Dim Sum Restaurant Startup Costs: $328K Spend And $718K Cash Need

Dim Sum Restaurant Startup Costs
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Description

You’re planning a US dim sum restaurant before the first table turns, so this page separates capital expenditures (CAPEX), pre-opening expenses, working capital, and total funding need The researched planning model shows $328k in listed startup outlays and a $718k minimum cash need in Month 2, with breakeven modeled in Month 3 These are planning benchmarks, not vendor quotes, franchise disclosures, or financing guarantees


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets for opening a dim sum restaurant, not operating cash or reserves.

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CAPEX only Excludes initial inventory, payroll runway, rent deposits, debt service, working capital, permits, marketing, insurance premiums, taxes, and other operating costs. Use this for capitalized startup assets only.



What does the CAPEX screenshot show?

This tab lists CAPEX and startup costs in the Dim Sum Restaurant Financial Model Template; review timing and depreciation.

Key screenshot highlights

  • 120k kitchen equipment
  • 80k leasehold improvements
  • 50k furnishings, 15k POS
  • 20k inventory and reserves
  • Month 1 to 7 launch
  • 718k cash, 14-month payback
Dim Sum Restaurant Financial Model capex inputs showing startup and ongoing capital expenditure assumptions, letting users customize equipment, leaseholds, fit-out and investment timing; fully customizable for scenario planning


How much funding do I need for a dim sum restaurant?


For a Dim Sum Restaurant, plan on at least $718k of cash by Month 2, not just the $328k startup outlays. Here’s the quick math: backers will want uses of funds, opening timeline, CAPEX schedule, launch costs, monthly burn, break-even assumptions, and contingency tied to that cash need. The model also points to breakeven in Month 3, 14 months to payback, $386k in Year 1 EBITDA, and 58% ROE.

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Funding anchor

  • $718k cash need by Month 2
  • $328k startup outlays alone
  • Include uses of funds
  • Show opening timeline
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Model outputs

  • Breakeven in Month 3
  • 14 months to payback
  • $386k Year 1 EBITDA
  • 58% ROE

How much does it cost to open a dim sum restaurant?


Opening a Dim Sum Restaurant takes about $718k in total funding at the Month 2 cash low point, not just the $328k listed startup outlays; track performance with What Is The Most Critical Metric To Measure The Success Of Dim Sum Restaurant? once doors open. Here’s the quick math: $308k is CAPEX-style spend, meaning buildout and equipment, plus $20k inventory, while the roughly $390k gap covers working capital and non-CAPEX needs.

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Funding Math

  • CAPEX-style spend: $308k
  • Opening inventory: $20k
  • Listed startup outlays: $328k
  • Minimum Month 2 cash need: $718k
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Operating Context

  • Working-capital gap: about $390k
  • Midweek AOV: $18
  • Weekend AOV: $25
  • Modeled breakeven: Month 3

What hidden costs of opening a dim sum restaurant should I plan for?


If you’re opening a Dim Sum Restaurant, the hidden cash burn is usually the pre-opening stack: $20k for initial inventory, plus lease and utility deposits, permit delays, health inspection readiness, hiring and training, recipe testing, uniforms, opening supplies, smallwares, insurance binders, legal review, accounting setup, and local marketing; see How Much Does The Owner Of Dim Sum Restaurant Typically Make? for the revenue side. Separate those from CAPEX, because these costs hit cash before day one and can’t be treated like normal build-out spend.

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Pre-opening cash traps

  • $20k initial inventory stock
  • Lease and utility deposits if required
  • Permits and health inspection delays
  • Training, uniforms, and opening supplies
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Monthly burn to plan for

  • $117k monthly fixed overhead before wages
  • $292k monthly Year 1 payroll run-rate
  • Insurance, accounting, and legal setup
  • These needs help explain the $718k minimum cash requirement


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Startup cost summary for a dim sum restaurant, showing researched buildout costs and the separate opening cash reserve.

Highlighted CAPEX$295,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$718,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,013,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Kitchen Equipment $120,000 Main kitchen buildout and cooking stations Yes
Leasehold Improvements $80,000 Lease fit-out and tenant improvements Yes
Dining Area Furnishings $50,000 Tables, chairs, and dining room setup Yes
Website & App Development $25,000 Ordering site, app, and setup build Yes
Initial Inventory Stock $20,000 Opening stock for launch menu and drinks Yes
Opening Cash Reserve $718,000 Cash runway before breakeven; excludes debt service, taxes, and owner salary No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched startup assumptions and exclude debt service, taxes, owner pay, and contingency.


