Caretaking Services Startup Costs: $285K CAPEX And Month 18 Cash Need

Caretaking Service Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Vehicle costs split into CAPEX, readiness, and monthly fuel.
  • Tools should match service tier and client mix.
  • Insurance and legal setup run about $3,200 monthly.
  • Marketing and staffing drive most pre-opening cash needs.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a caretaking services business before operations begin.

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What this excludes This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, monthly insurance, payroll, fuel, software subscriptions, advertising spend, payment fees, and other operating costs.



What does this CAPEX screenshot show?

This Caretaking Services Financial Model Template screenshot shows startup CAPEX, launch timing, and depreciation or amortization. Open the model and test assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • Vehicles, portal, fitout
  • Insurance, fuel, payroll
  • $285,000 CAPEX
  • $672,000 revenue, -$285,000 EBITDA
  • $332,000 Month 18 cash
  • 58-month payback
Caretaking Services Financial Model capex inputs tab showing capital expenditure categories and timelines, letting users customize asset purchases, depreciation, and investment schedules for scenario-ready forecasts.


What hidden costs come with starting a caretaking service?


Starting Caretaking Services takes more than equipment; the real squeeze is pre-opening cash and working capital before invoices clear. For the margin side, see How Increase Caretaking Services Profitability? because the hidden drain is insurance, onboarding, fuel, and small repair floats. Budget for $1,200 monthly professional liability insurance, $850 software and CRM, $2,000 legal and accounting, and $450 utilities and internet, plus 8% platform hosting and transaction fees and 10% client referral commissions.

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Before billing starts

  • Insurance deposits hit upfront.
  • Background checks cost cash first.
  • Permits and uniforms come before revenue.
  • Onboarding time delays first billing.
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Working cash needs

  • Fuel gets spent before collections.
  • Repair supplies need a cash float.
  • Reimbursed purchases can lag in cash.
  • Monthly fixed costs stay in the burn.

How much does it cost to start a caretaking service?


Starting Caretaking Services costs about $332,000 in minimum cash need by Month 18, because the base model carries $285,000 in capital expenses (CAPEX) plus early operating losses. For the funding logic behind these numbers, see How Increase Caretaking Services Profitability?: Year 1 revenue is $672,000, but EBITDA is -$285,000, so the launch must fund the gap.

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Startup cash

  • $285,000 modeled CAPEX
  • $332,000 minimum cash need by Month 18
  • -$285,000 Year 1 EBITDA
  • $672,000 first-year revenue
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Main drivers

  • $490,000 Year 1 staff cost
  • Team: GM, 2 home managers, coordinator, sales lead
  • Price mix: about $1,400 per client-month
  • Cost changes if founder owns vehicle and tools

How should founders fund a caretaking service startup?


Founders should fund Caretaking Services with enough upfront capital to cover $285,000 of CAPEX plus pre-opening spend and working capital, because the model does not breakeven until Month 18 and cash bottoms at $332,000 in that month. Year 1 EBITDA is -$285,000, then improves to $105,000 in Year 2 and $260,000 in Year 3, so the funding plan has to survive a long ramp. The first job is validating local costs and service scope; then build the model around slower client acquisition, higher insurance, delayed collections, and hiring before revenue.

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Fund the build, not just the launch

  • Cover $285,000 CAPEX upfront
  • Model pre-opening spend separately
  • Hold cash through Month 18
  • Expect 58-month payback
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Stress-test the operating plan

  • Test slower client acquisition
  • Test higher insurance costs
  • Test delayed collections
  • Test hiring before revenue


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table splits launch spending into CAPEX and excluded cash needs for funding and breakeven planning.

Highlighted CAPEX$285,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$332,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$617,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Fleet Vehicle Acquisition $120,000 Service vehicle fleet size and spec Yes
Proprietary Client Portal Development $85,000 Build scope and development time Yes
Office Technology and Workstations $25,000 Workstation count and setup quality Yes
Security and Surveillance Demo Suite $15,000 Demo equipment and installed features Yes
Branded Signage and Office Fitout $40,000 Fitout finish level and branding scope Yes
Working Capital Reserve $332,000 Covers the cash gap to Month 18 breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched launch assumptions; working capital and other non-CAPEX cash needs are excluded.


