How Much Does It Cost To Open A Cleaning Supply Store? $905k CAPEX

Cleaning Supplies Shop Startup Costs
Fully Editable
Instant Download
Professional Design
Pre-Built
No Expertise Is Needed
Cleaning Supply Store Bundle
See included products:
Financial Model iCleaning Supply Store Bundle Financial Model template included in this product.
$149 $109
ADD TO YOUR ORDER
Business Plan iCleaning Supply Store Bundle Business Plan template included in this product.
$79 $59
Pitch Deck iCleaning Supply Store Bundle Pitch Deck template included in this product.
$49 $29
YOU SAVE $0 TODAY
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Created by a Former CFO
Updated for 2026
One-Time Purchase
Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Inventory is the biggest startup cash need here.
  • Lease, buildout, and fixtures add heavy upfront costs.
  • Wholesale inventory runs above sales before shipping in Year 1.
  • Staffing and fees create steady monthly cash pressure.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a cleaning supply store before opening.

$
$
$
$
$
1.1%

What's excluded This CAPEX view covers launch assets only. It excludes inventory, rent deposits, prepaid rent, payroll runway, debt service, working capital, launch marketing, insurance premiums, payment processing fees, software subscriptions, and other operating costs.



What does the CAPEX screenshot show?

This CAPEX tab in the Cleaning Supply Store Financial Model Template lists startup costs, timing, amounts, and depreciation/amortization—review assumptions now.

Financial model screenshot highlights

  • Build-out and fixtures
  • Payroll and fixed costs
  • Runway before Month 31
Cleaning Supply Store Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timelines, letting users customize startup and growth investments, depreciation settings and funding needs for scenario-ready planning


What hidden costs come with starting a cleaning supply store?


The hidden costs in a Cleaning Supply Store are mostly launch cash items and operating drag, not store assets: lease deposits, prepaid rent, permits, insurance, training, freight, packaging, and payment processing. If you want the earnings side too, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Cleaning Supply Store Typically Make? Month one gets hit hard by setup costs before sales catch up.

Icon

Launch cash costs

  • Lease deposit and prepaid rent
  • Business registration and resale certificate
  • Local permits and signage permits
  • Safety data sheets, handling readiness, training
Icon

Year 1 operating drag

  • $3,500 rent, $400 utilities
  • $150 internet and phone, $100 insurance
  • $500 marketing, $80 alarm monitoring
  • 20% payment processing and 10% packaging of sales

How much money do I need to open a cleaning supply store?


You need more than $90,500 to open a Cleaning Supply Store; that figure is only capital expenditures, meaning asset spend. For planning, What Is The Primary Goal Of Your Cleaning Supply Store? should tie funding to $5,050/month fixed overhead, $118,000 Year 1 payroll, opening inventory, deposits, pre-opening costs, and runway through Month 31 breakeven.

Icon

Startup cash stack

  • $90,500 asset spend is not total funding
  • Opening inventory is a major cash use
  • Deposits and pre-opening costs add pressure
  • Fixed overhead runs $5,050/month
Icon

Runway math

  • Year 1 EBITDA is -$162,000
  • Year 2 EBITDA is -$107,000
  • Breakeven arrives in Month 31
  • Modeled cash marker hits $489,000 by Month 36

How to fund a cleaning supply store startup?


Fund a Cleaning Supply Store with a launch request that covers $90,500 in CAPEX plus opening inventory, deposits, and pre-opening expenses. The cash need is bigger than the build cost because Year 1 payroll is $118,000 and fixed overhead is $5,050/month before variable costs. That matters because EBITDA is -$162,000 in Year 1 and -$107,000 in Year 2, with breakeven in Month 31 and payback at 56 months.

Icon

Launch funding

  • Cover $90,500 CAPEX.
  • Add opening inventory cash.
  • Include deposits and pre-opening costs.
  • Use cash runway, not profit, first.
Icon

Model the downside

  • Test lean, base, and full setups.
  • Track monthly burn at $5,050.
  • Watch EBITDA: -$162,000, then -$107,000.
  • Model inventory, depreciation, amortization, and cash.


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table shows startup asset costs plus the non-CAPEX cash needed to open, stock, and carry the store until breakeven.

Highlighted CAPEX$76,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$489,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$565,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Store Build-out & Renovation $30,000 Leasehold work, layout changes, and finish quality Yes
Shelving & Display Fixtures $15,000 Fixture count, material grade, and store floor coverage Yes
Delivery Van $18,000 Vehicle condition, mileage, and prep costs Yes
Warehouse Racking $7,000 Storage density, rack height, and install scope Yes
Initial IT Infrastructure $6,000 Network setup, devices, and system install Yes
Working Capital Reserve $489,000 Fixed costs of $5,050/month, Year 1 payroll of $118,000, and Month 31 breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched planning assumptions; non-CAPEX excludes inventory, deposits, permits, launch cash, and working capital.


