Cleaning Company Startup Costs: $135K CAPEX Plus Cash Reserve

Cleaning Company Startup Costs
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Description

For this cleaning company model, opening CAPEX is $135,000, driven by $75,000 for three fleet vehicles, $20,000 for core equipment, $15,000 for website and booking development, and smaller setup items These are researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes, and they fit a home-and-office launch rather than a bare solo start The first operating year also carries $15,000 in marketing, $4,700 per month in fixed overhead, and a Year 1 payroll plan of about $300,000 Total funding need can exceed startup CAPEX because payroll, fuel, supplies, insurance, cancellations, and receivable timing push the modeled minimum cash requirement to $323,000 in Month 30



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a cleaning company launch.

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CAPEX only This block prices vehicles, equipment, tech, branding, and office setup only. It excludes deposits, inventory, payroll runway, debt service, working capital, insurance, licenses, fuel, ads, and other operating costs; the source startup-period total is $135,000, with $7,000 in deposits and inventory excluded here.



What does the CAPEX tab show?

This Cleaning Company Financial Model Template shows startup costs and CAPEX categories, launch timing, and depreciation. Open it and review assumptions.

Key screenshot highlights

  • $135k assets and deposits
  • Month 1-6 timing
  • Depreciation, amortization, working capital
Cleaning Company Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure items and assumptions, letting users customize equipment, vehicle, and setup costs for projections and scenario-ready funding plans


How much does cleaning equipment cost for a startup?


For a Cleaning Company, budget the startup gear separately from supplies: the model carries $20,000 for core cleaning equipment and $2,000 for initial bulk inventory. That covers vacuums, mop systems, buckets, carts, microfiber cloths, PPE, ladders, and storage bins, and it does not mean every startup needs commercial floor machines on day one. Here’s the quick math: in Year 1, equipment maintenance and replacements are modeled at 20% of revenue, while cleaning supplies and consumables are 70% of revenue.

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Core startup kit

  • $20,000 for core equipment
  • $2,000 for initial inventory
  • Vacuums, mop systems, buckets
  • Carts, cloths, PPE, ladders, bins
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Job-based add-ons

  • Carpet work can add machines
  • Floor care can add pads
  • Construction cleanup can add extension cords
  • Move-out cleans can need more transport space

How much does it cost to start a cleaning business in the US?


Starting a Cleaning Company in the US can cost very little as a solo residential cleaner, but the modeled home-and-office launch uses $135,000 in startup CAPEX plus $15,000 in Year 1 marketing. The bigger cash question is runway: this model shows a $323,000 minimum cash need by Month 30, so track demand, retention, and What Is The Most Critical Measure Of Success For Your Cleaning Company? before buying too much equipment.

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Lean Start

  • Use a suitable personal vehicle
  • Work from a home office
  • Defer fleet and office furniture
  • Limit software until scheduling breaks
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Cost Drivers

  • Service scope and city
  • Vehicle ownership and equipment
  • Hiring plan and payroll readiness
  • Bonding, certificates, background checks

How do you fund a cleaning business startup?


A Cleaning Company startup usually needs more than launch money: the base model stacks $135,000 in CAPEX, then adds $4,700 monthly fixed overhead, about $300,000 in Year 1 payroll, and $15,000 for Year 1 marketing plus insurance, fuel, supplies, and receivable timing. That means financing should cover a long ramp, not just day one, because breakeven lands in Month 22 and payback takes 53 months. The next step is to test service mix, pricing, hiring speed, and cash runway.

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What to fund

  • $135,000 CAPEX base
  • $4,700 monthly overhead
  • $300,000 Year 1 payroll
  • $15,000 Year 1 marketing
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How to fund it

  • Use owner cash first
  • Layer a small-business loan
  • Use equipment or vehicle financing
  • Use customer prepayments where allowed


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table summarizes core startup CAPEX and the excluded opening cash buffer for a cleaning company.

Highlighted CAPEX$125,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$323,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$448,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Initial Fleet Vehicles (3 units) $75,000 Vehicle purchase and service setup Yes
Core Cleaning Equipment (Initial Sets) $20,000 Initial equipment and tool sets Yes
Office Furniture & Fixtures $10,000 Office setup and furnishing Yes
Computer Hardware & Initial Software Licenses $5,000 Admin hardware and startup licenses Yes
Website & Booking Platform Development $15,000 Site build and booking setup Yes
Opening Cash Buffer $323,000 Runway to Month 30 minimum cash No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; operating reserve is excluded below the line.


Cleaning Company Core Five Startup Costs



Equipment and Physical Assets Startup Expense


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Core gear

The durable starter set runs about $20,000 and covers vacuums, mop systems, buckets, carts, microfiber cloths, PPE, ladders, and storage containers. Add a carpet extractor or floor-care machine only if those jobs are in scope. Keep the first consumable buy separate; that is a different $2,000 line.


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Office add-on

If the company opens a small office, add $10,000 for furniture and fixtures. That covers the workroom and admin setup, not field gear. Use this only when the plan needs a fixed base for storage, scheduling, or client admin.

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Service scope

Keep the purchase list tied to the services sold. If launch work is only recurring home cleaning, the gear stays lean; if it also includes offices, deep cleans, move-outs, carpet, and floor care, budget for specialty tools and more storage.


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Year 1 reserve

Set aside 20% of Year 1 equipment spend for maintenance and replacement, or about $4,000 on the $20,000 core set. That reserve stays outside supplies. Heavy daily use, deep cleans, and floor care can pull replacement timing forward.



