Aquarium Store Startup Costs: $138K CAPEX Plus Cash Runway

Aquarium Store Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Build-out is $40,000, but landlord terms can shift it.
  • Tank systems add $40,000 before live inventory starts.
  • Opening inventory is $30,000, with shrinkage risk.
  • Monthly overhead starts at $5,100 before labor.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates one-time capitalized startup asset spend for an aquarium store before opening.

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Scope note This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes the 30,000 initial inventory, payroll runway, rent deposits, debt service, working capital, marketing spend, and other operating costs. The base project CAPEX shown in the model is 138,000 including inventory; this block leaves that opening stock out.



What does the Aquarium Store model screenshot show?

This screenshot shows the Aquarium Store Financial Model Template startup-CAPEX tab; open it and review assumptions for a 53-month payback.

Screenshot highlights

  • $138,000 startup purchases
  • Month 30 breakeven
  • EBITDA -$187k to $32k
Aquarium Store Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and customizable purchase timing, costs, and depreciation assumptions for planning startup investments and fixed assets.


How much money do you need to open an aquarium store?


You need about $399,000 to open an Aquarium Store with enough runway, not just the $138,000 startup purchase list. The gap matters because rent, payroll, utilities, insurance, and sales-linked costs push Year 1 EBITDA to -$187,000; track this alongside What Is The Most Critical Metric For Aquarium Store Success?.

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Base funding

  • Startup purchases: $138,000
  • Rent: $3,500/month
  • Utilities: $800/month
  • Insurance: $300/month
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Runway need

  • Year 1 payroll: $140,000
  • Year 1 EBITDA: -$187,000
  • Breakeven: Month 30
  • Minimum cash need: $399,000 by Month 33

How do you fund an aquarium store?


Fund the Aquarium Store with enough cash to cover $138,000 in startup purchases, plus pre-opening costs, payroll, inventory timing, and a reserve until the store reaches Month 30 breakeven. Here’s the quick math: the model shows EBITDA of -$187,000 in Year 1, -$137,000 in Year 2, then first positive EBITDA of $32,000 in Year 3, with payback at 53 months. So the raise has to fund the ramp, not just the opening.

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Cash needs

  • $138,000 startup purchases
  • Cover pre-opening costs
  • Fund opening inventory
  • Hold payroll runway cash
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Model inputs

  • Map sales by month
  • Track inventory timing
  • Show runway month by month
  • Stress test to 53 months

How much does aquarium store equipment cost?


An Aquarium Store usually starts with about $80,000 in upfront equipment and build-out before inventory, based on $25,000 for advanced filtration, $15,000 for quarantine and display tanks, and $40,000 for store build-out and fixtures. Here’s the quick math: plumbing, electrical load, drainage, water-resistant flooring, lighting, backroom prep space, and display layout can push that total up fast. For Year 1, the sales mix matters too: 40% aquatic livestock, 25% aquarium kits, 25% consumable supplies, and 10% aquascaping services, so equipment capacity has to match livestock volume.

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Main cost drivers

  • $25,000 advanced filtration
  • $15,000 quarantine and display tanks
  • $40,000 build-out and fixtures
  • Plumbing and drainage raise costs fast
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Sales mix pressure

  • 40% aquatic livestock sales
  • 25% aquarium kits sales
  • 25% consumable supplies sales
  • 10% aquascaping services sales


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table summarizes the main startup assets and the non-CAPEX cash reserve needed to open and steady the store.

Highlighted CAPEX$128,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$399,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$527,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Store Build-out & Fixtures $40,000 Store fit-out, shelving, and tank display layout. Yes
Advanced Filtration Systems $25,000 Life-support plumbing and filtration capacity. Yes
Quarantine & Display Tanks $15,000 Tank count and size for stock control. Yes
Initial Inventory Stocking $30,000 Opening fish and supply stock mix. Yes
Delivery/Service Vehicle $18,000 Service reach and delivery transport needs. Yes
Operating Reserve $399,000 Loss runway to Month 30 breakeven and Month 33 cash low point. No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; non-CAPEX covers operating cash needs, not asset purchases.


