Cryotherapy Center Startup Costs: Plan For $537K Before Break-Even

Cryotherapy Center Startup Costs
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Description

Opening a cryotherapy center in this researched plan requires about $537k of startup funding, not just the price of the chamber The modeled CAPEX is $3065k, including $180k for two whole-body cryotherapy chambers, $75k for leasehold improvements, and $15k for localized cryotherapy devices The remaining funding covers pre-opening costs, early losses, and working capital through the Month 13 break-even point These are planning assumptions, not quotes, and the final cost depends on location, chamber type, buildout scope, safety setup, and staffing model



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX

Estimates the one-time capitalized startup assets needed to open a cryotherapy center, not working capital or payroll runway.

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CAPEX scope This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes payroll runway, rent reserve, launch marketing, insurance premiums, debt service, deposits, inventory runway, working capital, and other operating expenses.



What does the startup cost screenshot show?

This tab shows Cryotherapy Center costs, CAPEX, launch timing, and depreciation rules; review assumptions in Cryotherapy Center Financial Model Template.

Key screenshot highlights

  • $3.065M CAPEX
  • $537K cash need
  • Month 13 break-even
  • 34-month payback
  • Year 1 EBITDA -$111K
  • 20 visits, 300 days
  • $25-$65 pricing, FTE staffing
Cryotherapy Center Financial Model capex inputs allowing users to customize startup equipment, facility build-out, and one-time capital costs for accurate funding needs and scenario-ready forecasts.


How should I build a cryotherapy center funding plan?


Build the Cryotherapy Center funding plan around $537k minimum cash, $3,065k CAPEX, and a Month 13 break-even. Here’s the quick math: Year 1 EBITDA is -$111k, payback is 34 months, and test visits should ramp from 20 per day in Year 1 to 40 per day in Year 2. Keep debt, equity, owner salary runway, contingency, and reserve policy as separate decisions so the cash plan stays clean.

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Funding stack

  • Stage CAPEX across Month 1 to Month 6.
  • Time pre-opening costs before launch.
  • Use debt and equity separately.
  • Set a reserve above $537k.
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Operating ramp

  • Plan staffing before first visits start.
  • Track fixed and variable costs monthly.
  • Include depreciation and amortization each month.
  • Ramp from 20 to 40 visits per day.

How much does a cryotherapy chamber cost?


For a Cryotherapy Center, the modeled whole-body chamber cost is $90k each, so two chambers total $180k across the startup period. That is a model, not a universal vendor quote, because new vs. used units, delivery, installation, warranty, service agreement, maintenance setup, and training all move the price. Localized cryotherapy devices add about $15k, compression equipment adds $20k, and ongoing maintenance is modeled at $600 per month once operating.

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Whole-body chamber cost

  • $90k per chamber, modeled
  • $180k for two chambers
  • Price shifts by new or used
  • Add delivery and installation
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Other startup assets

  • Localized devices: $15k
  • Compression gear: $20k
  • Training and warranty matter
  • Maintenance: $600/month

How much money do I need to open a cryotherapy center?


To open a Cryotherapy Center, plan on a $537k minimum cash requirement, not just the chamber price; use What Is The Main Goal You Aim To Achieve With Cryotherapy Center? to tie that funding to the operating target. That budget includes $306.5k in CAPEX plus $230.5k for pre-opening costs and working capital, covering early burn from -$111k Year 1 EBITDA until Month 13 break-even.

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Main startup costs

  • $180k for two chambers
  • $75k for leasehold improvements
  • $15k for localized devices
  • $306.5k total CAPEX
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Runway check

  • 20 average visits per day
  • 300 operating days in Year 1
  • Break-even targeted in Month 13
  • Budget shifts by location, buildout, staffing


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Shows opening budget items for cryotherapy equipment, buildout, fixtures, and cash runway using researched low/base/high ranges.

Highlighted CAPEX$302,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$537,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$839,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Cryotherapy Chambers (2) $180,000 Two $90k chambers, plus install and delivery timing. Yes
Facility Leasehold Improvements $75,000 Buildout scope, electrical work, and treatment room prep. Yes
Ancillary Compression Equipment $20,000 Ancillary compression unit purchase and setup. Yes
Localized Cryo Devices $15,000 Localized cryo units and related installation. Yes
Reception Area Furnishings $12,000 Front desk, seating, and waiting area setup. Yes
Minimum Cash Buffer $537,000 Month 13 break-even and Year 1 EBITDA of -$111k. No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched opening costs; non-CAPEX cash need excludes owner salary runway and extra reserves.


