Urgent Care Center Startup Costs: $413K CAPEX Planning Budget
Urgent Care Center Bundle
Key Takeaways
Buildout starts at $150,000 before landlord allowances.
Durable equipment starts at $40,000 for exam rooms.
X-ray and lab add $130,000 upfront.
Readiness and IT split CAPEX from monthly costs.
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Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for an urgent care center: buildout, diagnostic equipment, clinical equipment, technology, furniture, signage, security, and reserve.
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CAPEX only Excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, marketing runway, and other operating costs. Base source CAPEX is $413,000 across Month 1 to Month 5; contingency is separate.
What does this Urgent Care Center screenshot show?
This Urgent Care Center Financial Model Template screenshot shows the financial model tab with CAPEX and startup costs; review timing, amounts, and depreciation, then validate assumptions.
Screenshot highlights
$413k CAPEX
Month 24 cash floor
41-month payback, 486% ROE
Urgent Care Center Financial Model
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What hidden costs of opening an urgent care center should I budget for?
The biggest hidden cost in an Urgent Care Center is not the lease—it’s the setup drag before first revenue. Budget for payer credentialing, medical director coverage, recruiting, staff training, billing and compliance setup, and launch costs; the model also shows a $126,000 minimum cash need in Month 24. For the owner-income side, see How Much Does The Owner Of An Urgent Care Center Typically Make?
Pre-open costs
Payer credentialing can delay cash.
Add legal and accounting setup.
Budget initial medical supplies and pharmaceuticals.
Include recruiting, training, and compliance.
Monthly costs
$3,500 malpractice insurance.
$800 business liability insurance.
$3,000 launch marketing.
$2,500 IT support and software.
Year 1 also carries a 19% variable cost load from supplies, pharmaceuticals, outsourced lab and imaging, plus billing and EMR software fees. Add $700 for administrative supplies, and the known monthly fixed stack already totals $10,500.
How much does it cost to open an urgent care center?
Opening an Urgent Care Center requires $539,000 in total funding: $413,000 of CAPEX plus a $126,000 minimum cash reserve, not just buildout and equipment. The key driver after opening is visit volume, so track What Is The Current Growth Rate Of Patient Visits At Your Urgent Care Center? because the researched model shows first-year revenue of about $124 million at 60% clinician capacity and 55% radiology capacity with treatment prices from $50 to $250.
Opening cash need
Fund $413,000 in CAPEX
Hold $126,000 cash reserve
Spend CAPEX from Month 1 to Month 5
Separate startup cost from total cash required
Ramp economics
Budget first-year wages of $900,000
Cover fixed overhead of $25,300/month
Reserve cash for reimbursement timing and early losses
Model payback at 41 months and IRR at 0.04%
How much funding do I need for an urgent care center?
If you're opening an Urgent Care Center, plan on at least $539,000 before you add pre-opening payroll, licenses, credentialing, insurance deposits, opening supplies, and launch marketing. Construction and equipment run from Month 1 to Month 5, and the model also keeps a $126,000 working capital reserve in place.
Here’s the quick math: with $103,250 in first-year monthly revenue and a 19% variable-cost load, you keep about $83,600 after variable costs, but payroll plus fixed overhead are about $100,300 per month, so the gap is roughly $16,700. That means funding has to cover the build, the launch, and the early cash burn, not just the construction bill.
Build budget
$413,000 CAPEX starts the plan
Month 1 to 5 covers buildout
Add licenses and credentialing
Add supplies and launch marketing
Cash runway
$126,000 reserve cushions early losses
81% contribution margin after variable costs
$83,600 stays after variable costs
$100,300 payroll plus fixed overhead
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
Shows base CAPEX of $413,000 plus an excluded operating reserve; minimum cash hits $126,000 in Month 24.
Highlighted CAPEX$413,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$126,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$539,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category
Base Estimate
Main Cost Driver
CAPEX Calculator
Clinic build-out and renovation
$150,000
Tenant improvements and finish level
Yes
Imaging and lab equipment
$130,000
X-ray spec and lab kit mix
Yes
Exam, office, and waiting furnishings
$80,000
Furniture count and room layout
Yes
IT infrastructure and hardware
$35,000
Hardware, networking, and install complexity
Yes
Security and signage
$18,000
Security scope and exterior signage
Yes
Operating reserve
$126,000
Payroll and overhead runway through Month 24
No
Urgent Care Center Core Five Startup Costs
Facility Buildout Startup Expense
Buildout Base
Treat clinic buildout as major CAPEX. Plan $150,000 across Months 1 to 3 for lease deposits, architectural plans, permits, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, exam rooms, procedure space, waiting area, reception, restrooms, accessibility, infection-control finishes, flooring, and lighting.
