Athletic Training Center Startup Cost: $440K CAPEX and $783K Cash

Athletic Performance Training Center Startup Costs
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Description

It takes about $122 million in modeled funding capacity to open this athletic training center under the researched base case The total comes from $440,000 in CAPEX plus a $783,000 minimum cash requirement in the early ramp-up period The largest startup items are facility build-out at $150,000, strength and conditioning equipment at $120,000, and performance testing equipment at $80,000 This estimate excludes owner salary, debt service, and vendor-specific quotes, and it treats recurring costs like the $10,000 monthly lease as operating expenses after launch



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates upfront capitalized startup assets only for an Athletic Training Center, with a base build around $440,000 before contingency.

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Excluded from CAPEX This calculator covers upfront capitalized assets only. It excludes working capital, payroll runway, pre-opening payroll, rent after launch, debt service, deposits, inventory, and recurring software subscriptions.



Is the Athletic Training Center model a validation bridge?

Open the Athletic Training Center Financial Model Template: CAPEX spans Month 1-6, $440,000 startup assets, amortized buildout, and $783,000 minimum cash—review assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • Buildout amortized
  • Equipment depreciated
  • IT, furniture, software
  • 60 Tier 1
  • 40 Tier 2
  • 4 team contracts
  • 45% occupancy
  • 22 billable days
  • Lease, payroll sensitivity
  • Marketing percentage impact
  • Equipment phasing effect
  • Payback and breakeven
Athletic Training Center Financial Model capex inputs letting users customize capital expenditures, equipment purchases, facility fit-out and timing to model startup costs and depreciation; fully customizable.


What hidden costs come with starting an athletic training center?


Hidden costs in an Athletic Training Center show up in two buckets: pre-opening setup and monthly overhead. Before revenue starts, you still pay lease deposits, permits, legal and accounting setup, staff onboarding, certifications, background checks for youth athletes, website and scheduling setup, access control, uniforms, signage, and launch materials; for owner-income context, see How Much Does The Owner Of An Athletic Training Center Usually Make?. The monthly drag is real too: $600 insurance, $700 software, $500 professional services, $400 cleaning, and $300 admin supplies, and that timing gap can hit before memberships ramp against a $783,000 Month 2 cash need.

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Pre-Opening Costs

  • Lease deposits and binders
  • Permits and legal setup
  • Accounting setup and onboarding
  • Background checks for youth athletes
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Monthly Cash Drain

  • $600 insurance each month
  • $700 software licensing each month
  • $500 professional services each month
  • $400 cleaning and $300 supplies

How much money do I need to open an athletic training center?


For an Athletic Training Center, plan on about $1.22 million of funding capacity: $440,000 in CAPEX plus a $783,000 minimum cash need in Month 2; use What Is The Most Critical Metric To Measure The Success Of The Athletic Training Center? to test whether that spend turns into paid training volume. A small leased studio can lower CAPEX to a $320,000 floor by deferring $80,000 of performance testing equipment and $40,000 of recovery equipment, before cash reserve effects.

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Base funding need

  • $440,000 CAPEX base model
  • $783,000 Month 2 cash low point
  • $1.22 million total funding capacity
  • Month 1 breakeven is a model output
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Lower-cost path

  • Lease smaller training space first
  • Defer $80,000 testing equipment
  • Defer $40,000 recovery equipment
  • Treat 8-month payback as validation, not a guarantee

How do I fund an athletic training center?


Fund the Athletic Training Center with a mix of owner equity, investor capital, equipment financing, a leasehold improvement allowance, and a credit line. Here’s the quick math: the base model needs $440,000 of CAPEX plus $783,000 of minimum cash, so the raise has to cover buildout and the cash trough before occupancy climbs from 45% in Year 1 to 90% in Year 5. At Year 1 volume, revenue is about $39,900 a month from 60 Tier 1 memberships, 40 Tier 2 memberships, 4 team contracts, and $3,000 in ad hoc services.

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Funding mix

  • Use owner equity first.
  • Add investor capital next.
  • Finance equipment and buildout.
  • Use a credit line buffer.
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Model checks

  • Test payback on $39,900 monthly revenue.
  • Watch the $783,000 cash trough.
  • Delay hiring until slots fill.
  • Plan for 45% to 90% occupancy.


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup Cost Summary

Startup cost table for facility build-out, equipment, technology, and the cash reserve needed before Month 2.