Cleaning Supply Store Core Five Startup Costs



Cleaning Supply Store Initial Inventory Startup Expense


Icon

Stock Mix

Inventory is the main non-CAPEX startup need. Plan by category mix, case packs, and supplier minimums: 40% household cleaners, 25% eco cleaners, 20% bulk janitorial, and 15% cleaning tools. Use 20-unit average orders, then size cash for commercial chemicals, paper goods, trash bags, dispensers, mops, carts, and equipment.


Icon

Cost Build

Here’s the quick math: estimate units by SKU count, then multiply by case pack and reorder cycle. Year 1 wholesale product cost is modeled at 120% of sales, and inbound shipping adds 25% more in Year 1. That makes inventory cash heavier than shelf stock, so build the budget from reorder coverage, not just opening-day display quantities.

Icon

Buy Lean

Keep the first buy tight. Start with the fastest movers in each category, then add slower SKUs after sell-through data comes in. Watch supplier minimums and avoid overbuying bulky items that tie up cash and space. The goal is enough depth to serve repeat buyers without turning backroom stock into dead cash.


Icon

Keep It Separate

Do not mix resale inventory with shelving, racks, POS hardware, or operating cash. Inventory is the stock you sell; fixtures and systems are separate startup lines. That split matters because a store can look full on day one but still run short on cash if the opening order, shipping, and reorder buffer are not funded.



Cleaning Supply Store Lease And Buildout Startup Expense


Icon

Lease Cash

Your biggest upfront cash need is the lease stack, not the first shelf. Model $3,500/month rent plus $400/month utilities, then add the landlord deposit and any prepaid rent the lease requires. Keep those cash items separate from capitalized build-out, so you can see what hits operating cash versus fixed assets.


Icon

Buildout Scope

The $30,000 build-out covers the space that lets customers buy and staff work: flooring, lighting, checkout area, storage layout, and accessibility fixes. Use contractor quotes for each scope item, then test whether plumbing or ventilation work is needed. If the store sells bulk janitorial cases, backroom flow matters as much as the front sales area.

  • Quote finish work by room.
  • Check accessibility early.
  • Separate rent from assets.
Icon

Signage Cost

$4,000 for exterior signage is CAPEX, so keep it out of rent and deposit math. Ask whether the landlord work letter covers mounting rules, power, or façade limits. Sign cost moves with sign size, install access, and any electrical work, so a simple quote can swing fast.

  • Confirm sign placement rules.
  • Price install and power separately.
  • Match size to street visibility.

Icon

Cost Drivers

The real swing factor is the condition of the space. A clean shell with the right storage, a useful landlord work letter, and no plumbing or ventilation surprises will cost less than a space that needs major rework. For bulk cleaning cases, size the backroom for pallet or warehouse flow before signing.



Cleaning Supply Store Shelving And Fixtures Startup Expense


Icon

Durable Fixtures

For a cleaning supply store, shelving is a load-bearing cost, not decor. Model $15,000 for shelving and display fixtures and $7,000 for warehouse racking. Keep these separate from resale inventory, because liquid cleaners, bulk cases, paper goods, and commercial supplies are heavy and spill-prone.


Icon

What It Covers

This cost covers heavy-duty shelving, chemical-safe storage, pallet storage, a checkout counter, carts, dollies, and an optional pallet jack. Estimate it from units × unit price, vendor quotes, and the number of storage zones you need. The key inputs are SKU count, case weight, pallet deliveries, backroom square footage, and contractor-size chemical containers.

  • Count SKUs by category
  • Measure heaviest case weights
  • Map pallet and backroom flow
Icon

Spend Less, Not Flimsier

Save money by matching fixture strength to the stock mix, not by buying light retail shelves that sag under bulk inventory. Get quotes for both front-of-store displays and backroom racking, then separate resale inventory from fixtures in the budget. One clean rule: if the shelf can’t handle spill-prone cases, it’s the wrong shelf.

  • Price heavy-duty first
  • Buy for worst-case loads
  • Keep inventory out of fixtures

Icon

Layout Drives the Budget

Put retail browsing in front and stock replenishment in back, so customers can shop while staff move cases fast. If you expect pallet deliveries or sell contractor-size chemical containers, the fixture plan has to protect aisles, storage access, and spill control. That layout choice can change the fixture count and the racking depth fast.