What Drives It
Price it by square footage, shell condition, local labor rates, utility capacity, medical gas or plumbing needs, and landlord-funded work. Ask one first question: is this a second-generation medical space or a raw retail shell? That answer changes demo, permits, and utility costs fast.
Separate landlord-paid improvements.
Separate founder-funded CAPEX.
Quote each trade by scope.
How To Control It
Save money by reusing what already works: plumbing runs, HVAC capacity, and room layouts. Do not trim accessibility or infection-control finishes. Get 2 to 3 bids on every trade, and push the landlord on tenant improvements, because that often protects more cash than cutting exam-room basics.
Reuse existing utility paths.
Negotiate landlord allowances.
Avoid mid-build plan changes.
Lease Split
Record landlord-paid improvements separately from founder-funded CAPEX. That keeps the lease economics clean and shows the real cash needed to open. If the landlord covers a larger share of the finish-out, your upfront funding gap drops; if not, the $150,000 base can move up fast.
Medical Equipment Startup Expense
Durable package
$40,000 is the base durable medical equipment CAPEX for exam room furnishings and clinical setup. Keep this separate from disposable supplies and pharmaceuticals. It covers exam tables, vital signs monitors, diagnostic tools, procedure equipment, sterilization, crash cart readiness, medication storage, refrigerators, and basic treatment gear.
Room build
Size the package by exam room count, acuity level, and procedure scope. The clean way to budget is rooms × room package, then add shared clinical items for imaging and treatment areas. New, leased, or refurbished gear changes the cash need fast, so get quotes before locking the budget.
Count exam rooms first
Separate shared from room gear
Quote new, leased, refurbished
Cost control
Use refurbished or leased equipment where clinical risk is low, but do not cut corners on monitors, sterilization, or crash cart readiness. The big mistake is mixing durable gear with consumables, which hides true CAPEX and inflates opening cash. One clean line: buy for the rooms you will actually staff.
Lease low-risk items
Protect critical safety gear
Keep supplies off CAPEX
Staff-linked setup
The first-year team of 1 physician, 1 physician assistant, 1 nurse practitioner, 1 radiology tech, and 2 medical assistants should drive the room package. Here’s the quick math: if the team needs more exam and treatment capacity, durable equipment rises with room count, not with patient volume alone.
X-Ray And Lab Startup Expense
Scope Drives Cost
Diagnostic scope is the main swing factor. Base spending starts at $100,000 for the x-ray machine and $30,000 for basic lab gear, before room prep, shielding, digital imaging, image storage, point-of-care testing, analyzers, calibration, service agreements, and Clinical Laboratory Improvement Amendments (CLIA) setup.
Price The Room
Price it from separate quotes for the x-ray machine, room prep, shielding, analyzers, and service agreements. The inputs are one unit of each major asset, install costs, and the share of testing done in-house versus outsourced. Do not fold lab and imaging into one lump sum.
Outsource Drag
The model also carries outsourced lab and imaging fees at 50% of Year 1 revenue, easing to 40% by Year 5. With 300 monthly treatments at $120, monthly billed volume is $36,000, so outside fees can still be a big drag even when the machine is installed.
Keep It Lean
Keep only the tests your team will use often, and phase in extra capability as volume proves out. Service agreements and calibration are not optional, so budget for them from day one. If first-year radiology runs at 55% capacity, buying more gear than you need can trap cash fast.
EHR And IT Startup Expense
Launch IT Spend
For an urgent care center, the $35,000 IT launch budget is one-time CAPEX for Month 1 to Month 3. It covers EHR setup, practice management software, claims clearinghouse setup, payment processing, online scheduling, digital intake, patient portal setup, plus computers, tablets, printers, networking, phones, cybersecurity, backup, and implementation fees.
Monthly Run Rate
Model recurring IT as a separate line: $2,500 per month for support and software subscriptions, plus billing and EMR software fees equal to 30% of Year 1 revenue. That keeps fixed costs, usage-based fees, and hardware spend from getting mixed together.
Hardware CAPEX: one-time devices and network gear
Implementation: setup, training, migration, go-live help
Recurring: monthly support and licenses
Variable: payment and billing fees
Keep It Lean
Keep the quote clean. Ask vendors to split setup fees from monthly seats, and separate payment processing from software licenses. The mistake to avoid is rolling everything into one monthly number; that hides cash burn and makes Year 1 planning less accurate.
Get itemized vendor quotes
Check user-seat counts
Track transaction fees monthly
Budget Split
If you want a quick test, the IT budget should show three buckets: $35,000 launch CAPEX, $2,500 monthly support, and 30% of Year 1 revenue for billing and EMR fees. If any vendor quote blends those together, break it apart before you sign.
