Cost To Start A CGM Supply Business: $717K Cash Need

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

You’re funding inventory, compliance, systems, fulfillment, and payroll before collections are stable, not just buying shelves and scanners This first operating year plan shows $495,000 in CAPEX, a $717,000 minimum cash need in Month 2, and breakeven in Month 2 under the researched assumptions These ranges are planning assumptions, not vendor quotes, payer guarantees, or legal compliance advice


CGM Supply Business CAPEX Calculator Objective

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a continuous glucose monitoring supplies business.

$
$
$
$
$
10%

What's excluded Covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, marketing, monthly subscriptions unless booked as setup fees, and other operating costs. Refrigeration applies only where product instructions require controlled storage.



What does the CAPEX tab show?

Screenshot: Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies Financial Model Template shows CAPEX categories, launch timing, cost amounts, depreciation/amortization. Open it, review assumptions.

Financial model screenshot highlights

  • $495,000 CAPEX total
  • Month 8 launch timing
  • Month 2 breakeven
Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timing, letting users customize equipment, implementation and upgrade costs for scenario-ready forecasts and error-checked projections


How should you plan funding for a CGM supply business?


Plan the raise in tranches, not all at once: Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies needs $495,000 of CAPEX and at least $717,000 of cash to get through launch, with the model showing Month 2 breakeven and 3-month payback. Fund accreditation, inventory buys, billing system go-live, and the first reimbursement cycle as separate milestones. Before you size the final check, validate Year 1 revenue of $9863 million against $150 CAC, a $450,000 marketing budget, and 650% repeat customers, because payer mix and denial rates can swing collections fast.

Icon

Launch cash plan

  • $495,000 CAPEX first
  • $717,000 minimum cash
  • Month 2 breakeven target
  • 3-month payback model
Icon

Funding milestones

  • Accreditation readiness unlocks tranche one
  • Inventory purchasing needs cash up front
  • Billing go-live triggers collections
  • Watch payer mix, denials, retention

What hidden costs should a CGM supplier reserve for?


The hidden costs for Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies are mostly working capital, not fixed assets. For the cost base, see What Are Operating Costs For Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies?; the real drain is payer credentialing delays, documentation rework, claim denials, billing setup, inventory replenishment before collections, and payroll while authorizations mature. The model’s reserve signal is $717,000 in Month 2, with Year 1 fixed expenses at $25,000/month, wages near $61,250/month, and marketing around $37,500/month, and a 30 to 60 day reimbursement delay can still create a cash gap even with strong modeled EBITDA, so keep receivables float separate from capital spending (CAPEX) and inventory.

Icon

Cash gaps to reserve for

  • Payer credentialing delays cash start
  • Documentation rework adds labor cost
  • Claim denials slow collections
  • Payroll hits before reimbursement
Icon

What to keep separate

  • Receivables float is not CAPEX
  • Inventory replenishment comes first
  • Billing setup needs upfront cash
  • Month 2 reserve points to $717,000

How much does initial CGM inventory cost?


For Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies, initial CGM inventory is working inventory, not pure CAPEX. Using the provided Year 1 assumption, inventory procurement runs at 120% of revenue, or about $1.184 million on $9.863 million of revenue, and packaging plus sterilization materials add 20% of revenue, or about $197,000. The cash goes into sensors, transmitters, receivers/readers, insertion supplies, adhesive patches, charging accessories, and replacements before sales turn back into cash.

Icon

Stock what moves

  • Sensors drive recurring demand.
  • Transmitters need spare coverage.
  • Readers and receivers need backup.
  • Adhesive and insertion items turn fast.
Icon

Size cash by flow

  • Plan by expected orders.
  • Watch minimum order quantities.
  • Time reorders before stockouts.
  • Build in payer authorization lag.


CGM Supply Business Cost Breakdown Table Objective

Startup cost summary

This table breaks startup funding into five CAPEX lines totaling $495,000 plus one non-CAPEX cash need for a glucose monitoring supply business.

Highlighted CAPEX$495,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$717,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,212,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
E-commerce platform development $120,000 Order flow, billing, and storefront build Yes
Warehouse, cold-chain, and security setup $170,000 Racking, refrigeration, security, and inventory hardware Yes
Initial delivery van fleet $110,000 Launch vehicles for shipping and local routes Yes
Packaging automation machinery $60,000 Packing speed and labor efficiency Yes
Office equipment and workstations $35,000 Admin, quality, and support setup Yes
Opening cash buffer $717,000 Receivables lag, replenishment inventory, and payroll runway No

Planning note: Ranges use researched planning assumptions; excluded cash covers working capital, not fixed assets.


