Concierge Medicine Startup Costs: $166K CAPEX Plus $696K Cash

Concierge Medicine Practice Startup Costs
Fully Editable
Instant Download
Professional Design
Pre-Built
No Expertise Is Needed
Concierge Medicine Bundle
See included products:
Financial Model iConcierge Medicine Bundle Financial Model template included in this product.
$149 $109
ADD TO YOUR ORDER
Business Plan iConcierge Medicine Bundle Business Plan template included in this product.
$79 $59
Pitch Deck iConcierge Medicine 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

Plan for $166,000 in identified startup CAPEX and a modeled $696,000 minimum cash need by Month 6 before the practice reaches breakeven The first operating year includes $36,000 of marketing, $460,000 of clinical and admin payroll, and $14,100 per month of non-payroll fixed costs, so working capital matters as much as office setup Actual concierge medical practice costs vary by state, office size, staffing model, and patient panel ramp


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

This estimates capitalized startup assets only, not ongoing operating cash needs.

$
$
$
$
$
15%

What this excludes This calculator covers startup CAPEX only. It excludes working capital, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, rent after opening, malpractice after launch, taxes, owner draw, ongoing member acquisition, and other operating expenses.



What does the CAPEX and runway view show?

This Concierge Medicine Financial Model Template screenshot shows the CAPEX tab, with startup costs, timing, amounts, and depreciation or amortization; review assumptions now.

Key model checks

  • $166,000 CAPEX
  • Month 6 breakeven
  • $696,000 minimum cash
  • $148,000 Year 1 EBITDA
  • 15-month payback
  • Check fees and mix
  • Validate CAC, rent, malpractice
  • Review legal, software, supplies
  • Confirm staff ramp timing
Concierge Medicine Financial Model capex inputs tab showing capital expenditure categories and timing, letting users customize equipment, facility and startup investments for accurate cash needs and runway projections, fully customizable.


How do you fund a concierge medicine practice?


Fund Concierge Medicine by building the membership ramp and cash model first; don’t start with the loan. With Year 1 fees of $200 for individuals, $500 for families, and $3,000 for corporate executives, plus $36,000 in marketing and $150 CAC, the plan shows $166,000 in CAPEX but a peak funding need of $696,000 by Month 6.

Icon

Plan the cash need

  • Model payroll, rent, and marketing.
  • Set patient panel capacity first.
  • Use CAC at $150.
  • Keep runway past Month 6.
Icon

Use the fee mix

  • Price individuals at $200.
  • Price families at $500.
  • Price executives at $3,000.
  • Match funding to ramp timing.

How much money do you need to start a concierge medicine practice?


You need $696,000 in minimum cash by Month 6 to start Concierge Medicine under this model, even though setup CAPEX is only $166,000. This is budget planning, not valuation, and How Is The Patient Satisfaction Level For Concierge Medicine? should sit beside the cash plan because member retention depends on care quality.

Icon

Cash Needed

  • $166,000 setup CAPEX
  • $696,000 minimum cash by Month 6
  • $14,100 monthly non-payroll fixed costs
  • Breakeven occurs in Month 6
Icon

Main Driver

  • $220,000 physician payroll
  • $130,000 nurse practitioner payroll
  • $45,000 medical assistant payroll
  • $65,000 office manager payroll

What does it cost to convert a primary care practice to concierge medicine?


If there’s an existing primary care practice, Concierge Medicine conversion is usually cheaper than a new build, but it still needs a real launch budget. A from-scratch setup runs about $166,000 CAPEX, while an existing lease, EHR, furniture, staff, and patient panel can lower that cash need. Still plan for legal review, membership agreements, patient notices, enrollment marketing, billing and software changes, plus compliance review; Year 1 mix is often 45% individual, 40% family, and 15% corporate executive package.

Icon

From scratch

  • $166,000 CAPEX baseline
  • Legal review before launch
  • Membership agreements and notices
  • Billing, software, compliance changes
Icon

Existing practice

  • Existing lease can save cash
  • Installed EHR cuts setup work
  • Furniture and staff may already exist
  • Year 1 mix: 45%, 40%, 15%


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table summarizes startup CAPEX and excluded cash needs for a concierge medicine clinic using researched planning assumptions.

