How Much It Costs To Open A Bicycle Shop: $1405k CAPEX Plan

Bike Shop Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Permanent setup costs total about $88,000 before inventory.
  • Opening inventory starts at $50,000, centered on bikes.
  • Repair tools need about $10,000 and one mechanic.
  • Month-one staffing starts immediately, so cash burns fast.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates the upfront capitalized startup assets needed to open a bicycle shop, including buildout, equipment, tech, inventory, and vehicle costs.

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Scope note This calculator covers only capitalized startup assets. It excludes working capital, payroll runway, rent deposits, debt service, insurance premiums, marketing, taxes, financing costs, owner draw, and ongoing operating expenses. Opening inventory is included here as launch stock, not inventory runway.



What does this Bicycle Shop model screenshot show?

See Bicycle Shop Financial Model Template: startup assets, Month 1–7 launch timing, and depreciation are mapped—open it and review assumptions.

Key model checks

  • Startup assets and costs
  • Month 1–7 timing
  • Depreciation, payroll, runway
Bicycle Shop Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and customizable purchase timing, costs and depreciation assumptions for planning startup and expansion investments.


What hidden costs come with opening a bicycle shop?


Hidden costs in a Bicycle Shop go far beyond bikes and fixtures: rent deposits, utility deposits, insurance, pre-opening payroll, merchant setup, launch marketing, legal and accounting setup, shrinkage, and cash for a slow repair backlog. Monthly fixed costs can reach $46,600 before sales: $45,000 rent, $600 utilities, $250 insurance, $150 POS and CRM software, $300 accounting and legal, $200 cleaning, and $100 security monitoring. Add 20% payment processing and 30% digital advertising in Year 1, and total funding need rises fast; see How Much Does The Owner Of Bicycle Shop Make?

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Upfront cash hits

  • Rent deposit and first month
  • Utility deposit before opening
  • Pre-opening payroll for staff training
  • Legal and accounting setup fees
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Monthly burn drivers

  • $45,000 rent each month
  • $600 utilities plus $250 insurance
  • 20% card fees on sales
  • 30% digital ads in Year 1

How much inventory does a bike shop need?


The quick answer: a Bicycle Shop usually starts with about $50k in inventory, but the real number depends on the product mix. If Year 1 sales lean 60% new bicycles, 25% accessories and parts, and 15% repair service, the stock plan has to favor bikes and fast-turn items, not one flat number. At $1,200 per new bike, $75 for accessories and parts, and $80 for repairs, the right buy also depends on brands, floor space, e-bike focus, and vendor terms.

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Opening mix

  • $50k base inventory
  • 60% new bikes
  • 25% accessories and parts
  • 15% repair service
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What drives stock

  • Brands and price points
  • Square footage and showroom capacity
  • E-bike versus commuter mix
  • Vendor terms and turnover speed

How much money do I need to open a bike shop?


A Bicycle Shop needs $1.405M for base opening CAPEX, but total cash capacity can reach $2.086M if the $681k Month 18 cash need is funded on top of buildout. Track conversion closely because the model starts at 40% visitor conversion; see What Is The Most Critical Metric For Measuring The Success Of Your Bicycle Shop? for the key operating lens.

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Opening Cash

  • $1.405M base CAPEX
  • $45k monthly rent
  • $61k fixed overhead, excluding wages
  • $160k Year 1 wages
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Runway Risk

  • -$129k Year 1 EBITDA
  • Breakeven in Month 14
  • $681k minimum cash need by Month 18
  • Key drivers: rent, inventory, repairs, staffing


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table summarizes the main startup assets and the non-CAPEX cash reserve a bicycle shop needs before opening.

Highlighted CAPEX$130,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$681,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$811,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Initial Inventory Purchase $50,000 Opening stock depth for bikes and parts Yes
Leasehold Improvements $30,000 Store buildout and tenant finish work Yes
Delivery Van $25,000 Used vehicle spec and prep Yes
Retail Display Fixtures $15,000 Fixtures, racks, and showroom layout Yes
Repair Shop Equipment $10,000 Tools and equipment for service work Yes
Operating Reserve $681,000 Year 1 losses, payroll, and 61k monthly overhead No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched planning assumptions; non-CAPEX excludes launch cash, runway, and operating reserve.


