How Much It Costs to Open a Breakfast Restaurant: $1358k CAPEX

Breakfast Restaurant Startup Costs
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Description

This breakfast restaurant cost breakdown covers the startup period through the first operating year: CAPEX, pre-opening expenses, opening inventory, working capital, and total funding need The researched base case includes $135,800 in listed CAPEX, $780,000 minimum cash in Month 2, and a model outcome of breakeven in Month 3 with 16 months to payback It excludes guaranteed vendor quotes and site-specific bids, so the final startup budget for a breakfast restaurant depends on location, size, lease condition, menu complexity, and service model


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates the capitalized startup assets for a breakfast restaurant buildout, then adds contingency to show the CAPEX subtotal.

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Non-CAPEX reminder Excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, operating losses, and opening food beyond initial stock. Use this for capitalized setup only; fund those needs separately.



What does the Breakfast Restaurant CAPEX screenshot show?

This Breakfast Restaurant Financial Model Template screenshot shows startup CAPEX timing, depreciation, amortization, and funding. Breakeven hits Month 3, payback is 16 months, and Year 1 EBITDA is $146,000. Open it and review assumptions.

Financial model screenshot highlights

  • Month 1-9 CAPEX timing
  • Total CAPEX: $135,800
  • Month 2 cash: $780,000
Breakfast Restaurant Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and customizable purchase schedules, letting users define startup and growth investments for accurate cash planning and runway visibility


How do I fund a breakfast restaurant startup?


If your Breakfast Restaurant needs funding, don’t ask for one lump sum — build a sources-and-uses plan around buildout, pre-opening costs, working capital, and contingency. The model shows $135,800 of base CAPEX, but the minimum cash assumption rises to $780,000 in Month 2, so you need enough cash to reach Month 3 breakeven and 16-month payback.

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Use of funds

  • $135,800 base CAPEX
  • Pre-opening spend before launch
  • Working capital for Month 2 cash
  • Contingency for slower ramp-up
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Funding sources

  • Owner cash first
  • Bank loan for core buildout
  • Equipment financing for kitchen assets
  • Landlord allowance and investor capital if used

Stress-test the model with cover counts, $8 midweek AOV, and $12 weekend AOV, plus a 175% first-year variable cost load. Add payroll, rent or lease costs if they apply, because those drive cash runway and tell you whether the funding stack can really hold through opening.

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Launch checks

  • Track cover count by day
  • Test weekday and weekend checks
  • Measure variable cost load monthly
  • Watch cash runway every week
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What to prove

  • Breakeven by Month 3
  • Payback in 16 months
  • Enough cash for opening losses
  • Room for payroll and rent

What hidden costs should I expect before opening?


Before opening a Breakfast Restaurant, the hidden costs are mostly cash you burn before day one: pre-opening payroll, hiring, training, food-safety setup, permits, inspections, utility deposits, insurance binders, initial ingredients, coffee and beverages, paper goods, uniforms, soft-opening meals, local marketing, smallwares, and cash drawers. If you’re sizing the full launch, see How Much Does The Owner Of Breakfast Restaurant Usually Make? for the operating side, because these items should sit in working capital (cash buffer), not CAPEX.

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Cash to fund early

  • Pre-opening payroll for setup time
  • Hiring and training before sales start
  • Permits and inspections before opening day
  • Utility deposits and insurance binders
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Ongoing cash run-rate

  • $125 permits and licenses, annualized
  • $300 marketing retainer each month
  • $200 accounting and legal services
  • $75 software, plus about $1,950 fixed monthly expenses and $8,375 first-year payroll

What is the biggest cost to open a breakfast restaurant?


The biggest cost to open a Breakfast Restaurant is usually the buildout and kitchen infrastructure: hood, plumbing, electrical, grease handling, HVAC, restrooms, seating layout, and workflow. In the CAPEX data, the largest listed item is $100,000 for acquisition, then $15,000 for customization and $8,000 for commercial equipment, so the real driver depends on whether the site already works as a restaurant. If the space is raw, leasehold improvements can easily become the main cost; ask whether the site was a restaurant before and whether the hood, drains, and electrical capacity pass inspection.

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Big cost drivers

  • Hood system can change the budget fast
  • Plumbing and drains must fit service load
  • Electrical capacity affects equipment installs
  • HVAC and restrooms add buildout cost
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What to check first

  • Was it a restaurant before?
  • Do hood and vents pass inspection?
  • Are drains already in place?
  • Can the panel handle kitchen load?


