Dance Movement Therapy Startup Costs: $88K CAPEX To Launch

Dance Movement Therapy Startup Costs
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Description

The researched dedicated-studio case for a dance movement therapy practice includes $88,000 in startup CAPEX before working capital, owner draw, loan payments, taxes, and long-term losses A lean solo or rented-room launch should sit below that CAPEX level because it avoids some dedicated-studio items, but separate lean quotes are not provided in the source data The full funding plan is much larger than visible setup cost because the model carries $854,000 minimum cash in Month 2, $8,750 in monthly fixed costs, and first-year staffing needs Treat these as researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes or state-specific licensing advice



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for launch, based on the model's $88,000 base CAPEX across Month 1 to Month 6.

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Excluded from CAPEX This block excludes inventory, payroll runway, rent deposits, prepaid rent, debt service, working capital, insurance premiums, subscriptions, marketing, and other operating costs. Those need separate funding.



What should the CAPEX tab show?

Use the Dance Movement Therapy Practice Financial Model Template for $88,000 Month 1–6 startup costs; open and review depreciation/amortization.

Screenshot highlights

  • Not a quote substitute
  • Fixed overhead, variable costs
  • Working capital, funding need
  • Year 1 $447k revenue
  • Year 2 $778k revenue
  • Year 5 $3.206M revenue
  • Month 1 breakeven, 10-month payback
  • 1765% IRR, 522% ROE
  • Test lease, utilization, pricing
Dance Movement Therapy Practice Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timelines, letting users customize startup and growth investments, depreciation schedules and funding needs for scenario-ready planning


How much does it cost to start a dance movement therapy practice?


A Dance Movement Therapy Practice does not have one universal startup cost; the dedicated-studio model shows $88,000 in CAPEX and a $854,000 minimum cash need in Month 2, as detailed in What Does It Cost To Run A Dance Movement Therapy Practice?. The model also shows $8,750 in monthly fixed overhead, $167,500 in Year 1 admin payroll, $447,000 in Year 1 revenue, and Month 1 breakeven.

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Budget pieces

  • CAPEX: $88,000 for startup assets
  • Fixed overhead: $8,750/month
  • Admin payroll: $167,500 in Year 1
  • Cash floor: $854,000 in Month 2
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Watch changes

  • Include pre-opening costs and reserves
  • Fund payroll runway before client ramp-up
  • Check state credential rules early
  • Lease deposits can move cash fast

What drives dance movement therapy studio setup cost?


Space is the biggest visible cost driver for a Dance Movement Therapy Practice because clients need privacy, safety, accessibility, ventilation, and enough room to move without injury. A dedicated setup can include $25,000 for studio flooring and acoustic treatment, $12,000 for reception and office furniture, $6,000 for sound systems, $7,000 for security and confidentiality systems, and $4,500 for signage. Here’s the quick split: a home office is cheapest but tight on safety and privacy, a rented clinical room cuts buildout, and a shared wellness space sits in the middle.

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Largest costs

  • Flooring and acoustic treatment: $25,000
  • Reception and office furniture: $12,000
  • Sound systems: $6,000
  • Security and confidentiality systems: $7,000
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Setup checks

  • Separate leasehold improvements from deposits
  • Separate prepaid rent from buildout costs
  • Check zoning and landlord insurance terms
  • Confirm ADA access and storage needs

How much funding is needed for a dance movement therapy practice?


The Dance Movement Therapy Practice should plan funding around the build-out, launch runway, and payroll, not just opening costs. The model shows $88,000 in CAPEX, $8,750 in monthly fixed overhead, and $167,500 in Year 1 admin payroll, against $447,000 in Year 1 revenue. It reaches Month 1 breakeven and a 10-month payback, so pricing, therapist utilization, mix, and lease choice are the main levers.

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Funding blocks

  • $88,000 CAPEX
  • $8,750 monthly fixed overhead
  • $167,500 Year 1 admin payroll
  • Month 1 breakeven
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Capacity checks

  • 100 senior sessions monthly at $175
  • 65% senior capacity
  • 120 associate sessions monthly at $130
  • 80 trauma sessions monthly at $160


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table covers the practice's startup assets and excluded cash reserve, with $88,000 of CAPEX and $854,000 minimum cash in Month 2.