Caretaking Services Core Five Startup Costs



Service Vehicle And Readiness Startup Expense


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Vehicle CAPEX

Treat the service vehicle as CAPEX, not overhead. The base model uses $120,000 for acquisition, plus down payment or lease deposit, registration, decals, basic upfit, storage bins, mileage readiness, and inspection. That is the opening cash need before the first monthly service route runs.


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Cost Build

Build the estimate from 1 vehicle × vendor quote, then add readiness items and prep fees. The main inputs are service areas, visit frequency, estate size, and whether staff take vehicles home. If the founder starts with an existing reliable vehicle, the launch cash need can drop fast.

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Spend Control

Keep the spec tight and buy only for route density. Fewer service areas and shorter drives cut wear, fuel use, and downtime. One clean rule: do not add a second vehicle until the route load truly forces it. That keeps cash free for service staff and client work.


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Monthly Run Rate

Plan on $1,500 per month from Month 1 for maintenance and fuel. Track that as operating cost, separate from vehicle CAPEX and any insurance premiums. If staff take vehicles home, add more miles and more wear into the forecast.



Tools, Equipment, Safety Gear, And Supplies Startup Expense


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Kit Scope

Keep this startup cost tight: buy ladders, hand tools, power tools, PPE, cleaning basics, lockboxes, reusable repair gear, and storage, but split durable tools from consumables and client-billed materials. A lighter kit fits 40% Basic Security at $750 per month; a deeper kit fits the 10% Estate Management tier at $3,500 per month.


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How To Size It

Use units × unit price for tools, then add replacement timing for consumables and PPE. Here’s the quick math: size inventory to the Year 1 mix of 40% Basic Security, 50% Comprehensive Care, and 10% Estate Management, so you do not overbuy for the smallest jobs or underbuild for higher-touch estates.

  • Count each tool by unit
  • Price each item from quotes
  • Add months of supply
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How To Keep It Lean

Buy durable gear once, then replenish only consumables. Standardize kits by service tier, store client-specific materials separately, and rent specialty tools only when needed. Don’t load every vehicle for the rare estate job; specialized trade work may need licensed contractors, not just more tools.

  • Share gear across routes
  • Rent rarely used equipment
  • Track breakage and loss

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Safety And Storage

PPE, lockboxes, and secure storage are not optional in a caretaking model. They protect staff, client access, and tool life, and they keep service calls moving. If a job needs trade-level work, stop at the boundary and bring in a licensed pro instead of stretching the tool budget into a compliance problem.



Insurance, Bonding, Licensing, And Compliance Startup Expense


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Insurance Stack

Budget for general liability, professional liability, commercial auto, and bonding first. The modeled floor is $1,200 per month for professional liability, so get quotes for the rest and add workers’ compensation if you hire. That cost belongs in launch cash, not later, because claims can hit early.


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Licenses

Do not assume one national rule. Business registration, local licenses, and trade-specific permits depend on state, city, and service scope. If you go beyond basic caretaking into specialty repairs, check permits before you sell the work. Use filing fees, renewal dates, and scope notes to build the estimate.

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Legal Setup

Add the modeled $2,000 monthly retainer for legal and accounting setup. It covers entity setup, contract review, tax handling, and a compliance calendar. That line is part of launch cash, because recurring service work needs clean paperwork from day one and mistakes get expensive fast.


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Hiring Checks

Employee hiring raises compliance load fast. Year 1 includes four role groups and $490,000 in salaries, so plan for payroll tax, onboarding, background checks, and policy updates before the first hire starts. One clean rule: every new role should trigger an insurance and compliance review.



Technology, Communications, Scheduling, And Client Reporting Startup Expense


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Tech Stack

For a caretaking service, split technology into build cost, monthly SaaS, and payment fees. Here, the modeled setup uses $85,000 for client portal development, $25,000 for office technology and workstations, and $850 per month for software and CRM, plus 8% of Year 1 revenue for hosting and transactions.