Highlighted CAPEX$440,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$783,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,223,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Facility Build-out & Renovation $150,000 Leasehold build-out scope and finish level Yes
Strength & Conditioning Equipment $120,000 Training equipment package size Yes
Performance Testing Equipment $80,000 Testing systems and measurement tools Yes
Recovery & Wellness Equipment $40,000 Recovery gear and wellness stations Yes
Technology, AV, Furniture & Initial Software $50,000 IT setup, AV systems, furniture, and software licenses Yes
Working Capital Reserve $783,000 Month 1-2 payroll, fixed overhead, and cash trough No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; non-CAPEX covers opening cash and other excluded launch costs.


Athletic Training Center Core Five Startup Costs



Facility Lease and Buildout Startup Expense


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Buildout

The biggest facility cost is the one-time buildout: $150,000 for renovation, lease deposits, landlord improvements, zoning fit, ceiling height, turf lanes, restroom and lobby setup, office space, lighting, HVAC, signage, accessibility, contractor contingency, and inspection timing. Actual spend moves with location, size, shell condition, and landlord contribution.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate this from quotes, not guesses. Split the budget into shell work, tenant improvements, permits, and inspection timing. Ask for the landlord’s contribution, required deposit, and any code-driven upgrades before you sign. Do not use per-square-foot pricing unless you also have square footage.

  • Get landlord TI terms in writing
  • Quote HVAC and accessibility early
  • Separate permit and inspection fees
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Control It

Cut waste by picking a space that already has the right ceiling height, power, and HVAC, then phase lobby and office finish after launch. Don’t underbudget inspection delays or contractor changes; that’s where cash slips. If the shell is rough, the buildout climbs fast.


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Lease

After launch, model the lease as $10,000 per month, or $120,000 a year, separate from the startup buildout. Put it in fixed overhead, because the rent hits before payroll, insurance, and software do. Occupancy only works if memberships fill fast enough to cover that recurring burden.



Training Equipment and Performance Assets Startup Expense


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Core Training Gear

$120,000 is the essential launch base for racks, barbells, plates, dumbbells, benches, plyometric boxes, sleds, bands, cones, agility tools, medicine balls, cardio machines, and storage. Here’s the quick math: estimate units needed, quote each item, and size the mix to your athlete slots and training lanes. This is the must-have capacity that lets athletes train safely on day one.


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Testing Upgrades

$80,000 for performance testing covers athlete testing tools, timing gates, and force measurement tools. These assets improve credibility and give cleaner data, but they do not all need to launch on day one. Price this with device count, calibration needs, software, and staff use hours so you only buy the tools that directly support early program sales.

  • Buy core tests first
  • Phase the rest later
  • Quote calibration costs
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Recovery Gear

$40,000 for recovery and wellness equipment adds value, but it is a phaseable upgrade, not a launch blocker. This bucket can include recovery assets that support athlete care and retention. Budget it with item counts, replacement timing, and usage frequency, and keep the first spend focused on the pieces that help athletes train harder without hurting quality.

  • Start with high-use items
  • Delay luxury pieces
  • Match spend to demand

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Launch Priority

The full equipment stack totals $240,000, split into $120,000 core training gear, $80,000 testing gear, and $40,000 recovery assets. The base package should open the doors first; the other two raise pricing power and trust, but they can follow once training slots fill and cash flow supports the upgrade cycle.



Turf, Flooring, and Safety Surfaces Startup Expense


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Flooring Scope

Turf, rubber flooring, subfloor prep, wall padding, mirrors, storage, sprint lanes, sled zones, and safety clearances belong in one scope because they change both cost and athlete capacity. The source data has no separate flooring line, so tie it to the $150,000 facility build-out unless vendor quotes split it out.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate this by layout, not by guess. Ask for square footage, turf lane length, rubber area, and landlord condition. Those four inputs drive materials, labor, and prep work. If the shell is rough or the slab needs work, this line moves fast and should stay inside the full build-out budget.

  • Measure usable training area
  • Map each turf lane
  • Count rubber zones
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Capacity Driver

Good flooring layout can raise revenue capacity because it decides how many athletes can train safely at once. More clear lanes, cleaner sled paths, and better spacing mean more filled slots per hour. Bad layout does the opposite, so one-line savings on floor materials can cost you usable training space.


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Quote Check

If you have landlord-provided flooring, compare it to your safety needs before you accept it. Ask whether the subfloor, padding, and clearances support sprint work, sled work, and group training without crowding. If not, fold the upgrade into the $150,000 build-out.