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Startup costs split between five CAPEX items and one excluded cash reserve for a breakfast restaurant model.

Highlighted CAPEX$128,500Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$780,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$908,500CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Truck Acquisition $100,000 Unit acquisition price Yes
Truck Customization & Wrap $15,000 Buildout and exterior finish scope Yes
Commercial Freezers & Equipment $8,000 Kitchen refrigeration and prep equipment Yes
Generator & Power System $3,000 Backup power setup Yes
Point-of-Sale System $2,500 Checkout hardware and software setup Yes
Working Capital Reserve $780,000 Month 2 cash trough, payroll runway, and operating losses No

Planning note: Ranges use researched assumptions; launch cash and payroll runway stay excluded from CAPEX.


Breakfast Restaurant Core Five Startup Costs



Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense


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Buildout Scope

This is the most site-specific startup cost. It ties to square footage, whether the unit was already a restaurant, and how much hood, drain, electrical, and restroom work is in place. The source data does not give a separate line, so treat this as a key input, not a made-up range.


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What It Covers

It covers walls, flooring, kitchen flooring, restrooms, plumbing, electrical, grease trap, HVAC, accessibility, fire safety, paint, lighting, landlord work letter, and code compliance. Estimate it from quotes by trade, square footage, and the current condition of the space. Compare it with the source figures of $15,000 for customization and $2,000 for plumbing, but a fixed-site restaurant buildout can be much larger.

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Trim the Cost

Pick a former restaurant with as much hood, drain, electrical, and restroom work already done as possible. Ask for the landlord work letter before you sign, then price only the missing trades. Don’t budget to the $15,000 customization line if the site needs new compliance work, because that can push the spend far beyond it.


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Budget Risk

If the space needs new plumbing, electrical, grease trap, HVAC, or restroom work, this line can become one of the biggest cash asks before opening. If the prior tenant already had a restaurant hood and compliant restrooms, the bill drops fast, so the lease decision matters as much as the finish list.



Commercial Kitchen Equipment Startup Expense


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Kitchen Gear Budget

A breakfast line lives or dies on speed. The source model sets $8,000 for commercial equipment and $3,000 for the power system, before installation and working capital. That budget has to cover the right mix of griddles, ranges, ovens, fryers if used, refrigeration, prep tables, dishwashing, coffee service, and any ventilation tie-ins.


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Scope the Build

Price this from the menu, not from a wish list. Higher peak covers, more pancake and egg volume, and heavier coffee volume push up heat, cold storage, and dish flow needs. A hood already approved can reduce setup friction, but delivery, installation, and warranty should still sit outside the equipment subtotal.

  • Estimate peak covers first
  • Map equipment to ticket time
  • Separate install from gear cost
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Trim Without Cutting Quality

Keep the base line tight by matching equipment to the menu breadth you can actually sell. Used gear can lower the cash outlay, but only if it fits the breakfast rush and doesn’t slow ticket time. Ask early about refrigeration needs and the dishwashing method, since those choices can change the whole layout.

  • Buy to menu, not to vanity
  • Check used gear condition first
  • Confirm hood and power early

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Refine the Quote

Before you lock the budget, get answers on expected peak covers, pancake and egg volume, coffee volume, dishwashing method, refrigeration needs, and whether the hood is already approved. Those inputs tell you if $8,000 is enough for equipment alone or if the real need is higher once installation and power work are added.



Furniture, Fixtures, POS, and Signage Startup Expense


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What’s inside

This line covers tables, chairs, booths, counters, host stand, menu boards, payment terminals, point-of-sale hardware, receipt printers, kitchen display screens, exterior and interior signage, customer flow, and accessibility. Keep it separate from kitchen equipment and from the $75 per month software fee. The source CAPEX items here total $7,800: $2,500 POS, $1,500 signage, $800 security, and $3,000 website work.


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How to price

Price it from line-item quotes, not guesses. Start with seat count, counter length, and service model, then add the cost of each terminal, printer, screen, sign, and any install or wiring in the quote. If your layout must keep checkout fast in the morning rush, the number of order points matters as much as the seats.

  • Count seats first.
  • Quote hardware separately.
  • Keep software in OPEX.
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Fast checkout

A tight floor plan can cut waits, but only if it matches how breakfast runs at peak. Fewer steps from host stand to payment terminal help, and accessibility should stay clear. Don’t overbuy fixtures that slow the line; the goal is faster checkout, not more décor.


