Marketing, legal, and launch spend need working capital.
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a SaaS launch, not runway or operating spend.
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What this excludes This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes payroll runway, monthly subscriptions, marketing spend, cloud usage, inventory, deposits, debt service, taxes, financing costs, and working capital unless a cost is separately labeled as CAPEX.
What are the hidden costs of starting a SaaS business?
If you’re asking what a SaaS Business really costs, the hidden bill is bigger than the code: How Much Does The Owner Make From A SaaS Business Like This One? and the early cash drain is the real shock. One-time setup can add $20,000 before launch, with $7,000 for a security audit, $5,000 for a network upgrade, and $8,000 for website and brand work, plus legal docs, IP assignment, payment setup, demo assets, and onboarding content. After that, monthly costs stack fast: 30% cloud hosting, 15% payment processing, 10% third-party API use, 40% sales commissions, and $7,300 fixed overhead.
Setup costs
$7,000 security audit
$5,000 network upgrade
$8,000 website and brand
Legal and launch assets
Runway risk
$729,000 minimum cash need
Before Month 8 breakeven
Contractor delays raise burn
Recurring costs hit every month
How much does it cost to build a SaaS MVP?
A SaaS MVP is usually scope-driven, not just code-driven: for SaaS Business, the listed Year 1 floor is $410,000 from $10,000 in core platform licenses plus $400,000 in engineering payroll ($160,000 Head of Engineering and $240,000 for 2 software engineers). Here’s the quick math: discovery, UX/UI, backend, frontend, database, integrations, billing, authentication, analytics, QA, deployment, and support admin all add time, and that’s why integrations and user roles often move the budget fastest. What this estimate hides is contractor delay, uptime needs, and data migration work, so don’t lock in fixed vendor pricing too early.
Core build costs
$10,000 core platform licenses
$160,000 Head of Engineering
$240,000 2 software engineers
$410,000 known Year 1 base
Big scope drivers
Integrations raise build time
User roles add logic
Billing and reporting add complexity
Security and uptime need more work
How to estimate funding needs for a SaaS startup?
For SaaS Business, the funding plan starts with $70,000 in CAPEX, then adds $580,000 in Year 1 payroll, $250,000 in Year 1 marketing, and $7,300 a month in fixed overhead, plus variable costs and a cash cushion. Here’s the quick math: with $49 Core, $149 Pro plus a $250 setup fee, and $499 Enterprise plus a $1,000 setup fee, the Year 1 model needs $729,000 minimum cash by Month 8, reaches breakeven in Month 8, and shows a 17-month payback. The model also assumes 20% visitor-to-trial conversion and 150% trial-to-paid conversion in Year 1, with negative $58,000 EBITDA.
Funding inputs
$70,000 CAPEX upfront
$580,000 Year 1 payroll
$250,000 Year 1 marketing
$7,300 monthly overhead
Model outputs
$729,000 minimum cash in Month 8
Breakeven in Month 8
17-month payback period
negative $58,000 Year 1 EBITDA
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table summarizes SaaS startup asset costs and the non-CAPEX cash reserve needed through Month 8.
Highlighted CAPEX$65,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$729,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$794,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Office setup & furnishings
$25,000
Workspace buildout and furnishing scope
Yes
IT hardware
$15,000
Laptops, monitors, and endpoint setup
Yes
Core software platform licenses
$10,000
Development platform and launch licenses
Yes
Website & brand identity
$8,000
Site build and brand design scope
Yes
Security audit & compliance setup
$7,000
Security review and compliance readiness
Yes
Operating reserve
$729,000
Month 8 cash runway before breakeven
No
SaaS Business Core Five Startup Costs
Product Development Startup Expense
MVP scope
A SaaS MVP starts with discovery, product specs, UX/UI, then backend, frontend, database, integrations, billing, authentication, QA, release management, and initial deployment. Budget $10,000 for core development platform licenses in CAPEX, then size the rest from labor. One line: the scope is broad, so the build plan must be tight.
Cost drivers
The biggest swings are in-house vs contractor, number of integrations, security depth, analytics depth, and customer onboarding complexity. The source labor budget is $160,000 for the Head of Engineering, $120,000 per software engineer, and 2 engineers in Year 1, for $400,000 in engineering payroll before CEO cost.
In-house or contractor?
How many integrations?
Security requirements?
Analytics depth?
Onboarding complexity?
