotes early, before signing the lease. Bundle policies where possible, but do not cut required coverage to save a little cash. The biggest mistake is underbudgeting the first 2 to 3 months while licenses, checks, and approvals are still pending. If approvals slip, the camp may need extra reserve before the first camper pays.
Use one compliance calendar.
Renew policies before launch.
Budget extra cash for delays.
Timing Risk
If licensing, background checks, or inspections run late, opening moves and cash burn rises. A camp with food service, field trips, or water activities should expect more documentation and longer review time, so build reserve around the $1,000 monthly compliance load plus extra runway for any state or city hold-up.
Program Equipment And Activity Supplies Startup Expense
Durable gear
Budget $25,000 for program equipment and $20,000 for outdoor play equipment as durable capital spend (CAPEX). That covers sports gear, games, arts and crafts materials, STEM kits, water-play items, storage bins, tables, chairs, tents, coolers, and other reusable assets. Keep this separate from day-to-day consumables.
Cost build
Price equipment from a simple asset list: units times unit cost, then add quotes for bulky items and delivery. This budget should cover what lasts across sessions, not supplies used up in one week. Track each item by age group, activity type, and expected useful life.
Quote tents, tables, and chairs.
Count kits by camper capacity.
Separate durable and consumable items.
Trim waste
The fast control point is reuse. Buy durable items once, then scale consumables by program mix. Don’t bury snacks, craft kits, or replacement parts inside equipment spend. If workshops are heavy, the supply line rises; if outdoor play is the focus, the gear line does more work.
Order by camper count.
Reuse storage and furniture.
Refresh only worn items.
Year-1 mix
Model operating cost with Program Supplies at 70% of Year 1 revenue and Snacks and Beverages at 30% of Year 1 revenue. Refine both lines by activity mix, age group, workshop intensity, and camper capacity, because a craft-heavy schedule and a larger roster will move these costs fast.
Safety, Medical, Transportation, And Communication Startup Expense
Safety Setup
The basic safety and communication setup starts at about $5,000 for first aid kits, emergency action supplies, radios, check-in and check-out controls, and security procedures. This is the core cost even before transport, so keep it separate from any van purchase or field-trip budget. One clean rule: safety first, vehicles second.
Transport Trigger
Transportation only belongs in the budget if the camp offers pickup, drop-off, or off-site trips. The base model uses an optional $35,000 vehicle van, plus driver screening and parent authorization controls. For planning, separate the vehicle decision from the camp’s core safety setup and ask how many routes, trip days, and riders you need.
Count pickup and drop-off days
Quote van lease or purchase
Include driver screening time
Field Trips
Field-trip safety needs sit on top of the transport plan and should be budgeted at 30% of Year 1 revenue. That covers off-site trip risk, extra controls, and trip-day handling. If the camp stays on site, this cost can stay low; if trips are frequent, this line can become one of the biggest variable expenses.
Cost Control
Keep the $5,000 safety base intact, then decide whether transport is truly needed. A common mistake is buying a van too early; a better first step is to price a lease or shuttle option against route count, trip frequency, and student load, while keeping compliance documents and parent sign-off tight.
Staffing Readiness And Training Startup Expense
Staffing Readiness
Pre-opening staffing should cover recruiting, interviews, background checks, CPR and first-aid training, onboarding, uniforms, staff manuals, and orientation days. Keep this cost separate from ongoing payroll and working capital, because it hits before the first camper pays tuition. That split protects opening-day cash.
Training Budget
Estimate training from headcount, hours, and vendor quotes. Here’s the quick math: the staffing plan spans 75 roles, including 10 Camp Director, 10 Lead Counselor, 40 Counselors, 10 Specialty Instructor, and 5 Administrative Assistant positions, so onboarding and certification costs should scale to the full team before opening day.
Year 1 Payroll
The stated Year 1 wage run-rate is $297,500 before payroll taxes or benefits if those are not modeled. Treat that as operating payroll, not startup spend. If taxes and benefits are added later, the cash need rises, so the base budget should still leave room for the first payroll cycle.
Reserve Buffer
Hold a payroll reserve for the gap between onboarding and the first tuition receipts. That reserve sits outside facility, equipment, and compliance spend, since staffing is the one cost that starts before camp day one and keeps going every pay period. If hiring slips, the reserve needs to stretch longer.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario Table
Lean, Base, and Full change the cash need fast because staff, facility, transport, and activity depth drive most of the spend. Base matches the model; Full adds transport and deeper working capital.
Lean, Base, and Full startup cost comparison
Scenario
Lean LaunchTest launch
Base LaunchCommunity day camp
Full LaunchFull-service program
Launch model
Runs as a leased-site day camp with limited activities, no vehicle, and a lean admin team.
Uses the model setup with 65 Year 1 places, 55% occupancy, $138,000 of capex, and $8,000 monthly rent.
Adds transportation, expanded activities, higher capacity, stronger systems, and deeper working capital.
Typical setup
Uses a small site, basic supplies, and only the staff needed for core supervision.
Uses the planned facility, standard program equipment, and the full core team.
Uses a larger site, transport gear, more counselors and instructors, and better admin systems.
Cost drivers
Rent
core staff
basic supplies
licensing and insurance
light marketing
Facility rent
wages
program supplies and snacks
marketing and enrollment
licensing and insurance
Facility buildout
vehicle and transport
expanded staffing
field trips and activities
working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only
Mid six figuresLeanest setup
High six figuresModel case
Low seven figuresMax buildout
Best fit
Best for a test launch or a small leased-site day camp with tight capacity.
Best for a community day camp that wants to match the model and scale steadily.
Best for a full-service program that wants transport, richer activities, and more staffing.
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Planning note: These scenario bands are researched planning assumptions from the model, not exact vendor quotes or bids.
Hold enough cash to cover the gap before tuition collections are steady In this model, the minimum cash need peaks at $876,000 in Month 2, even though CAPEX is $138,000 That difference matters because rent, payroll, insurance, licensing, training, refunds, and deposits all hit before a camp has a stable enrollment rhythm
Usually, yes, but the exact requirement depends on state and local rules Budget for licensing, insurance, background checks, and health and safety compliance before opening This model carries $1,000 per month for insurance and licensing, plus $5,000 for safety and first aid gear Overnight programs, transportation, food, swimming, and field trips can add more requirements
A leased school, community center, park district site, or church facility is often cleaner for a first launch than buying property The base model assumes $8,000 monthly rent and $30,000 in facility improvements Buying land or building a dedicated camp property is a separate funding case, not a normal startup-cost line for a leased day camp
Buy durable items you’ll use all season and rent items tied to uncertain enrollment or one-off activities The model includes $25,000 for program equipment, $20,000 for outdoor play equipment, and $15,000 for office furniture and IT Consumables are different: program supplies run at 70% of Year 1 revenue, and snacks and beverages run at 30%
Plan setup around staged spending, not one purchase day In this model, safety gear starts in Month 1, facility improvements run from Month 1 to Month 3, program equipment from Month 2 to Month 4, outdoor play equipment from Month 3 to Month 5, and the van from Month 4 to Month 6 Permit delays can push cash needs higher
About the author
Caleb Ross
Small Business Advisor
Caleb Ross is a small business advisor at Financial Models Lab who helps first-time entrepreneurs plan startup costs before launch. He studies common expenses, revenue drivers, and launch requirements, then turns broad business ideas into clear planning assumptions. His work focuses on pricing and profitability basics, with a practical, research-based approach to building realistic forecasts.
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