Cryotherapy Center Core Five Startup Costs



Cryotherapy Treatment Equipment Startup Expense


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Treatment CAPEX

The modeled treatment equipment spend is $215k: 2 cryotherapy chambers at $90k each, localized cryo devices at $15k, and ancillary compression at $20k. That total excludes any unlisted delivery, installation, warranty, service setup, and training charges, so the real first check can land higher.


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What Drives the Quote

Here’s the quick math: equipment cost starts with units × unit price, then you add delivery, install, and service terms. To price it right, ask for chamber count, session capacity, service menu, and whether the system is electric or nitrogen-based. New versus used gear also changes the number fast.

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How to Control Spend

Keep the spec tight before you buy. One chamber can cost $90k, so overbuying capacity is the fastest way to waste cash. Get two quotes, separate equipment from install, and compare warranty and service contract terms line by line. If the menu is narrow, you may not need every add-on device on day one.


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Quote Gaps

Before you lock the budget, confirm chamber count, session capacity, electric versus nitrogen setup, new versus used, and service contract terms. Those five inputs decide whether $215k is close or low, because delivery, install, and training can move the total without changing the core equipment mix.



Cryotherapy Facility Buildout Startup Expense


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Buildout Scope

This block covers the room build, not the chambers or safety systems. Budget $75k for leasehold improvements, plus $12k reception furnishings, $8k computer POS, $4k security surveillance, and $25k washer-dryer. That puts the modeled buildout at about $124k before any delivery, extra permit work, or contractor change orders.


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Cost Inputs

Here’s the quick math: estimate by square footage, landlord condition, electrical capacity, room layout, finish level, and local contractor rates. A simple shell is cheaper than a space needing panel upgrades, plumbing, accessibility fixes, and more finish work. Get separate quotes for flooring, lighting, electrical, reception, and inspection coordination so the budget stays real.

  • Price each trade line by line
  • Confirm power before final plans
  • Lock layout before contractor bids
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Hold The Line

Keep the design plain and client-facing spaces clean. The fastest savings usually come from using the existing shell, limiting custom finishes, and avoiding late changes after bids are signed. Ask for itemized bids, because bundled quotes hide overruns. One clean rule: layout first, finishes second.

  • Avoid custom millwork unless needed
  • Reuse workable walls and surfaces
  • Price inspection support upfront

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Scope Creep

Do not hide chamber costs, compliance gear, or ventilation work inside this budget. The $4k surveillance line is a fixed asset, not a substitute for safety systems. If electrical capacity is weak or the landlord space needs accessibility work, the buildout can rise fast, so scope those items before signing the lease.



Cryotherapy Safety And Compliance Startup Expense


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Safety Setup

Safety and compliance are local planning items, not legal or medical advice. Budget for oxygen sensors, ventilation, nitrogen storage or delivery setup, emergency steps, warning signs, staff rules, permits, inspections, and compliance consulting. Because no sensor or ventilation price is given, keep those lines quote-required. The modeled $4k security surveillance is only an asset, not a safety system.


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Quote-Only Lines

Use units × unit price for each line: sensors, fans, signs, training, permits, inspection fees, and consultant hours. Ask for separate quotes on oxygen monitoring and ventilation upgrades, since the model gives no price. Keep nitrogen planning tied to supply volume, and split one-time setup from recurring checks so the budget stays clean.

  • Quote sensors separately
  • Split one-time costs
  • Keep recurring checks separate
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Trim Smart

Don’t cut the monitoring or airflow line to save cash. Save money by bundling permits, inspections, and compliance consulting, then standardizing staff protocols and signage across rooms. The easy mistake is treating $4k security surveillance as a safety fix; it isn’t. Keep cryotherapy safety systems separate from general buildout assets.


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Nitrogen Budget

Liquid nitrogen supply should be modeled at 40% of Year 1 revenue, then 32% by Year 5. Here’s the quick math: if Year 1 revenue is R, budget 0.40R for nitrogen; by Year 5, budget 0.32R. That helps size delivery, storage, and on-site procedures without guessing.