Aquarium Store Core Five Startup Costs



Leasehold Improvements and Build-Out Startup Expense


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Build-Out Base

Treat the fit-out as CAPEX or a leasehold improvement. Base plan is $40,000 spread across Months 1–3 for flooring, water-resistant surfaces, plumbing access, drainage, lighting, backroom prep space, and a retail layout that keeps customer flow clear.


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Cost Drivers

Estimate from quotes and square footage, then test the landlord’s delivery condition. Ask whether the space already has electrical capacity, floor drains, water access, and usable fixtures. If any are missing, tenant-paid work rises fast because aquarium stores need high load, wet surfaces, and safe service space.

  • Check electrical load first
  • Confirm drains and water
  • Reuse usable retail fixtures
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Save Smart

Keep landlord-funded work separate from your own spend. Don’t pay twice for base walls, plumbing stubs, or electrical service if the lease can deliver them. The clean savings come from reusing existing retail fixtures, but never skip waterproof finishes, drainage, or lighting where tanks and prep areas sit.

  • Negotiate shell delivery terms
  • Reuse safe fixtures only
  • Protect wet-area finishes

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Lease Split

Show landlord-funded improvements on one line and tenant-paid CAPEX on another. That split tells you what you can amortize, what you must fund up front, and where lease terms change cash need. If the landlord delivers a near-ready shell, the $40,000 base can fall; if not, it can move up fast.



Tank Systems and Filtration Startup Expense


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Core Asset Plan

For tank systems, plan on $40,000 before livestock: $25,000 for advanced filtration and $15,000 for quarantine and display tanks. Keep this line asset-focused, because it supports sales capacity but does not include fish, plants, or corals.


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What It Covers

This cost covers display tanks, racks, sumps, pumps, heaters, chillers where needed, lighting, quarantine systems, water testing tools, reverse osmosis/deionization systems, and backup power planning. Estimate it from unit counts, quote prices, and how many systems need redundancy. It’s the backbone of store reliability.

  • Count tanks by display zone.
  • Price each support system.
  • Add backup power coverage.
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Cost Drivers

The big swings are tank count, freshwater versus saltwater mix, filtration redundancy, livestock density, and display layout. A saltwater-heavy floor usually needs more equipment and tighter control, so the same sales plan can cost more to build. Tie capacity to Year 1 livestock mix, which is 40% of sales.

  • More tanks, higher spend.
  • More redundancy, higher spend.
  • Denser livestock, stronger filtration.

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Right-Sizing the Build

Don’t buy more life-support capacity than the Year 1 sales mix can use. Start from the 40% aquatic livestock share, then size filtration, quarantine space, and display count around that demand. Overbuilding ties up cash; underbuilding raises loss risk, stock stress, and customer complaints.



Initial Livestock and Dry Goods Inventory Startup Expense


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Opening Stock

$30,000 is the base assumption for initial inventory in Month 4, and it should stay separate from fixed equipment CAPEX. This covers freshwater fish, saltwater livestock if offered, plants or corals, food, conditioners, filters, substrate, tanks, décor, pumps, and replacement supplies.


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What It Covers

Estimate this line with vendor quotes, unit counts, and weeks of coverage. Year 1 sales mix assumes 40% aquatic livestock, 25% aquarium kits, 25% consumable supplies, and 10% aquascaping services, so inventory has to support live goods plus fast-moving dry goods without overbuying slow stock.

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Control the Cash

Plan for shrinkage, quarantine losses, and dead-on-arrival risk. A few bad shipments can eat into the first order fast, so keep replenishment cash ready after opening. The safest move is to buy to turn, not to fill shelves, and reorder based on sell-through instead of wishful display stock.


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Budget Split

Keep live inventory and dry goods out of the fixed build-out bucket. This line sits next to opening working capital, then gets replenished from operating cash after launch, so the budget stays clean and you can see how much money is tied up in stock versus equipment.