Keep scope tight
Cut spend by freezing the first release to the must-have workflow, then add extras after the first live feedback. Every new integration, security layer, or onboarding step pushes labor up fast, so make the first build small enough to ship, test, and revise without redoing the core architecture.
Payroll split
Keep $400,000 of Year 1 engineering payroll visible as operating labor, then have your accountant decide what portion of coding and deployment time can be treated as capitalized software development. The clean rule for planning is simple: licenses go to CAPEX, while labor needs a role-by-role split and a month-by-month time log.
Cloud Infrastructure And Security Startup Expense
Hosting Stack
Cloud cost is more than servers. It covers hosting, databases, monitoring, backups, staging and production, domain and DNS, SSL, logging, security tools, and scale planning. Budget 30% of Year 1 revenue for cloud infrastructure and hosting, plus 10% of Year 1 revenue for third-party APIs. One-time security setup adds $7,000.
Cost Build
Split this model into recurring spend and setup work. Recurring cloud infrastructure and hosting runs at 30% of revenue in Year 1 and 28% in Year 2, with third-party API usage at 10% of Year 1 revenue. One-time items are the $7,000 security audit and compliance setup plus the $5,000 network upgrade.
Separate monthly burn from launch CAPEX.
Price APIs by usage volume.
Track staging and production separately.
Keep It Lean
Use smaller environments, tighter logs, and right-sized databases before you add more tooling. The common mistake is folding the $7,000 setup cost and $5,000 network upgrade into monthly burn. Keep usage caps on APIs, review backups, and trim unused staging resources so quality stays high without inflating recurring spend.
Review logs and backups monthly.
Set API usage limits early.
Avoid extra environments too soon.
Budget Split
Put cloud infrastructure and hosting in operating expense, but keep the $7,000 security audit, compliance setup, and $5,000 network upgrade in startup CAPEX. That split protects runway math and margin tracking. If revenue grows, recurring cloud spend should stay near 30% in Year 1 and 28% in Year 2.
Legal, Formation, And Compliance Startup Expense
Formation and docs
Your legal setup covers entity formation, founder docs, IP assignment, contractor agreements, customer contracts, terms of service, privacy policy, and data processing terms. Budget for $1,200 monthly legal and accounting retainers starting Month 1, plus $300 monthly insurance. The $7,000 security audit and compliance setup is a separate one-time cost.
What changes the fee
Here’s the quick math: more customer data, enterprise buyers, regulated industries, multi-state sales, and stronger data-handling promises all push legal work up. A basic setup is one thing; custom terms, vendor reviews, and compliance review add time and cost. One-liner: the more you promise, the more you must paper.
Map data types first
List buyer contract asks
Flag state-by-state sales
Keep it lean
Use standard templates at launch, then add custom clauses only when a deal or risk needs them. Don’t pay for certifications you don’t need, and don’t skip IP assignment or privacy terms just to save money. The cleanest savings come from fewer contract versions, fewer redlines, and one clear compliance scope.
Start with one contract set
Limit custom redlines early
Review compliance triggers quarterly
Budget guardrail
For a US software startup, the core legal run-rate starts at $1,500 a month for retainers and insurance, before any special review work. Add the $7,000 setup only if your data, buyers, or promises create real compliance needs. That keeps the budget tied to actual risk, not generic checklists.
Launch Marketing And Sales Startup Expense
Launch Budget
For a SaaS launch, the first marketing and sales spend splits between setup and demand generation. Here, $8,000 covers brand identity and website design, while Year 1 marketing is $250,000. That launch budget is separate from ongoing customer acquisition cost of $350 per customer after operations begin.
What It Buys
Use the Year 1 budget for landing pages, product demos, sales decks, content, analytics, email setup, paid tests, launch campaigns, lead capture, and early outreach. The quick math is simple: fixed setup first, then monthly spend. With 20% visitor-to-free-trial conversion, traffic quality matters more than raw clicks.
Build the website first.
Track every lead source.
Test small ad spends early.
Keep It Tight
Cut waste by reusing one page system, one demo deck, and one email flow across $49 Core, $149 Pro, and $499 Enterprise plans. The mistake is treating launch assets as one-time and ignoring ongoing CAC. Keep paid tests small until the funnel proves it can move leads into paid users.
CAC Math
At $350 Year 1 CAC, a $250,000 budget buys about 714 customers before product and support costs. Keep that separate from the $8,000 brand and website CAPEX, because those are launch assets, not acquisition spend. The model gets risky fast if traffic comes in before the offer proves repeatable.