Highlighted CAPEX$88,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$854,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$942,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Studio flooring and acoustic treatment $25,000 Flooring and acoustic treatment for therapy rooms Yes
Reception and office furniture $12,000 Reception, waiting, and admin setup Yes
Initial movement therapy equipment kit $8,500 Movement props and therapy kit Yes
IT infrastructure and secure servers $15,000 Secure IT and booking infrastructure Yes
Launch systems, signage, and onboarding hardware $27,500 Signage, sound, security, and hardware Yes
Operating cash reserve $854,000 Month 2 payroll and overhead runway No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched startup assumptions; non-CAPEX cash reserves and losses sit outside asset spend.


Dance Movement Therapy Practice Core Five Startup Costs



Clinical Space and Facility Setup Startup Expense


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Clinical first

Treat the room like a clinical safety decision, not office décor. Keep capital expense (CAPEX) separate from prepaids: the buildout assets total $48,500, while $6,500 first-month rent and any lease deposit sit outside CAPEX. That split keeps startup cash clear and makes your break-even math honest.


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Buildout assets

Facility CAPEX includes $25,000 for flooring and acoustic treatment, $12,000 for reception and office furniture, $7,000 for security and confidentiality systems, and $4,500 for signage. Use that spend for privacy, secure records, storage, lighting, ventilation, accessibility, and room flow for both individual and group movement sessions.

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Lease prepay

Rent is $6,500 per month, so first-month cash out is rent plus any deposit before buildout starts. Keep those prepaid items out of CAPEX so you can compare leases cleanly and see the real cost of opening the suite, not just the monthly rate.


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Room flow

Use a layout that protects privacy and movement safety. The weak spots are thin walls, poor ventilation, bad lighting, and cluttered storage. A clean room plan should let clients move freely, keep records locked, and support both one-on-one and group sessions without cross-traffic or exposure.



Movement Equipment and Room Assets Startup Expense


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Launch kit

A lean movement room needs durable gear and consumables. The source starting kit is $8,500, and sound systems are $6,000. Budget for mats, bolsters, scarves, balls, sensory props, secure storage, adaptable seating, and portable or fixed sound; keep replacement props and hygiene items in a separate supply line.


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Asset split

Build the budget from unit counts and vendor quotes. Classify mats, storage, sound systems, and furniture as durable assets if they last beyond launch. Treat replacement props and hygiene supplies as ongoing clinical supplies. In Year 1, clinical supplies and movement props run 35% of revenue, so they belong in monthly operating costs.

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Spend control

Start with the core kit, then add specialty props only after you know your client mix and mobility needs. Buy items that work for different bodies, and replace worn supplies on a set schedule. Do not overbuild a studio; this space needs clinical function, storage, and safe movement, not performance-level finishes.


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Supply watch

Track durable assets separately from consumables so you can see what is one-time and what keeps coming back. The main risk is supply burn rate, since the 35% Year 1 load can rise fast if props are replaced too early or hygiene use is not monitored.



Licensing, Credentials, and Compliance Startup Expense


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Compliance Stack

Licensing and compliance isn’t one fee; it’s a stack of state-specific items. Budget for entity formation, state registrations, professional credentials, supervision or consultation, continuing education, consent forms, privacy policies, mandated reporting, and legal review. Requirements change by state, payer model, and whether services are psychotherapy, wellness, or adjunct therapy.


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Cost Inputs

Use the staffing plan to size the work: 1 Senior Lead Therapist, 2 Associate Movement Therapists, 1 Group Session Facilitator, 1 Trauma Specialist, and 2 Junior Intern Practitioners in Year 1. Then add fees for each credential, required supervision, and legal review. The source model starts paid clinical supervision in Year 2 at 0.5 FTE.

  • Track fees by role
  • Budget renewal dates
  • Price supervision separately
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Keep It Lean

Keep the spend tight by matching credentials to scope, not by skipping controls. Set one compliance calendar for renewals, continuing education, and supervision, and standardize consent, privacy, and reporting forms before launch. What this hides: if your payer mix or state scope changes, you may need new registrations and another legal review.

  • Review state rules first
  • Update forms before launch
  • Use one document set

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Budget Guardrails

Treat this as a launch and operating cost, not a one-time legal task. The biggest drivers are how many staff need credentials, how much supervision junior staff need, and whether you sell psychotherapy or wellness-adjacent sessions. No universal rule applies, so tie the budget to the actual service mix and launch state.



Insurance and Risk Management Startup Expense


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Coverage base

For a movement therapy practice, insurance is a must-have budget line. The known base is $450 per month for professional liability, then add general liability, property, cyber coverage, landlord-required certificates, and workers’ compensation if you hire. This covers clinical, premises, privacy, and professional risk.