Pre-Opening Staffing Training And Insurance Startup Expense


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Pre-Launch Team

This cost covers recruiting, onboarding, staff training, written protocols, and basic setup before day one. Build it around the Month 1 team: $70k center manager, $45k cryotherapy technician, 0.5 FTE second technician at $45k basis, 0.5 FTE front desk at $35k, and 0.5 FTE marketing coordinator at $30k.


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Coverage and Setup

Add the opening insurance and service setup lines here: general liability, professional liability, workers’ compensation, legal setup, accounting setup, payroll setup, and HR basics. The modeled run-rate inputs are $750 per month for insurance and $700 per month for professional services, so the opening budget needs at least one month of each plus any vendor quotes.

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How To Size It

Here’s the quick math: count people, months of coverage, and vendor quotes. Training cost scales with headcount and onboarding length; setup cost scales with the number of providers you hire. What this estimate hides is local law and insurance pricing, so collect quotes before you lock the launch budget.


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Keep It Lean

The cleanest savings come from shorter onboarding, one set of SOPs, and bundled professional services. Don’t trim coverage or skip workers’ comp, because that turns a startup saving into a claims problem. If opening is delayed, hold the team plan and insurance timing until the site is truly ready.



Launch Systems Supplies And Marketing Startup Expense


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Launch Spend

For a cryotherapy center, separate setup cash from ongoing spend. Model the one-time stack around $8k for computer POS systems, then add quote-based costs for website, booking, CRM, payment setup, supplies, and opening promos. Keep recurring items like $400 per month CRM, 25% payment processing, and ad spend out of launch-only math.


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What To Budget

Build the budget from line items: website, booking system, POS, customer relationship management, payment setup, initial supplies, robes or protective gear, cleaning supplies, disposable liners, branded materials, local advertising, launch offers, and grand opening promotions. Use quotes for setup items, then layer in 70% of Year 1 revenue for marketing and promotions, falling to 60% in Year 2.

  • Use quotes for setup items.
  • Track launch promos separately.
  • Keep recurring tools on a monthly plan.
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Control The Burn

To keep cash use sane, cap launch buys to what you need for opening week, then restock from real demand. Don’t fold disposable liners into fixed overhead; they’re modeled at 0.8% of Year 1 revenue. One clean rule: launch spend opens the door, but long-term acquisition spend should be planned as its own line.


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Separate The Lines

Here’s the quick math: if a launch item does not help the center open, process payments, book visits, or fill the first sessions, it should stay out of startup CAPEX. That keeps one-time o pening costs clean and makes 25% payment processing, $400 CRM, and promo-driven spend easier to watch after day one.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Lean uses one chamber and a simpler buildout, while Base matches the model's two-chamber setup and Full adds more services, staff, and marketing. The setup mix changes cash needs fast.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchLowest upfront cash Base LaunchBalanced launch Full LaunchCapacity-first launch
Launch model Start with one chamber, a smaller menu, and a tighter opening plan. Start with the model's two-chamber setup and a standard service mix. Start with broader services, heavier staffing, and a larger opening push.
Typical setup Use one chamber, simpler buildout, fewer add-on services, and lean launch marketing. Use two $90k chambers, localized devices, ancillary compression, leasehold improvements, and steady marketing. Use more services, more equipment, fuller staffing, and stronger marketing from day one.
Cost drivers
  • one chamber
  • smaller buildout
  • fewer services
  • tighter marketing
  • two chambers
  • leasehold improvements
  • localized devices
  • ancillary compression
  • steady staffing
  • more services
  • heavier staffing
  • larger buildout
  • stronger marketing
  • more equipment
Planning rangeCAPEX only $200,000 - $300,000Leanest cash need $300,000 - $450,000Balanced cash need $450,000 - $650,000Highest cash need
Best fit Fits owners with tight cash, low lease risk, and slower demand ramp. Fits owners who want a middle path on cash, capacity, and launch risk. Fits owners with strong funding, favorable lease terms, and faster demand upside.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model inputs and cash profile, not exact quotes.

Frequently Asked Questions

Plan around the full cash runway, not just equipment In this model, minimum cash need is $537k, with break-even in Month 13 and Year 1 EBITDA of -$111k That reserve covers the gap between the $3065k CAPEX plan and the cash needed for payroll, rent, utilities, insurance, launch costs, and early operating losses