Highlighted CAPEX$166,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$696,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$862,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Clinic buildout and furnishings $33,000 Office setup, furniture, and signage Yes
Medical diagnostic equipment $35,000 Equipment scope and device count Yes
EHR and patient software $53,000 EHR rollout and patient portal scope Yes
IT and telemedicine setup $30,000 Hardware, networking, and video setup Yes
Security and data protection systems $15,000 Access controls and data safeguards Yes
Cash runway reserve $696,000 Month 6 runway for payroll and fixed costs No

Planning note: Planning ranges reflect researched assumptions; non-CAPEX cash needs exclude owner draws and debt reserves.


Concierge Medicine Core Five Startup Costs



Office Lease, Buildout, and Clinical Space Setup Startup Expense


Icon

Clinic Space Cost

A concierge clinic usually starts with $6,500 monthly rent and facility cost, plus deposits, leasehold improvements, accessibility work, waiting area, consult room, exam rooms, signage, furniture, utilities, and maintenance. The base setup also includes $25,000 for clinic furniture and office setup and $8,000 for signage and branding materials.


Icon

Buildout Inputs

Here’s the quick math: use monthly rent of $6,500, then add one-time leasehold improvements, deposits, and room buildout. Count the spaces you need, then price each item by quote. Keep leased improvements separate from buying property, since this startup cost is for fit-out, not real estate ownership.

  • Price each room by quote
  • Track deposits separately
  • Do not mix in land purchase
Icon

Monthly Run Rate

Budget $1,200 per month for utilities and maintenance on top of rent. That puts base space carrying cost near $7,700 a month before payroll, software, and supplies. If the lease is in a high-cost area, keep that extra real estate burden outside the base CAPEX so you do not distort launch math.

  • Rent and facility: $6,500
  • Utilities and maintenance: $1,200
  • Exclude unusually high rent

Icon

Keep the Setup Tight

Use the $25,000 furniture and office setup budget for essentials only, then layer in the $8,000 signage and branding line after the lease is secure. The main savings come from right-sizing the waiting area and exam room finishes, while still meeting accessibility needs and keeping the space patient-ready.



Clinical Equipment and Initial Medical Supplies Startup Expense


Icon

Clinical Gear Budget

This covers the one-time clinical setup: exam tables, diagnostic tools, vitals equipment, minor procedure supplies, and vaccine or lab storage if you need it. Start with $35,000 of diagnostic equipment CAPEX, then size by exam room count and service scope. More procedures mean more gear, more PPE, and more consumables.


Icon

How to Size It

Separate one-time equipment from recurring medical supplies. Use 80% of Year 1 revenue as the medical supplies and diagnostic equipment expense target, then adjust for the number of exam rooms, the refill cycle, and whether you offer vaccines or in-office procedures.

  • Count rooms first.
  • Quote each device.
  • Set stock months.
Icon

Keep It Tight

Keep the launch lean by buying only what each room needs and delaying specialty gear until volume proves it out. The fastest way to overspend is stocking for procedures you do not yet book. Ask for quotes, tie purchases to room count, and set reorder levels for PPE and consumables.


Icon

Scope Drives Cost

A basic primary care room set costs far less than a clinic built for injections, minor procedures, or lab handling. If you add specialty services, this budget climbs fast because each new service needs more equipment, storage, and consumables. Match the spend to your clinical scope, not just your headcount.



EHR, Telehealth, Patient Portal, and Billing Software Startup Expense


Icon

Launch Stack

Your one-time software build is $98,000: $45,000 for EHR implementation, $12,000 for telemedicine and video, $8,000 for the patient portal and scheduling, $18,000 for IT infrastructure, and $15,000 for security and data protection. Price each line with vendor quotes, user counts, and setup scope.


Icon

What It Covers

This stack covers secure messaging, recurring membership billing, phone systems, cybersecurity, and IT onboarding. Estimate it from licenses, seats, and months of service, then keep it separate from the one-time install fee. One clean rule: setup is a startup cost, while SaaS is monthly operating spend.

  • Count active users and admins
  • Quote onboarding separately
  • Track monthly licenses
Icon

Year 1 Run Rate

Use 90% of Year 1 revenue for Electronic Health Records and software licenses. That is a heavy operating load, so build the model around membership growth and cash timing. What this estimate hides is vendor terms, seat count, and how much of the workflow sits inside one platform.


Icon

Budget Test

If onboarding takes longer, software spend climbs fast because the recurring stack follows daily use. Keep the first purchase list tight, then add tools only after the clinic workflow is live and the monthly billing, messaging, and scheduling flow works cleanly.