Bicycle Shop Core Five Startup Costs



Location, Buildout, And Storefront Setup Startup Expense


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Buildout Cost

A bike shop's permanent setup starts around $73k: $30k leasehold improvements, $15k retail fixtures, $3k office furniture, and a $25k camera system. That covers flooring, lighting, wall racks, a service counter, storage, and exterior signage, plus landlord rules and permits. Keep delivery access in the plan.


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Budget Drivers

Price it from square footage, fixture count, and contractor bids. Bigger showrooms, rougher leases, lower landlord allowances, and higher local labor push cost up. Ask for separate quotes for buildout, fixtures, and security so you don't blur one-time spend with rent or working capital.

  • Measure wall rack length first
  • Confirm power and lighting needs
  • Check loading access and permits
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Keep It Lean

Trim cost by reusing usable flooring, racks, or counters if the lease allows, and by narrowing showroom intensity to the bikes and accessories that move fastest. The big mistake is overbuilding the front end before traffic proves itself. A landlord allowance can offset part of the $30k buildout, but only if it's negotiated up front.


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Cash Buffer

Do not mix buildout with monthly rent. Separate the one-time setup from the cash you need to stay open: $45k monthly rent, rent deposits, utilities, and opening cash. That buffer matters because permitting delays, fixture lead times, and contractor slippage can burn cash before the first sale. Plan extra room if the lease requires tenant work or delivery access changes.



Initial Merchandise Inventory Startup Expense


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Open Stock

Base the opening buy on $50k, with most cash in fast movers: 60% new bicycles, 25% accessories and parts, and 15% repair-ready items. At a $1,200 bike price point, the first order should match showroom space and local rider demand, not a broad catalog.


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Stock Mix

Use the opening inventory for bicycles, helmets, apparel, locks, lights, tubes, tires, chains, lubricants, components, and seasonal SKUs. Here’s the quick math: $30k to bicycles, $12.5k to accessories and parts, and $7.5k to service items if you mirror the opening mix.

  • Match depth to showroom capacity
  • Buy more fast-moving sizes
  • Skip slow seasonal SKUs
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Tight Buy

Trim this cost by narrowing sizes, delaying slow e-bike models, and stocking only the repair parts you turn quickly. The trap is overbuying full assortment depth before you know local rider type or repair attachment rate; that ties up cash fast and slows replenishment.


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Cash Tie-Up

Treat opening inventory as cash on the shelf. It should be funded separately from rent deposits and payroll working capital, then sized to the first 60 days of demand so turnover stays healthy and dead stock does not drain the launch budget.



Repair Service Department Equipment Startup Expense


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Repair Tool Budget

A $10k base equipment budget covers repair stands, workbenches, hand tools, torque tools, wheel truing stands, an air compressor, parts storage, cleaning supplies, safety gear, and small consumables. Estimate it as units × unit price, then add setup quotes. This is startup capex, not rent or payroll.


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What To Buy First

Keep the first purchase list tied to the repair menu. Basic tune-ups need less gear than suspension work, wheel building, hydraulic brake service, or e-bike diagnostics. With repair at 15% of sales mix and one certified mechanic at $50k salary, spend for the service level you will actually sell.

  • Start with tune-up tools
  • Add specialty tools later
  • Match gear to volume
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How To Control Cost

Buy core tools new, then price specialty items against expected ticket mix and mechanic capacity. The common mistake is overbuying advanced tools before repair demand is steady. A lean setup can stay near the $10k base, while a broader service menu will push spending up fast.

  • Quote the full kit first
  • Avoid unused specialty tools
  • Stage upgrades with demand

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Capacity And Service Depth

Equipment depth should match how many jobs one mechanic can turn per day. More complex repairs need more bench space, tighter torque tools, and better storage for parts and consumables. If the shop stays centered on basic maintenance, the $10k setup works better; if it expands into advanced repairs, tool spend rises with complexity.



POS, Software, Ecommerce, And Security Startup Expense


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POS and security base

The first spend is the shop stack: $5k for POS hardware and $25k for cameras, plus $150 a month for POS CRM software and $100 a month for monitoring. Keep hardware separate from subscriptions, and size terminals, scanners, payment hardware, and network gear to checkout volume.