Retail Fixtures, POS, Signage, and Security Startup Expense


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Setup Cash

This bucket is mostly one-time cash. The dedicated hard costs are $5,000 for POS system and hardware and $3,000 for security and surveillance, plus a share of the $40,000 build-out for shelving, counters, displays, signage, and checkout layout. Get quotes by unit count and tie them to the landlord delivery condition.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate it from units and finishes: register count, camera count, alarm setup, sign size, and the number of fixtures. Use vendor quotes for barcode or inventory tools, payment setup, and website basics. The clean split is capital spend upfront, then a separate monthly software line. That keeps retail setup distinct from aquarium life-support equipment.

  • Count registers and cameras
  • Quote signage and fixtures
  • Add months of software
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Monthly Run Rate

Recurring cost is simple: $150/month for website and POS software plus $100/month for security monitoring, or $250/month total. Budget it for 12 months if you want the first-year cash need, then renew only what the store uses. Don’t bury these inside build-out; they hit profit every month.


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Keep It Lean

Save money by asking if the space already has usable electrical load, floor drains, water access, and some fixtures. If the landlord delivers those items, tenant-paid capex drops fast; if not, the $40,000 build-out can rise. Get a written scope before you sign.



Pre-Opening Readiness Startup Expense


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Readiness Costs

Classify readiness spending as pre-opening expense unless a specific item is capitalized. For an aquarium store, that includes registration, resale permits, local licenses, insurance, legal and accounting setup, hiring, training, vendor setup, water-testing supplies, and launch promotion. Month 1 cash also starts with $3,500 rent, $800 utilities, $300 insurance, and $250 accounting and legal.


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Cost Inputs

Build the estimate from quotes, not guesses. Use permit fees, hiring hours, training days, and first-month bills to size the cash need. Year 1 staffing is $60,000 for the store manager, $45,000 for the aquatic specialist, and $35,000 for the sales associate. Launch marketing is modeled at 30% of sales, so it rises with volume.

  • Separate one-time setup from monthly burn.
  • Use city fees and vendor quotes.
  • Track hiring and training time.
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Cash Control

Cut waste by keeping landlord-funded work out of this bucket and by timing hires close to opening. The big mistake is paying pre-opening overhead too early, before sales begin. If opening slips, fixed costs still hit in Month 1, so the cash buffer needs to cover rent, utilities, insurance, and admin before the first repeat customer.


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Buffer First

Keep this bucket tight: fund only the items that get the store open, then move recurring costs into the monthly plan. Insurance, utilities, rent, and accounting start in Month 1, so the opening cash reserve should cover those bills plus the 30% launch-marketing load until sales stabilize.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Lean, Bas e, and Full launches change cash need fast because tank count, inventory depth, staffing, and working capital swing hard in an aquarium store.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost bands for an aquarium store
Scenario Lean LaunchSmaller setup Base LaunchModel setup Full LaunchHeavier build
Launch model Open with a small footprint, fewer tanks, limited saltwater stock, and no service vehicle at launch. Use the model's core build with the planned store layout, standard filtration, initial inventory, and normal staffing. Go deeper on saltwater and coral, add more quarantine space, use the vehicle more, and carry a bigger payroll cushion.
Typical setup Use a freshwater-led mix, basic fixtures, light backroom storage, and a thin service menu. Use about $138,000 in startup purchases, including $40,000 build-out, $25,000 filtration, $15,000 tanks, and $30,000 inventory. Build extra quarantine capacity, denser display tanks, deeper premium inventory, and more staff coverage.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller tank count
  • lighter inventory
  • basic fixtures
  • delayed vehicle
  • Full build-out
  • filtration systems
  • initial inventory
  • core staffing
  • cash reserve
  • More saltwater stock
  • extra quarantine tanks
  • heavier payroll
  • more vehicle use
  • larger reserve
Planning rangeCAPEX only $250,000 - $325,000Lower cash $375,000 - $425,000Model cash $500,000 - $650,000Higher cash
Best fit Fits owners who want a tighter opening budget and can grow after cash flow steadies. Fits founders who want the base case and can fund the model's roughly $399,000 cash need. Fits operators chasing wider assortment and service volume who can support a larger cash burn.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or final bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

The model points to a large reserve because losses continue after opening It shows first-year EBITDA of -$187,000, second-year EBITDA of -$137,000, and breakeven in Month 30 The minimum cash need reaches $399,000 in Month 33, so don’t fund only the $138,000 startup purchase list