Legal, Licensing, Credentialing, Compliance, and Insurance Startup Expense


Icon

What it covers

This budget covers entity formation, a healthcare attorney review, membership agreement setup, state medical board compliance, and, if needed, DEA registration and a CLIA waiver. It also includes HIPAA policies, credentialing, and malpractice coverage. A working monthly base starts at $2,500 for professional liability insurance plus $1,500 for legal and accounting support.


Icon

How to price it

Price this by state, payer participation, corporate practice rules, and whether the practice bills insurance. If you bill payers, credentialing and contract work usually rise. The clean split is one-time setup for formation and policies, then recurring monthly support for insurance, compliance, and accounting.

Icon

Watch the scope

The hidden driver is how much of the practice touches insurance. A cash-pay model can be simpler, but payer enrollment adds work fast. Ask counsel for a fixed scope on formation, agreements, and policy review, then keep the monthly retainer tied to actual compliance and credentialing load.


Icon

Budget guardrails

What this estimate hides is state filing fees, board rules, and the size of the credentialing stack. Split the budget into one-time legal setup and ongoing compliance, then update the quote after the practice model is set and the insurer path is clear.



Pre-Opening Staffing, Training, and Launch Marketing Startup Expense


Icon

Pre-Opening Payroll

Treat this as pre-opening working capital, not equipment CAPEX. Year 1 payroll totals $460,000: physician $220,000, nurse practitioner $130,000, medical assistant $45,000, and office manager and billing specialist $65,000. Spread evenly, monthly payroll is about $38,333 before taxes and benefits. Add $36,000 for recruiting, onboarding, training, scripts, scheduling workflows, and member acquisition.


Icon

Budget It Right

Keep this in the operating budget because the cash lands before member fees do. Use hiring dates, onboarding time, and launch date to stage spend. The clean benchmark is $150 CAC; $36,000 in launch marketing supports about 240 member starts if performance holds.

  • Hire to the launch date.
  • Track monthly payroll burn.
  • Separate training from equipment.
Icon

Launch Cash Need

This spend needs cash on day one because payroll starts before members pay. One month of staffing burn is about $38,333 before taxes and benefits, and year-one launch marketing is $36,000. If CAC stays at $150, that budget buys about 240 new members.


Icon

Working Capital First

Build this cost as cash runway, not a one-time asset. The main risk is starting payroll and marketing too early, before appointment flow is live. Keep the spend tied to launch dates, onboarding milestones, and the $150 CAC target so the first months of membership growth cover the run rate.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Clinic size, staffing, and launch spend move the cash need fast in this model. Lean, base, and full launches show how much funding changes with service scope.

Lean, base, and full launch cost bands
Scenario Lean LaunchSmall footprint Base LaunchStandard clinic Full LaunchPremium scope
Launch model Lean launch keeps the footprint small with fewer rooms, lighter staffing, and a simpler buildout. Base launch uses the model's $166,000 capex, $14,100 monthly non-payroll fixed costs, $460,000 Year 1 payroll, and $36,000 Year 1 marketing, with minimum cash of $696,000 at Month 6. Full launch adds more exam rooms, richer technology, heavier marketing, and broader service scope.
Typical setup Solo physician model with limited support staff, basic telehealth, and only essential equipment. One physician-led clinic with standard exam rooms, core EHR, and a compact support team. Multi-provider clinic with stronger admin support, more patient capacity, and deeper digital tools.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller buildout
  • lower payroll
  • basic tech
  • lean marketing
  • lower rent
  • Buildout and equipment
  • payroll
  • rent and admin
  • software and supplies
  • marketing
  • Larger buildout
  • higher payroll
  • heavier marketing
  • more software
  • more rooms
Planning rangeCAPEX only $450,000 - $600,000Lowest funding $650,000 - $750,000Base funding $800,000 - $1,100,000Highest funding
Best fit Best for founders testing demand or opening a first clinic with tight capital. Best for founders who want a conventional clinic footprint and can fund the full opening ramp. Best for founders targeting affluent markets and ready to fund growth from day one.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not exact vendor quotes or fixed bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

Budget $166,000 for identified one-time CAPEX, then plan for a much larger cash cushion In this model, minimum cash reaches $696,000 by Month 6, when breakeven occurs The opening spend includes $45,000 for EHR implementation, $35,000 for diagnostic equipment, and $25,000 for furniture and office setup