Continuous Glucose Monitoring Supplies Core Five Startup Costs



Initial CGM Inventory Startup Expense


Icon

Launch Stock

This opening bucket covers sensors, transmitters, receivers/readers, starter kits, adhesive patches, insertion supplies, charging accessories, and replacement items. Use the stated Year 1 prices as revenue inputs, not vendor cost: $350, $850, and $45. That mix drives a weighted unit price of about $419.50.


Icon

Order Math

For planning, the first order value works out to about $629 if you assume 1.5 products per order against that $419.50 weighted unit price. That is the number to test against launch cash, reorder needs, and early sell-through, not the shelf price alone.

  • $419.50 weighted unit price
  • 1.5 products per order
  • $629 average order value
Icon

Buy Less

Set inventory procurement at 120% of revenue and packaging at 20%. Then watch minimum order quantities, expirations, and reimbursement timing. The clean move is to reorder before collections clear, or cash gets tied up while stock runs thin.

  • Check expiry dates first.
  • Reorder before authorization delays.
  • Hold a small safety buffer.

Icon

Cash Timing

This is working capital, not shelf decor. If replenishment lags reimbursement, you can run out of stock while claims are still open, so plan the first buy around refill speed, expiration risk, and the timing of cash coming back in.



Licensing, Accreditation, And Credentialing Startup Expense


Icon

License Map

For a CGM supplier, this cost is mostly pre-opening work plus ongoing compliance, not warehouse CAPEX. Plan for state registrations, a National Provider Identifier, DMEPOS accreditation where needed, payer enrollment, surety bond planning, written policies, audit prep, and compliance consulting. Requirements change by state, payer contract, and distribution model.


Icon

Cost Inputs

Here’s the quick math: use quote-based setup fees plus month-one run rate. The model already includes $3,000 per month for regulatory compliance audits from Month 1 and $4,500 per month for general and product liability insurance. Add credentialing, filings, policy drafting, and document review as separate line items.

Icon

Control Spend

Keep the spend tight by batching registrations, using one policy set for sales, shipping, and returns, and getting payer and Medicare supplier enrollment started early. The big mistake is waiting on credentialing after inventory is bought. That can trap cash, because approval timing often controls when claims and collections start.


Icon

Timing Risk

Watch the gap between launch and reimbursement. Medicare supplier enrollment and commercial payer credentialing can stretch opening dates, so build this cost into cash planning, not inventory. If approvals slip, you still owe the monthly compliance and insurance spend, even before the first paid order ships.



Software, Billing, And HIPAA Setup Startup Expense


Icon

Build

Launch software is a split budget: $120,000 for e-commerce platform development, then recurring hosting and security at $2,500/month and CRM at $1,200/month. Here’s the quick math: known recurring spend is $3,700/month before billing and clearinghouse fees. Separate build CAPEX from SaaS so cash burn stays clear.


Icon

Billing

Billing software, the electronic data interchange clearinghouse, claims workflow, inventory tracking, secure document storage, website ordering, and support tools sit in the same stack. This setup matters because prior authorizations, refill reminders, claim documents, and patient support all depend on clean data and fast handoffs. Poor setup slows cash and raises rework.

  • Quote setup and monthly fees separately
  • Map prior auth before go-live
  • Test claim edits early
Icon

Save

Keep the one-time build lean by reusing proven templates, but don’t cut security or billing logic. A bad launch often costs more in rejected claims and support calls than the savings upfront. Ask vendors for implementation fees, training, and data migration in writing, then compare them against monthly subscriptions and usage fees.

  • Negotiate setup fees once
  • Cap custom features early
  • Review user counts monthly

Icon

HIPAA

Think of HIPAA as the rules for protecting patient health data in plain English. Your setup needs secure storage, limited access, and cybersecurity basics so orders, claims, and records don’t leak. If staff share logins or store files in open folders, privacy risk jumps fast and cleanup gets expensive.



Facility, Storage, And Fulfillment Startup Expense


Icon

Warehouse base

$13,800 per month is the base facility bill: $12,000 rent plus $1,800 for utilities and maintenance. That is $165,600 a year before labor. Size the space to turnover, because empty square footage burns cash while inventory sits. Use this number as the floor for warehouse budget planning.