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What to budget

Build the estimate from monthly premiums, required certificates, and any staffing triggers. Here’s the quick math: the only fixed insurance number provided is $450 per month. Keep lease deposits and first month rent outside CAPEX, and remember security and confidentiality systems are a separate $7,000 CAPEX item.

  • Count all required policy lines
  • Separate CAPEX from monthly spend
  • Get landlord certificate terms early
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Keep it tight

Price this like a clinical practice, not a hobby studio. Use policy quotes that match your room use, group sessions, and client handling rules. Don’t strip out cyber or property coverage to save a few dollars; privacy gaps and equipment losses usually cost more later. Website hosting and security add $150 per month.

  • Ask for certificate requirements first
  • Match coverage to room use
  • Keep records and access controls

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Risk link

Movement work adds real exposure from slips, falls, trauma-informed care, client confidentiality, and group sessions. Insurance should sit beside facility setup, not after it. If you hire, add workers’ compensation before the first payroll. Secure storage, access limits, and documented confidentiality rules help support underwriting and keep claims risk lower.



Technology, Admin Systems, and Launch Marketing Startup Expense


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Launch budget split

For launch, split the budget into fixed build-out and recurring spend. The fixed side is $15,000 for IT infrastructure and secure servers plus $10,000 for staff training and onboarding hardware. The recurring side starts at $250 a month for EHR and booking software and $150 a month for website hosting and security, before usage fees and marketing.


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Fixed build-out

Price setup by counting devices, seats, and security quotes. The launch stack should support EHR, scheduling, billing, secure documentation, and telehealth if you offer it. Use vendor quotes for each system, then tie them to the number of staff who need access and the rooms or endpoints that must stay secure.

  • $15,000 infrastructure and server spend
  • $10,000 onboarding hardware spend
  • Quote access by user count
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Monthly stack

Monthly tools are small, but usage fees are not. Budget $250 for EHR and booking plus $150 for hosting and security, then add payment processing and EHR transaction fees at 30% of revenue. If bookings rise, this line grows with sales, so use revenue-based modeling from day one.

  • Model fees as a share of revenue
  • Count active client payments monthly
  • Keep security and hosting separate

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Year 1 acquisition

Year 1 launch costs also include the website, local SEO, directory listings, referral materials, and campaigns. Here, digital marketing and referral fees are 100% of revenue, so acquisition can consume every dollar earned early on. The cleanest control is to stage spend by month and stop channels that do not fill sessions.

  • Stage spend by month
  • Track source-by-source bookings
  • Cut weak channels fast


Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Costs climb as the practice moves from a solo setup to shared rooms and then a dedicated studio. The full studio case carries $88,000 CAPEX, $8,750 monthly fixed overhead, and $854,000 minimum cash in Month 2.

Lean solo, shared space, and dedicated studio launch costs.
Scenario Lean LaunchSolo founder Base LaunchShared space Full LaunchDedicated studio
Launch model Start with one credentialed therapist and a low-commitment space plan. Operate from rented clinical rooms and share site services where possible. Build a full studio with the model's priced setup; the case shows $8,750 monthly fixed overhead and $854,000 minimum cash in Month 2.
Typical setup Use a small flexible room with core clinical gear and basic admin tools. Use host-provided rooms and trim flooring, signage, furniture, and security scope. Include full flooring, acoustic treatment, IT, sound, signage, security, and onboarding hardware.
Cost drivers
  • Lower space commitment
  • fewer buildout items
  • lean equipment
  • lighter staffing
  • Shared rooms
  • reduced buildout
  • fewer site assets
  • lower signage spend
  • Full buildout
  • studio rent
  • secure IT
  • onboarding hardware
  • staffing scale
Planning rangeCAPEX only Lower funding bandLightest setup Mid funding bandShared-room model $88,000 CAPEXPriced setup
Best fit Best for a credentialed solo founder testing referral demand. Best for a referral-based early practice that wants lower upfront asset load. Best for a multi-therapist group launch that needs dedicated rooms.

Planning note: Ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact vendor quotes. Final spend shifts with rent, lease deposits, buildout scope, and credentialing rules.

Frequently Asked Questions

Not always, but the practice model matters A solo founder may start in rented clinical space, while the researched dedicated-studio plan includes $25,000 for flooring and acoustic treatment, $6,000 for sound systems, and $6,500 monthly rent If clients move actively, prioritize safe flooring, privacy, accessibility, and liability coverage before saving on space