Staffing Readiness And Contractor Support Startup Expense
Year 1 payroll
Staffing starts in Month 1 with a CEO at $180,000, Head of Engineering at $160,000, and 2 software engineers at $120,000 each. That totals $580,000 in Year 1 payroll, or about $48,300 per month. Treat this as working capital or a pre-opening expense, not CAPEX.
Month 13 hires
Sales manager, marketing specialist, and customer support roles start in Month 13. Budget them as added payroll, not a one-time build cost, and size the plan by headcount, start month, and monthly salary. The cash test is simple: can the runway cover these hires before they start paying back?
Start date changes runway.
Headcount drives monthly burn.
Delay hires until demand shows up.
Contractor support
If used, contractor help should cover design, QA, DevOps, customer support readiness, sales operations, and admin. Price it by role, hours, and months covered. Keep it separate from employee payroll so you can see what is recurring support and what is true staffing runway.
Budget split
The clean split is simple: the $400,000 engineering payroll before CEO cost is the build team, while the $180,000 CEO salary and later Month 13 hires sit in the wider staffing plan. Ask for quotes on contractor scope, then separate capitalized software development from operating payroll so the cash plan matches launch timing.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Lean uses a founder-led MVP and tight spend, Base matches the model's $729,000 cash need, and Full adds heavier hiring, compliance, and paid acquisition. Each step changes runway and breakeven.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario
Lean LaunchBootstrap fit
Base LaunchValidation fit
Full LaunchFunded launch fit
Launch model
Founder-led MVP with a narrow feature set, light spend, and early user tests.
Model-based launch with the planned $70,000 CAPEX, $250,000 Year 1 marketing, and $580,000 Year 1 payroll.
Scaled launch with more engineering, compliance, support, and paid acquisition to grow faster.
Typical setup
Keeps office setup and brand spend tight and relies on a small build team.
Uses the model's office, hardware, legal, and software build, plus $7,300 monthly fixed overhead and a Month 8 breakeven target.
Adds deeper product build, more customer support, and a larger sales and marketing push.
Cost drivers
Founder-led MVP
limited office setup
tight brand spend
fewer paid tests
CAPEX buildout
Year 1 marketing
Year 1 payroll
fixed overhead
cash buffer
More engineering FTEs
compliance setup
support hires
higher marketing budget
sales team ramp
Planning rangeCAPEX only
Bootstrap rangeLower cash need
$729,000Model cash need
Funded launch rangeHigher cash need
Best fit
Fits teams validating demand before raising money.
Fits operators using the source model as the launch plan.
Fits funded teams that want faster market coverage and more runway.
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Planning note: These ranges are planning assumptions from the model, not exact quotes or universal benchmarks.
The modeled launch CAPEX is $70,000, but the broader cash need is $729,000 by Month 8 The gap comes from burn before breakeven, especially $580,000 of Year 1 payroll, $250,000 of Year 1 marketing, and $7,300 in monthly fixed overhead Treat those as planning assumptions, not vendor quotes
The model reaches breakeven in Month 8, with the minimum cash point also in Month 8 Year 1 EBITDA is still negative $58,000, then improves to $1173 million in Year 2 That means cash timing matters even when the business starts showing operating traction inside the first year
Not usually in dollar terms, but usage can move fast This model sets Year 1 cloud infrastructure and hosting at 30% of revenue, payment processing at 15%, and third-party API usage at 10% The risk is not the first small bill it’s unmonitored usage, test environments, logs, and customer growth
Budget payroll by month, not just annual salary This model starts with a CEO at $180,000, a Head of Engineering at $160,000, and 2 software engineers at $120,000 each, creating about $48,300 in monthly Year 1 payroll Sales, marketing, and support hires start in Month 13, so early staffing is product-heavy
Yes, but this model is not a bare-bones bootstrap case It includes $70,000 of CAPEX, $10,000 of development platform licenses, $15,000 of hardware, and $8,000 of website and brand work before counting payroll Contractors can reduce fixed hiring risk, but they do not remove the need for product scope control and cash runway
About the author
Marcus Cole
Business Operations Writer
Marcus Cole is a business operations writer for Financial Models Lab who researches how small businesses launch, operate, and earn money. He focuses on first-year business costs and simple business projections, helping local business owners move from a side project to a real business. His work guides readers from an idea to a basic business plan.
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