Sports Complex Startup Costs: $121M CAPEX Plus Cash Runway
Sports Complex Bundle
This sports complex cost breakdown covers $121M in modeled CAPEX, plus pre-opening expenses, rent, staffing readiness, launch marketing, and working capital for the first operating year The model shows $197M in Year 1 revenue, $292k in Year 1 EBITDA, and a -$120k minimum cash point in Month 6 These are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed vendor pricing or local construction quotes
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Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a sports complex buildout, using lean, base, and full scenarios.
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What this excludes This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes pro shop inventory, payroll runway, working capital, deposits, debt service, rent before opening, marketing launch spend, operating reserve, operating expenses, and the Month 6 cash low point.
What does the CAPEX tab show?
The Sports Complex Financial Model Template CAPEX tab maps Month 1-6 startup costs, opening assumptions, depreciation, amortization, and runway before funding outreach.
Key screenshot checks
$121M CAPEX baseline
Year 1 revenue $197M
EBITDA $292k, Year 1
Month 6 cash -$120k
26-month payback
Validate rental hours
Tournament day counts
Membership and registrations
Wage and fixed costs
Scenario-test assumptions
Sports Complex Financial Model
5-Year Financial Projections
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What is the biggest cost to open a sports complex?
For a Sports Complex, the biggest cost is usually real estate and facility readiness, not just the gear. In the named CAPEX model, court and field surfacing plus equipment is the largest item at $500k, with HVAC next at $250k, fitness equipment at $150k, IT and security at $80k, and scoreboards plus PA at $75k. What this estimate hides is that land, the building shell, tenant improvements, parking, accessibility, restrooms, utilities, lighting, and code compliance can cost more than equipment, especially with ownership or a larger indoor mix.
Biggest named CAPEX items
$500k for surfacing and equipment
$250k for HVAC
$150k for fitness gear
$80k for IT and security
Costs that can outrun equipment
Land can be the biggest check
Building shell changes the budget
Tenant improvements add fast
Code and access items pile up
How should you build a sports complex funding plan?
Build the Sports Complex funding plan around validated assumptions before any lender or investor outreach: show use of funds, a Month 1 to Month 6 CAPEX schedule, pre-opening costs, opening-month cash, revenue ramp, fixed costs, wages, variable costs, and runway. In the model, $121M CAPEX, $197M Year 1 revenue, $292k Year 1 EBITDA, 26-month payback, 1,243% ROE, and a -$120k minimum cash point only work if you can support 15,000 rental hours, 50 event days, 300 memberships, and 1,000 program registrations.
Funding plan basics
State use of funds clearly
Map CAPEX by month
Budget pre-opening expenses
Show opening cash and runway
Demand proof
Support 15,000 rental hours
Support 50 event days
Support 300 memberships
Support 1,000 registrations
What hidden costs of opening a sports complex should founders budget for?
Hidden costs can push a Sports Complex from “looks profitable” to cash-strained fast, so founders should budget for pre-opening spend and early monthly burn from day one. For a quick benchmark, see How Much Does The Owner Of The Sports Complex Make?; the early bill stack can include $40k monthly lease rent, $15k base utilities, $3k insurance, $15k admin software, $4k cleaning, and $3k base marketing. That’s why the model can still show -$120k minimum cash in Month 6 even when operations look solid on paper.
Pre-open cash
Pay rent during buildout
Cover permit delay gaps
Fund insurance binders
Pay utility deposits early
Early monthly burn
Set up software before launch
Hire before revenue starts
Train staff and safety
Buy uniforms, supplies, cleaning
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table summarizes the main startup CAPEX and the non-CAPEX cash buffer needed to open and cover early operating pressure.
Highlighted CAPEX$1,055,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$120,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,175,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Court Field Surfacing & Equipment
$500,000
Main court and field buildout
Yes
HVAC System Upgrade
$250,000
Climate control and ventilation scope
Yes
Fitness Center Equipment
$150,000
Workout area equipment package
Yes
IT Network & Security Systems
$80,000
Network, access control, and security install
Yes
Scoreboards & PA System
$75,000
Displays, sound, and game-day electronics
Yes
Operating Reserve
$120,000
Monthly fixed costs and Year 1 wages before cash turns positive
No
Sports Complex Core Five Startup Costs
Site Acquisition and Facility Buildout Startup Expense
CAPEX Scope
Site acquisition and facility buildout is CAPEX when it creates a long-term asset. That includes land purchase or lease deposits, the building shell, architectural work, construction, tenant improvements, parking, accessibility, restrooms, code upgrades, and inspections. Cost swings with market, size, indoor versus outdoor mix, court or field count, ceiling height, floor loading, parking, and utility capacity.