Transportation and Vehicle Readiness Startup Expense


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Vehicle Setup

If you already own a car, mark it as already owned instead of buying one. The base model still reserves $75,000 for 3 initial fleet vehicles plus $5,000 for office and vehicle lease deposits, so vehicle spend should be scenario-based CAPEX, not a fixed assumption.


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Ready Kit

Budget for personal vehicle readiness, storage racks or bins, decals, insurance, and a fuel float. Add $800 per month for admin or supervisor vehicle lease/depreciation, then model staff travel and fuel at 40% of Year 1 revenue. Route density matters: tight clusters cut miles, time, and fuel burn.

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Van Point

A van becomes necessary when cars can’t safely carry ladders, supplies, and daily gear without slowing routes. That is the point to move from car-based service to a larger load plan. Keep the decision tied to route density, equipment volume, and whether office, deep clean, or move-out work is part of launch.


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Cost Control

Start with the founder’s existing vehicle if it fits the job, then add racks, bins, and decals only after routes are proven. Don’t buy a van too early. The big mistake is ignoring travel time, because staff travel and fuel already run at 40% of Year 1 revenue.



Insurance, Bonding, Licensing, and Compliance Startup Expense


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Startup compliance

Compliance setup for a cleaning company usually starts with entity filing, a local business license, general liability, and bonding. The base model uses $500 per month for general liability and bonding plus $750 per month for accounting and legal work. Costs change by state, city, client type, and whether you hire staff.


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Budget inputs

Budget for filing fees, policy quotes, certificates of insurance, background screening, client onboarding paperwork, and, if you hire, workers' compensation. If you choose a limited liability company (LLC), add formation costs too. Estimate it with quotes, headcount, and the months of coverage needed. One-size-fits-all numbers miss the real scope.

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Control the spend

Keep the spend tight by buying only the coverage clients and local rules require, then add higher limits only when a contract asks for them. Ask carriers for bundled quotes and review renewal dates early. The main mistake is paying for broad coverage before you have a client that needs it.


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Client proof

Commercial contracts can ask for higher coverage, proof of bonding, background checks, and recurring compliance documents. That means your admin load is ongoing, not a one-time launch task. Build a simple checklist for each client so you can send certificates and updates fast when a property manager or office manager asks.



Initial Supplies and Consumables Startup Expense


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Start Stock

This covers the first batch of cleaning chemicals, disinfectants, microfiber cloths, gloves, trash bags, paper products, PPE, spray bottles, labels, and SDS sheets. The base launch number is $2,000 for eco-friendly bulk inventory. Estimate it from unit counts, case prices, and the number of service days you want on hand.


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Split by Job

Separate client-provided supplies from company-provided items before you build the budget. Office cleaning, move-outs, and deep cleans can need specialty chemicals, extra trash handling, and larger carrying inventory. The real inputs are service mix, jobs per week, and bulk-case quotes.

  • Track supply use by service type
  • Price bulk cases, not single units
  • Plan extra stock for deep cleans
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Buy Smart

Keep a tight restocking level so cash does not sit on shelves. Buy bulk only on fast movers, and tie specialty items to booked office or move-out work. The model shows supplies at 70% of revenue in Year 1, easing to 50% by Year 5.

  • Set minimum stock by weekly use
  • Avoid overbuying slow-moving chemicals
  • Reorder before the buffer runs out

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Keep Buffer

Hold a small buffer for spills, breakage, and short-notice jobs, and keep safety data sheets with each chemical. A clear supply list also helps when clients ask what the company provides versus what they supply, so margins do not leak on every visit.



Launch Marketing, Software, Hiring, and Training Startup Expense


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Launch Readiness

This budget covers the first sales and operating setup: name and logo, website, local search profile setup, flyers, local ads, booking software, phone, uniforms, onboarding, background checks, and basic training. Use it as opening readiness, not a long-term growth model. The core fixed sources here are $15,000 for website and booking build and $15,000 for Year 1 marketing.


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Cost Build

Here’s the quick math: $5,000 for computer hardware and initial software licenses, $3,000 for uniforms and branding stock, plus $300 a month for hosting and software, $200 a month for communication and internet, and $250 a month for training. That is $750 monthly, or $9,000 in Year 1, before any extra hiring or screening costs.

  • Count one phone setup per launch team.
  • Separate one-time and monthly costs.
  • Match software to booking volume.
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Keep Spend Tight

Trim this cost by buying only the software you need, delaying extra uniforms until schedules fill, and using low-cost local search setup support before paid ads scale. Don’t overbuy branding stock or training hours on day one. A clean launch can stay lean if onboarding is simple, background checks are targeted, and the booking flow works without custom extras.

  • Start with one software stack.
  • Buy uniforms in small batches.
  • Test flyers before larger ad spend.

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Year 1 Customer Math

With $150 CAC in Year 1, the $15,000 marketing budget supports about 100 customers if spend converts as planned. That is a launch math check, not a promise. What this hides: lead quality, route density, and how fast background checks and training finish. If onboarding slips, cash goes out before bookings come in.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Lean, base, and full launches change cash needs fast. The gap comes from fleet setup, staffing depth, and commercial readiness, with base anchored at $135,000 CAPEX and $4,700 monthly fixed overhead.

Startup cost ranges by launch scale
Scenario

Frequently Asked Questions

The model shows a $323,000 minimum cash need in Month 30, so the reserve should cover more than startup purchases Year 1 EBITDA is -$234,000, fixed overhead is $4,700 per month, and payroll is about $300,000 in the first operating year That gap is why working capital matters