Cleaning Supply Store POS System Cost Startup Expense


Icon

POS Stack Cost

For Pristine Provisions, the POS stack is a real startup line item, not just a register. Model $5,000 for POS hardware and install, $6,000 for initial IT infrastructure, and keep software at $200/month. Card processing is separate and modeled at 20% of Year 1 sales, so don’t bury it in capex.


Icon

What The Setup Covers

This cost covers the hardware and tools needed to ring up sales and track stock: POS terminal, barcode scanner, receipt printer, cash drawer, payment terminal, inventory tracking, ecommerce add-on, cameras, and alarm install. The key inputs are unit quotes, number of stations, and install fees. Keep one-time equipment separate from monthly software and processing fees.

Icon

Keep It Lean

Use one checkout lane at launch unless traffic proves you need more. Get quotes that split hardware, installation, software, and monitoring. The easy mistake is mixing capex with monthly fees. A cleaner budget is $5,000 POS hardware, $6,000 IT, $2,500 security install, plus $280/month before card fees.


Icon

Budget The Ongoing Fees

Monthly operating cost is $200 for POS software plus $80 for alarm monitoring, or $280/month before payment processing. That keeps recurring tech spend visible while the upfront hardware, IT, and security buildout stay in capex. If sales rise, the 20% Year 1 processing fee becomes the main variable cost to watch.



Cleaning Supply Store Licenses And Insurance Startup Expense


Icon

What it covers

For a cleaning supply store, this cost starts with business registration, a resale certificate, local permits, general liability, and property insurance. If you hire staff, workers’ compensation may apply too. Model $100/month for insurance and $500/month for launch marketing and local ads, but state and city rules can change the total.


Icon

How to estimate it

Use your state filing fees, city permit list, insurer quotes, and staffing plan to price this line. The real inputs are product mix, storage method, and whether you handle bulk chemicals. For workers’ comp quotes, start with Year 1 payroll of $118,000. Here’s the quick math: monthly insurance and ads run $600, or $7,200 a year, before payroll-linked coverage.

  • Check state registration fees first
  • Confirm permit needs by city
  • Quote coverage off payroll
Icon

Keep it lean

Don’t overbuy coverage before you know what your local rules require. Compare a few quotes, then train staff on safety data sheet organization and safe storage before opening. That’s launch readiness, not overkill. If your shelving, chemical handling, or employee count changes, revisit permits and insurance fast so you don’t pay for gaps or extras you don’t need.


Icon

Launch checklist

Before day one, confirm registration, resale, and local permits, then lock in insurance, SDS files, safe storage, and employee training. Requirements vary by state, municipality< /strong>, product type, storage method, and staffing, so the last quote should match your actual opening plan, not a generic retail template.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Lean, Base, and Full setups shift startup cash fast because delivery, racking, staffing, and inventory depth change the build. Breakeven lands in Month 31 and payback takes 56 months, so cash runway matters.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchOwner-operated launch Base LaunchStandard retail launch Full LaunchCommercial-account launch
Launch model A small storefront keeps SKU depth narrow, skips the delivery van, and leans on owner labor. A standard retail shop uses the full build-out, fixtures, POS, security, signage, IT, racking, and the delivery van. A larger commercial setup adds deeper bulk janitorial inventory, stronger handling gear, more storage, and more working capital.
Typical setup The shop focuses on household and eco cleaners, with limited racking, light opening inventory, and fixed overhead near $5.1k before owner pay. It carries balanced SKU depth across the four product groups and runs with the modeled staffing mix and about $15k a month in fixed costs. It is set up for commercial accounts, heavier loads, and higher monthly fixed costs than the Base launch.
Cost drivers
  • owner labor
  • no delivery van
  • limited racking
  • narrow SKU mix
  • full build-out
  • POS and security
  • signage and IT
  • delivery van
  • standard staffing
  • deeper bulk inventory
  • larger storage
  • handling equipment
  • more working capital
  • commercial staffing
Planning rangeCAPEX only $55,000 - $70,000Low cash need $85,000 - $95,000Core retail budget $120,000 - $150,000High capital load
Best fit Best for an owner-operated launch that wants tight control and low upfront cash. Best for a standard retail launch with balanced setup and normal staffing. Best for a commercial-account launch if you can carry the Month 31 breakeven and 56-month payback.

Planning note: Scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact supplier quotes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Budget beyond the $90,500 modeled CAPEX because equipment is only one part of opening You still need inventory, deposits, prepaid rent, insurance setup, payroll runway, launch marketing, and working capital The model carries $5,050 in monthly fixed costs before payroll and $118,000 in Year 1 staffing, so cash planning matters early