Price Inputs
Use square footage, court and field count, and utility load to price the site plan. The model does not split out land purchase or full construction cost, so the estimate has to come from quotes for shell work, tenant improvements, parking, and code items. One cleaner number beats a loose guess.
Get shell quotes by square foot.
Separate indoor and outdoor areas.
Price parking and code work early.
Control Spend
Keep the spend tied to safety, access, and revenue use. Don’t bury costs in decorative finishes when parking, restrooms, accessibility, and utility upgrades drive opening readiness. If the layout is more indoor-heavy, expect higher buildout pressure. Phase nonessential work.
Push upgrades that do not affect opening.
Match finishes to tenant demand.
Protect code and inspection scope.
Lease Anchor
The model uses $40k per month as the operating-cost anchor for rent. That helps frame the ongoing burn, but it does not separately provide land purchase or full construction cost, so the upfront CAPEX stack still needs its own quote set.
Courts, Turf, and Athletic Surfaces Startup Expense
Court Package
The core surface package is modeled at $500k for hardwood or synthetic courts, indoor turf, striping, nets, boards, padding, goals, and divider curtains. The real drivers are court count, field size, surface type, sport mix, and tournament-ready durability. Treat this as CAPEX because it creates long-life assets, not a short-term operating cost.
Sizing Inputs
Start with the layout: number of courts, field dimensions, and turf square footage, then layer quotes for each surface system and install. Multi-sport use raises wear needs and replacement cycles. Here’s the quick math: the surfaces must support 15,000 Year 1 rental hours at $75 plus 50 tournament days at $2,500.
Spend Control
Keep the spec tight: standardize court sizes, buy durable finishes only where traffic is highest, and avoid overbuilding low-use zones. Don’t cheap out on wear areas, because early repairs erase savings fast. The goal is simple: match surface life to booked hours, so the install lasts through heavy league and event use.
Revenue Test
Judge the spend against use, not just sticker price. At 15,000 rental hours and $75 per hour, Year 1 rental revenue is $1.125M; 50 tournament days at $2,500 adds $125k. That makes surface quality a direct capacity driver, so tournament readiness has to be built in from day one.
Lighting, HVAC, Utilities, and Amenities Startup Expense
Facility readiness
This spend keeps the building safe and playable, not decorative. It covers high-bay lighting, HVAC or ventilation, electrical and plumbing work, locker rooms, bathrooms, spectator seating, concessions, signage, and security. Indoor complexes carry heavier system costs because athletes, spectators, and events need temperature control, airflow, visibility, water, and power. A modeled HVAC upgrade alone is $250k.
What to count
Estimate it from quotes and months of coverage. Use separate line items for HVAC, lighting, electrical, plumbing, restrooms, seating, concessions, and security, then add monthly base utilities at $15k. Also include $40k for concession equipment and $30k for signage. This is startup capex, meaning capital spending for long-life assets.
Quote HVAC and electrical first
Add utility months
Track long-life buildout only
Keep it tight
Save money by phasing finishes after opening, but don't shrink ventilation, lighting, or restroom count. Get three bids on HVAC and electrical, and separate one-time buildout from monthly utilities. A common miss is under-sizing power or cooling; that causes rework and bad event days, which costs more than the initial savings.
Cash load
$15k in base utilities each month means this line starts burning cash before attendance ramps. Budget for service start-ups, deposits, and the first months of operating load so the site can handle leagues, tournaments, and crowded weekends without gaps in power, air, or water.
Equipment, Technology, and Booking Systems Startup Expense
Tech Stack Split
For a sports complex, this line item splits one-time hardware from monthly software. The durable side covers goals, nets, balls, training gear, scoreboards, PA, timing systems, Wi-Fi, cameras, access control, office equipment, and the IT network. The recurring side covers point-of-sale, online scheduling, membership software, and admin tools, so you price both capex and monthly burn separately.
Cost Base
Use $80k for IT network and security systems, $75k for scoreboards and PA, $25k for office furniture and equipment, and $15k monthly for administrative software subscriptions. Add booking system fees at 15% of Year 1 revenue as a variable expense. Estimate by quote, user count, and months of coverage.
Keep It Lean
Keep hardware spec'd to actual use, not wish list. Buy scoreboards, cameras, and access control only where they lift safety, speed, or revenue. Push software vendors on annual terms and seat limits, and avoid paying for unused modules. The main mistake is mixing one-time gear with subscriptions, which hides the real monthly run rate.
Cash Flow Hit
This cost has a fixed and variable side. The $15k monthly software stack hits cash flow right away, while booking fees move with Year 1 revenue at 15%. Track both against rental hours, tournament days, and memberships, so the tech stack stays tied to use instead of growing faster than sales.