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What it covers

This budget covers POS terminals, barcode scanners, payment hardware, inventory software, ecommerce setup, repair scheduling tools, cameras, alarms, and network equipment. Here’s the quick math: recurring tech cost is $250 a month, or $3,000 a year, before payment fees and ad spend. That keeps software and hardware decisions clean.

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Watch the burn

Year 1 also carries payment processing fees at 20% of sales and digital advertising at 30% of sales, so 50% of revenue is gone before rent, payroll, or inventory. Use setup quotes, sales volume, and channel mix to test if checkout, online orders, and repair bookings still leave room for margin.


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Cut waste early

Save money by buying only the hardware you need on day one, then adding extra terminals or scanners after traffic proves out. The common miss is bundling subscriptions into hardware and undercounting month-one cash need. Keep the $150 CRM fee and $100 monitoring fee in operating budget, not startup capex.



Licenses, Insurance, Hiring, And Launch Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch Paperwork

Licenses and pre-opening admin cover business registration, sales tax permit, resale certificate, insurance binders, accounting setup, legal setup, hiring, mechanic training, uniforms, grand opening marketing, and local sponsorship outreach. Keep these as setup costs, not operations. The key question is: what must be paid before the doors open?


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Working-Capital Markers

Use monthly costs as working-capital markers: $250 insurance, $300 accounting/legal, $600 utilities, and $200 cleaning. These are ongoing cash needs, not one-time setup. Here’s the quick math: they show the minimum cash buffer you need after launch, before sales cover overhead.

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Month 1 Staffing

Staffing starts in Month 1 with a store manager at $65k, a certified mechanic at $50k, a sales associate at $35k, and part-time sales at 0.5 FTE on a $20k annual salary. One clean rule: treat payroll as launch readiness if the hire is needed before opening.


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Keep Setup Separate

Separate one-time setup from operating cash. Licensing, training, marketing, and hiring sit in startup expense, while insurance, accounting/legal, utilities, and cleaning are working-capital markers. If you blend them, the opening budget gets fuzzy fast, and that makes cash planning weaker.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost swings with floor space, inventory depth, and repair capacity. The base model uses $140.5k CAPEX, breaks even in Month 14, and shows Year 1 EBITDA of -$129k.

Lean, base, and full launch cost bands for a bicycle shop
Scenario Lean LaunchRepair-first setup Base LaunchBalanced model Full LaunchHigh-capacity build
Launch model Starts as a repair-first launch and keeps retail breadth narrow to protect cash. Combines bicycle sales and repairs at the model's planned scale. Opens with a wider retail mix and higher service throughput from day one.
Typical setup A compact repair-forward shop with limited display space, tighter inventory, and minimal delivery support. A balanced shop with core retail space, service tools, standard inventory depth, and a full front-of-house team. A larger full-service store with deeper stock, more display space, expanded repair capacity, and heavier overhead.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller showroom build
  • lower opening inventory
  • fewer fixtures
  • no delivery van
  • lean staffing
  • Leasehold buildout
  • opening inventory
  • repair shop equipment
  • fixtures and POS
  • delivery van and cameras
  • Larger showroom build
  • deeper inventory
  • stronger fixtures
  • more repair capacity
  • higher rent and staffing
Planning rangeCAPEX only $95,000 - $125,000Lowest cash need $135,000 - $155,000Planned build $190,000 - $260,000Highest build
Best fit Best for smaller square footage, tighter lease terms, narrow inventory mix, and low initial staffing. Best for mid-size square footage, balanced inventory mix, standard lease terms, and one-manager plus mechanic staffing. Best for larger square footage, deeper inventory mix, stronger lease terms, more repair capacity, and a larger sales and mechanic team.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions for launch budgeting, not vendor quotes or exact bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

The researched CAPEX budget is $1405k before deposits, working capital, and early losses That includes $50k for initial inventory, $30k for leasehold improvements, and $10k for repair equipment The full cash plan is larger because the model shows -$129k EBITDA in Year 1 and breakeven in Month 14