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Build Cost

Use the upfront budget for the client portal, website setup, and purchased devices. The hard numbers here are $85,000 for the portal and $25,000 for office technology and workstations; those items sit in CAPEX, not monthly expense. Estimate from vendor quotes, device count, and any needed onboarding or setup work.

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Monthly SaaS

The recurring stack covers scheduling, route planning, invoicing, payment setup, photo reporting, client messages, and basic office systems. Budget $850 per month for software subscription and CRM, or $10,200 a year. Keep this as operating expense, and size seats and tools to active staff so you do not pay for idle users.


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Payment Fees

Payment-related variable cost is modeled at 8% of Year 1 revenue. On $672,000 of revenue, that equals $53,760, or about $4,480 per month on average. This cost moves with sales, so fast growth raises fee spend even if staff and software stay flat.



Launch Marketing, Branding, Professional Setup, And Staffing Startup Expense


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Launch Budget

Launch spend is front-loaded: $120,000 for Year 1 marketing, plus $40,000 for branded signage and office fitout where the asset lasts. At $1,500 CAC, that marketing budget implies about 80 customers if spend performs as planned. Keep one-time setup separate from monthly operating costs.


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What It Covers

Price the launch by line item: website copy, local SEO, business cards, yard or vehicle branding, referral outreach, background checks, uniforms, training, and contractor or employee onboarding. Use quotes for print and branding, headcount for onboarding, and months of coverage for outreach. Separate pre-opening spend from durable assets.

  • Use vendor quotes, not guesses.
  • Count hires and onboarding steps.
  • Capitalize only lasting assets.
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Keep It Tight

Cut waste by batching copy, buying only branded items you will reuse, and delaying nonessential uniforms or onboarding buys until hiring is real. The common mistake is treating setup as operating spend. One clean rule: if it lasts, capitalize it; if not, expense it. That keeps the opening budget clean.

  • Delay noncritical purchases.
  • Reuse assets across jobs.
  • Track pre-opening spend weekly.

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Staffing Readiness

Staffing is a real cash load: $490,000 in Year 1 salaries, including $145,000 for the general manager, $170,000 for two dedicated home managers, $65,000 for the operations coordin ator, and $110,000 for sales and partnership director. Hire timing matters, because payroll starts before subscriptions scale.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Caretaking costs rise fast as you move from solo visits to estate-ready coverage. Lean, base, and full scenarios help size vehicle, staffing, tech, and launch spend before you hire.

Lean, base, and full launch costs for property caretaking.
Scenario Lean LaunchExisting vehicle Base LaunchProfessional setup Full LaunchEstate-ready
Launch model Start with one operator, an existing vehicle, and only the tools needed for basic security visits. Follow the researched plan with professional tools, insurance, software, and a standard launch budget. Build a fuller operation with fleet depth, broader equipment, employees, and a stronger launch push.
Typical setup Use limited tools, basic software, and lighter launch marketing to keep cash needs low. Build around the model's $285,000 CAPEX, with proper insurance, software, and launch marketing. Add a client portal, office fitout, and more staff so the service can handle higher-touch estates.
Cost drivers
  • Existing vehicle
  • solo labor
  • basic tools
  • basic software
  • lighter launch marketing
  • Professional tools
  • insurance
  • software
  • launch marketing
  • $285,000 CAPEX
  • Fleet depth
  • employee team
  • client portal
  • office fitout
  • stronger launch marketing
Planning rangeCAPEX only $75,000 - $150,000Low cash need $285,000 - $325,000Plan baseline $500,000 - $800,000Higher capital
Best fit Best for basic security clients and owners testing demand before adding estate management. Best for mixed clients that want more than basic visits but do not need full estate-ready coverage yet. Best for estate management and higher-readiness clients that expect broader coverage and faster response.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes, you can start from home if your city allows it and your service scope is light The researched model includes a $6,500 monthly office lease and $40,000 fitout, but a lean launch may defer those costs Still budget for insurance, software, fuel, and a client-ready phone, email, scheduling, and reporting setup