Pre-Opening Readiness Startup Expense
What counts
Treat readiness spend as pre-opening expense unless it creates a durable asset. That includes hiring, onboarding, training, medical director coverage, licenses, permits, payer credentialing, malpractice and liability insurance, legal, accounting, initial supplies, pharmaceuticals, uniforms, and launch marketing. If it will not stay on the balance sheet, expense it.
Staff and overhead
Base the launch plan on 0.8 medical director FTE, 1 physician, 1 physician assistant, 1 nurse practitioner, 1 radiology tech, 2 medical assistants, 1 clinic manager, and 1 front desk staff. Monthly overhead also includes $3,500 malpractice, $800 liability, $3,000 marketing, and $700 administrative supplies.
Trim without risk
Keep spend lean by staging hiring to the opening date, getting quotes early, and separating one-time setup from ongoing monthly cost. Do not cut training, credentialing, or coverage just to save cash; delays there slow patient starts and billing. One clean rule: pay for what protects safety, compliance, and first claims.
Supply ratios
Use Year 1 revenue ratios to size consumables: initial supplies at 70% of revenue and pharmaceuticals at 40% of revenue. That keeps replenishment tied to volume, not guesswork. If early volume runs light, these lines should flex down, but day-one stock still has to cover walk-in demand and compliance needs.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Urgent care startup costs swing with buildout, imaging, lab scope, and staffing. Lean, Base, and Full scenarios show how much cash you need before volume catches up.
Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario
Lean LaunchLowest CAPEX
Base LaunchBalanced launch
Full LaunchHighest diagnostic capability
Launch model
Start with a smaller walk-in clinic and only the core services needed to handle non-life-threatening visits.
Launch a balanced walk-in clinic that matches the model's 60% clinician capacity, 55% radiology capacity, and 41-month payback.
Launch a broader clinic footprint with more rooms, more diagnostics, and a larger staffing ramp from day one.
Typical setup
Use fewer exam rooms, limited diagnostics, and a lighter staffing ramp to keep startup pressure down.
Use a standard clinic buildout with x-ray, core lab support, and a staffing mix that matches the base case.
Use heavier renovation, x-ray, broader lab coverage, and a bigger team to support a fuller service mix.
Cost drivers
Smaller buildout
fewer exam rooms
limited diagnostics
lighter staffing
lower reserve
$413k buildout
x-ray machine
basic lab equipment
staffing ramp
$126k reserve
Heavier renovation
x-ray included
broader lab scope
larger staffing ramp
higher rent market
Planning rangeCAPEX only
Below $413,000Lower spend
$413,000Base case
Above $413,000Premium build
Best fit
This fits founders who want a simpler launch, tighter cash control, and a lower working capital need.
This fits operators who want a middle path on cost, service scope, and payback risk.
This fits well-funded teams that want the widest service scope and can carry a larger reserve.
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Planning note: These scenario bands are researched planning assumptions, not exact quotes. Site choice, rent, staffing, and diagnostic scope can move the cash need.
Not always from a budget standpoint, but it changes the model a lot This plan includes a $100,000 x-ray machine, 1 radiology tech at an $80,000 annual salary, and 55% first-year radiology capacity If you skip in-house x-ray, move more cost to outsourced lab and imaging fees, which are modeled at 50% of Year 1 revenue
This model shows a $126,000 minimum cash need, with the low point in Month 24 That reserve sits on top of the $413,000 CAPEX budget It matters because first-year wages are about $900,000, fixed overhead is $25,300 per month, and collections may lag while patient volume and payer reimbursement mature
Leasing can reduce upfront CAPEX, but it does not remove the economic cost In this plan, owned CAPEX includes $100,000 for x-ray, $30,000 for lab equipment, and $35,000 for IT infrastructure Leasing may shift part of those costs into monthly payments, so compare cash runway, debt terms, service coverage, and replacement obligations
Buildout, permits, insurance, staffing, and payer timing usually vary the most The base model uses $150,000 for build-out, $3,500 per month for malpractice insurance, and $800 per month for business liability insurance State rules can also affect clinical staffing, lab setup, radiology workflow, and the time needed before insurance collections become predictable
The researched model shows a 41-month payback period That result assumes $413,000 of CAPEX, about $124 million of first-year revenue, and first-year capacity of 60% for clinicians and 55% for radiology If credentialing is slow, rent starts before opening, or staffing runs ahead of visits, payback can stretch quickly
About the author
Benjamin Lane
Local Business Observer
Benjamin Lane writes for Financial Models Lab as a local business observer focused on simple cash flow planning and the early steps of turning a service idea into a business. He explains startup costs in plain language, with startup budget examples that help readers researching what it takes to get started. Drawing on a practical founder perspective, he keeps his writing grounded, clear, and beginner-friendly.
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