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Budget split

Treat this as a separate startup bucket from ovens, ranges, and other kitchen gear. The known fixed spend is $7,800, while the $75 per month software charge stays in operating expense. If you add more seats or custom counters, get those quoted on the same schedule as opening work, so the budget stays clean.



Permits, Licenses, Insurance, and Professional Services Startup Expense


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Permit Stack

There is no single national restaurant license. A breakfast restaurant usually needs business registration, food service permits, health department review, fire approval, sign permits, sales tax setup, payroll setup, insurance binders, legal review, and accounting setup; add liquor licensing only if alcohol is served.


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Monthly Cost

Use the monthly run rate to budget this line: $125 permits and licenses, $200 accounting and legal, and $400 insurance. That is $725 per month, or $8,700 annualized. Put legal and accounting quotes in writing before opening, since filings and entity setup can change the total.

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Timing Risk

Treat inspections as schedule risk. A delayed health or fire approval can push opening payroll and rent before revenue starts, so the permit calendar belongs in the launch plan. The cost is not just fees; it is the cash burn from waiting on signoff.


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Control Spend

Cut waste by reusing a space with prior restaurant approvals, but verify hood, drain, restroom, and fire work first. Ask for fixed quotes on the insurance binder, legal review, and accounting setup, then confirm whether the liquor path applies at all.



Pre-Opening Expenses and Working Capital Startup Expense


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Launch Cash

This bucket funds the cash you need before sales start: initial ingredients, coffee and beverages, paper goods, uniforms, hiring ads, staff training, soft opening, local marketing, utility and insurance deposits, opening cash, and the first payroll cycle. Keep one-time launch spend separate from monthly burn, because the model already shows $100,500 annual payroll, $1,950 fixed monthly costs, $300 marketing, and $125 permits.


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What To Fund

Build this number from three inputs: opening inventory quantities, deposit amounts, and the cash needed to cover the first payroll run and early weeks of trading. Here’s the quick math: Year 1 variable cost load is 175% of sales, so early cash drains fast before Month 3 breakeven. Don’t mix this with kitchen equipment or leasehold work.

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Keep It Tight

Trim this line by staging buys: order opening inventory for the soft opening only, delay nonessential marketing, and match staffing to the first week’s cover count. Use vendor terms on paper goods and beverages where possible. What this estimate hides: if opening slips past Month 3, each extra month adds fixed costs plus payroll pressure.


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Cash Cushion

Working capital should cover the ramp, not just the opening day. If sales lag while payroll and fixed costs keep running, cash burns quickly because the model combines $100,500 of annual payroll with recurring monthly costs and a 175% Year 1 variable cost load. Hold enough to survive the gap until Month 3 breakeven.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Costs shift with seat count, lease quality, kitchen gear, menu breadth, and staffing ramp. Lean, Base, and Full show how a smaller café, the source case, and a larger launch change funding.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchSmaller cafe Base LaunchSource case Full LaunchBigger launch
Launch model A smaller breakfast cafe with a tight menu, fewer seats, and a lighter buildout. The source case uses 710 weekly Year 1 covers, $8 midweek AOV, $12 weekend AOV, $1,950 monthly fixed expenses, and about $8,375 monthly payroll. A broader-menu breakfast spot with more seats, more equipment, and a longer pre-opening payroll ramp.
Typical setup Likely uses a smaller space, partial leasehold work, and a basic kitchen equipment mix. A mid-size breakfast cafe with standard kitchen gear, a normal lease fit-out, and a steady staffing ramp. Likely needs a larger space, fuller kitchen buildout, more prep storage, and more working cash.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller space
  • fewer seats
  • lighter buildout
  • limited kitchen gear
  • lean staffing
  • 710 weekly covers
  • $8 midweek AOV
  • $12 weekend AOV
  • $1,950 fixed monthly costs
  • $8,375 monthly payroll
  • More seats
  • broader menu
  • more kitchen equipment
  • longer pre-opening payroll
  • larger working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only Lower startup bandLower buildout $135,800Base case Higher startup bandHigher buildout
Best fit Best for owners starting with a simple local concept and tight upfront cash control. Best for operators who want the modeled middle case with no extra buildout bets. Best for founders planning a bigger opening and enough cash to absorb a slower ramp.

Planning note: Ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact vendor quotes or lender terms.

Frequently Asked Questions

The researched base case includes $8,000 for commercial equipment, plus $2,500 for the point-of-sale system and $3,000 for a power system That is a planning assumption, not a vendor quote For a true breakfast restaurant, griddles, refrigeration, coffee service, dishwashing, and hood tie-ins can move the number fast, especially if the menu is broad