Staffing, Certification, Insurance, and Compliance Startup Expense


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Year 1 Payroll

Year 1 staffing is the big recurring cost. Using the listed headcount, 10 head coaches at $95,000, 20 coaches at $68,000, 5 sport scientists at $78,000, and 10 admin assistants at $42,000 totals $3,120,000 before taxes and benefits. The stated $312,000 looks short by a zero, so use the headcount math in your cash plan.


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Launch Readiness

Pre-opening costs are separate from payroll. Budget for coach recruitment, onboarding, certifications, background checks for youth athletes, liability insurance, workers' compensation, business licenses, waivers, and legal setup. The inputs are headcount, state rules, and whether youth training needs extra screening. This is the money that gets you launch-ready, not the money that keeps doors open.

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Cost Control

Cut this line by standardizing hiring and compliance. Use one checklist for every coach, renew certifications on the same cycle, and get quotes before opening so insurance and workers' comp are not guessed. Don’t skip background checks or waivers to save a few dollars; one missed control can cost far more than the paperwork.


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Insurance Run Rate

Insurance is a recurring operating cost, not startup capex. At $600 per month, the annual run rate is $7,200. Put that line in the monthly budget beside payroll, because it hits cash every month and affects how fast the center can scale staff.



Launch Marketing, Software, and Operating Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch setup

First-client readiness starts with $50,000 in setup CAPEX: $25,000 for IT infrastructure and AV systems, $10,000 for initial software licenses, and $15,000 for office furniture and fixtures. That covers the website, scheduling and billing software, CRM, access control, Wi-Fi, and tablets. Keep setup fees separate from subscriptions.


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Monthly stack

Recurring operating cost includes $700 per month for software licensing, plus Year 1 spend of 10% of revenue for marketing and client acquisition, 2% for performance software usage fees, and 3% for training consumables. That bucket also covers local team partnerships, uniforms, cleaning supplies, and onboarding materials. One clean rule: budget 15% of revenue, then add the fixed software fee.

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Spend control

Cut waste by buying only the launch tools needed on day one and phasing extras later. Get quotes for software, AV support, and access control before you sign. A common mistake is mixing setup fees with subscriptions, which hides runway. If revenue starts slow, the 15% variable stack falls with sales, but the $700 fixed software bill does not.


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Cash check

Here’s the quick math: base launch readiness is $50,000 up front, then $700 a month plus 15% of Year 1 revenue. So if monthly revenue is $40,000, variable launch ops add about $6,000 before the fixed software fee. That keeps the opening budget simple: one-time setup, then a revenue-linked operating layer.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Lean, Base, and Full launch costs move fast because this model is heavy on build-out, equipment, and payroll. The main swing is how much gear and working capital you fund at opening.

Lean, Base, and Full launch funding bands for an athletic training center.
Scenario Lean LaunchLower-risk pilot Base LaunchStandard launch Full LaunchMulti-sport buildout
Launch model Starts with the core training setup and defers performance testing and recovery gear. Funds the full $440,000 base build and keeps the Month 2 cash reserve in place. Keeps the base build and adds expansion items like turf, more testing gear, contingency, or added staff.
Typical setup Smaller space, core strength equipment, and a tighter opening roster. Full core equipment, standard coaching capacity, and enough cash for ramp-up. Larger space, deeper equipment mix, and higher coaching capacity for more athlete volume.
Cost drivers
  • Build-out
  • strength equipment
  • core staffing
  • software and lease costs
  • Full equipment set
  • staffing ramp
  • marketing
  • working capital reserve
  • Expansion add-ons
  • contingency
  • added turf
  • more testing gear
  • more staff
Planning rangeCAPEX only $1.10MLower cash need $1.22MModeled baseline $1.22M+Expansion band
Best fit Best if you want a smaller square-footage footprint, lighter equipment depth, and a pilot roster while keeping working capital tight. Best if you have standard floor space, full core equipment, and enough cash to cover staffing and ramp-up. Best if you need more square footage, deeper equipment depth, higher coaching capacity, and extra working capital for multi-sport demand.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes, bids, or lender terms.

Frequently Asked Questions

It can be, but profit depends on utilization, pricing, and coach capacity The researched model shows Month 1 breakeven, 8-month payback, and 45 percent Year 1 occupancy The early revenue base includes 60 Tier 1 members at $229, 40 Tier 2 members at $399, 4 team contracts at $1,800, and $3,000 in ad hoc services