Permits, Insurance, Staffing, and Launch Readiness Startup Expense
Pre-Opening Costs
Classify permits, insurance binders, hiring, training, uniforms, safety procedures, youth program prep, launch marketing, and opening events as pre-opening expenses unless they create a long-term asset. The main cash anchors here are $3k/month insurance, $3k/month base marketing, $505k Year 1 wages, and $5k/month maintenance and repairs.
Cost Build
Budget this with four inputs: permit and setup fees, headcount and pay rates, training weeks before opening, and monthly coverage for insurance, marketing, and repairs. Here’s the quick math: $3k insurance + $3k marketing + $5k repairs already means $11k/month before wages. Staffing has to be ready before the first rental hour, tournament, membership sale, or program registration.
Control Spend
Keep quality high by staging hires and training against the launch date, not too early. Use one safety playbook, one uniform standard, and one checklist for youth programs and opening events. The biggest mistake is underfunding labor and then opening with weak coverage. What this estimate hides is timing risk: if onboarding slips, revenue slips too.
Ready to Open
For a sports complex, launch readiness is not optional. The facility needs permits, insurance, trained staff, maintenance supplies, and program prep in place before day one. If any of those lag, the first paid hour is delayed and the first sale is at risk, even if the courts and fields are finished.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Scale matters here: a lean leasehold needs far less cash than a full indoor build, and a larger complex adds courts, turf, seating, and premium amenities. Lease terms, sport mix, event demand, and runway drive the choice.
Lean, base, and full launch cost bands for a sports complex.
Scenario
Lean LaunchLower buildout risk
Base LaunchBalanced launch
Full LaunchHighest capacity
Launch model
Leased space with limited courts and basic amenities keeps the first build smaller and the cash need lighter.
Modeled multi-sport indoor facility at $121M CAPEX, $74k monthly fixed costs, $505k Year 1 wages, $197M Year 1 revenue, and -$120k minimum cash in Month 6.
A larger complex adds multiple courts, turf, seating, concessions, fitness, and premium amenities, so the upfront cash need rises fast.
Typical setup
Small court mix, basic support space, and a lean operating team.
Full court and field buildout with core amenities and a staffed operations team.
Multi-zone facility built for heavy event traffic and more on-site spending.
Cost drivers
Lease rent
court surfacing
utilities
small staff
booking fees
Lease rent
staff wages
court and field buildout
utilities
maintenance
Turf and seating
fitness equipment
concessions
bigger staff
HVAC and utilities
Planning rangeCAPEX only
Lower buildout bandLeanest cash need
$121M base buildoutModeled base case
Upper buildout bandLargest cash need
Best fit
Best for founders with strong lease terms, early demand proof, and a tight runway.
Best for teams that want a balanced launch with clear demand, workable lease terms, and enough cash runway.
Best for operators with strong event demand, deeper capital, and a long runway.
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Planning note: Scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not exact vendor quotes or bids.
Hold enough to cover the early cash low point, not just opening bills In this model, minimum cash reaches -$120k in Month 6, while fixed costs run $74k per month and Year 1 wages equal $505k That means the reserve should cover timing gaps from rent, utilities, staffing, insurance, and launch ramp before cash receipts stabilize
This model shows breakeven in Month 1, but cash still dips to -$120k in Month 6 because CAPEX and ramp timing matter Year 1 EBITDA is $292k on $197M revenue Payback is modeled at 26 months, so break-even and cash recovery should be tracked separately
Yes, plan for permits and inspections before opening The exact list depends on the city, building use, occupancy, fire safety, food service, signage, accessibility, and parking Budget time and cash for delays because rent can still run at $40k per month, utilities at $15k, and insurance at $3k before full revenue starts
Leasing can reduce upfront real estate funding, but it does not remove facility risk The model assumes $40k monthly lease rent and $121M in CAPEX for surfaces, HVAC, IT, equipment, signage, and buildout-related assets Buying may add land and debt costs, while leasing may require landlord approval, deposits, and tenant improvements
Startup costs affect cash need, payback, and debt capacity more than operating break-even alone The model reaches Month 1 breakeven, but still needs cash through a -$120k Month 6 low point A $500k surface package, $250k HVAC upgrade, and $505k Year 1 payroll all shape how much funding the business needs before growth feels safe
About the author
Gregory Ford
Launch Planning Specialist
Gregory Ford is a launch planning specialist at Financial Models Lab who helps first-time entrepreneurs judge whether a business idea is financially realistic. He focuses on operating cost estimates and turns broad business questions into clear planning assumptions and practical next steps. Gregory writes about opening and running small businesses in a straightforward, easy-to-understand way.
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