Icon

Launch build

Launch buildout is mostly one-time capex: $85,000 racking, $25,000 inventory hardware, $15,000 security, $60,000 packaging automation, and $110,000 for the first delivery van fleet. Add shelving, packing stations, scales, label printers, barcode scanners, packing materials, and shipping setup. If needed by product instructions, add $45,000 refrigeration units; total becomes $340,000.

Icon

Cost control

Shipping is the main swing factor. In Year 1, logistics and national shipping can reach 40% of revenue, so lock carrier rates early, pack to reduce dimensional weight, and keep van use tied to real route density. Skip extra refrigeration unless instructions require it, because overbuilding cold storage raises fixed cost fast.


Icon

Cash plan

Budget cash in two buckets: the $13,800 monthly run rate and the launch capex. That keeps replenishment, delivery, and storage from competing with each other when order volume is still uneven. One-line test: if the warehouse sits full but orders are slow, the space is too big.



Staffing, Insurance, And Professional Support Startup Expense


Icon

Year 1 Payroll

Year 1 staffing totals $735,000, or about $61,250 a month before payroll taxes and benefits. The plan is 1 CEO at $180,000, 2 diabetes care specialists at $75,000 each, 1 warehouse operations manager at $85,000, 1 marketing manager at $95,000, 3 fulfillment associates at $45,000 each, and 1 quality assurance officer at $90,000.


Icon

What It Covers

This cost covers recruiting, onboarding, pre-opening payroll, and the daily team that keeps orders moving and patient questions covered. Use headcount, salary, months of coverage, and payroll load to build it. Add $4,500 a month for general and product liability insurance, then keep legal, accounting, compliance review, and billing workflow setup separate from ongoing payroll.

Icon

Keep It Separate

To keep this line from blowing up cash burn, treat one-time setup work as pre-opening spend and recurring people costs as monthly operating expense. Don’t mix compliance prep, billing workflow setup, and insurance with payroll. The clean split makes runway math and break-even checks much easier.


Icon

Monthly Run Rate

The recurring base is already $61,250 in wages plus $4,500 in insurance, or $65,750 a month before payroll taxes, benefits, and professional support. That is the floor, not the full cash need, because legal, accounting, compliance review, and billing setup can sit outside wages.



Lean, Base, And Full-Scale CGM Supplier Startup Budget Table Objective

Startup cost scenarios

CGM supply costs change fast with inventory depth, fulfillment setup, and staffing. Lean keeps the launch tight, base matches the model, and full adds support and stock.

Lean, base, and full launch cost bands
Scenario Lean LaunchTest launch Base LaunchPayer-ready launch Full LaunchScaled regional supplier
Launch model Uses limited inventory depth, a smaller facility, and outsourced billing or fulfillment. Matches the researched model with full warehouse, compliance, and core staffing assumptions. Builds a broader product mix, deeper stock, and more patient support for higher volume.
Typical setup Keeps staff lean and delays vehicle and automation spend. Includes $495,000 in CAPEX, $717,000 minimum cash, $25,000 monthly fixed overhead, and $735,000 of Year 1 wages. Adds stronger fulfillment infrastructure, more internal staff, and a larger receivables reserve.
Cost drivers
  • Limited inventory depth
  • smaller facility
  • outsourced billing and fulfillment
  • fewer internal staff
  • delayed vehicle spend
  • Full CAPEX stack
  • $25k monthly overhead
  • $735k Year 1 wages
  • compliance audits
  • working cash reserve
  • Deeper stock
  • stronger fulfillment
  • more patient support
  • broader product mix
  • larger receivables reserve
Planning rangeCAPEX only Below base modelLowest cash need $495,000 - $717,000Model aligned Above base modelHigher capital
Best fit Fits founders testing demand before building a larger operating footprint. Fits operators building a payer-ready regional launch around the modeled cost base. Fits teams ready to run a scaled regional supplier with heavier service load.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or guaranteed funding needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Plan around the researched minimum cash need first, which is $717,000 in Month 2 for this model That sits on top of $495,000 in startup CAPEX and must cover payroll, inventory timing, billing setup, and payer delays The model reaches breakeven in Month 2, but cash can still tighten if claims take longer to collect