Dim Sum Restaurant Core Five Startup Costs



Leasehold Improvements and Kitchen Buildout Startup Expense


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Buildout Base

A researched $80k leasehold-improvement base covers the dining layout, kitchen line, steam area, prep space, hood and ventilation, grease management, plumbing, electrical upgrades, fire suppression, flooring, walls, drains, and code compliance. Treat it as CAPEX in startup, not monthly spend. The real number moves with square footage, local code, and whether the site is a second-generation restaurant.


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Cost Drivers

This budget shifts fast with landlord allowance, utility capacity, and inspection scope. A space with a usable hood, drains, gas, and power can stay near the base; a shell space can run higher quickly. Ask for itemized quotes on demo, MEP work, and permit fees so hard costs and soft costs stay separate.

  • What square footage is included?
  • What code upgrades are required?
  • What equipment is already in place?
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Bid Questions

Use contractor bids to pin down three inputs: square footage, local code, and existing kitchen condition. Ask what the landlord allowance covers, what utility upgrades are needed, and what health, fire, and occupancy inspections must pass before opening. That keeps the estimate tied to real work, not guesswork.


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Estimate Inputs

For a tighter number, collect the lease plan, hood spec, plumbing and electrical load, grease trap needs, fire suppression scope, and inspection list. If the space is a second-generation restaurant, ask which systems can stay and which must be replaced. That gap often decides whether the buildout lands near $80k or moves well above it.



Dim Sum Kitchen Equipment Startup Expense


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Budget Base

$120k covers steamers, wok ranges, refrigeration, freezers, prep tables, mixers, dough sheeters if used, holding cabinets, dishwashing, food-safe storage, smallwares, and installation. Price it with unit counts, vendor quotes, delivery, and hookup labor. The main drivers are menu width, daily covers, and whether batch prep needs both hot and cold holding.


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Steam and Chill

Steamers and refrigeration carry dumplings, buns, rice rolls, and small plates. Build the quote around gas, electric, water, drain, hood, and installation needs. If frozen prep is part of the plan, add freezer capacity; if fresh prep leads, shift more spend to prep tables, mixers, and safe storage.

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Buy to Volume

Keep spend tight by buying to the menu, not to wishful volume. Don’t oversize gear before weekend peaks prove it. Used equipment can cut cash outlay, but only if it passes inspection and matches utility capacity. Online orders at 15% of Year 1 sales need separate holding and packaging flow.


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Throughput Check

Ask how many covers the line must handle each day, how sharp weekend spikes get, and how wide the menu really is. The kitchen has to support batch prep, food safety, and online orders without breaking cold chain or ticket times. If it can’t, the $120k plan needs a reset.



Dining Room, Signage, POS, and Guest Setup Startup Expense


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Dining Room Base

Plan $50k for the guest area: tables, chairs, booths, dishware, tea service items, décor, menu boards, and service stations. Size it by seat count, service style, and storage needs. Counter-service stays leaner; full-service dining needs more furnishings and staging space.


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POS Setup

Use $15k for POS hardware and setup, including payment terminals, printers, reservation setup, and service links. Estimate it by station count, menu complexity, and whether one counter or several service points handle orders. More terminals raise cost, but keep the setup simple if the floor plan is tight.

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Exterior Signage

Set $10k as the base for exterior signage, plus any required install or electrical work. The real drivers are local code, sign size, and mounting method. Get quotes that separate fabrication, permit work, and installation so the opening budget does not miss a cost step.


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Cart Service Fit

Do not overbuild service carts unless the labor plan needs them. Cart cost should track seating count, table service flow, and whether the room is casual counter-service, full-service, or limited cart-style service. For this concept, carts are optional, not a default expense.



Permits, Licenses, Compliance, and Professional Fees Startup Expense


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Permit stack

This is a jurisdiction-specific budget, not a fixed quote. Include business formation, food service permits, health department inspection, certificate of occupancy, fire inspection, sales tax registration, signage approvals, legal lease review, accounting setup, and insurance binders. Add liquor licensing only if alcohol is planned; beverage sales are modeled at 15%, so it is optional.


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Budget inputs

Build this line from local fee schedules, attorney and accountant quotes, inspection counts, and permit lead times. Ask for reinspection fees, amendment fees, and sign-off steps tied to the lease and buildout. The key question is simple: what must clear before you can open the doors?

  • Use city and county rates
  • Price every inspection
  • Include filing and review time
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Opening delay risk

Start permits in parallel with lease work and buildout. If health, fire, or occupancy approval slips, rent, payroll, and utilities keep running before revenue starts. A two-week delay can burn cash fast, so plan around the slowest approval, not the fastest contractor date.


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Control the spend

Keep the legal lease review, accounting setup, and insurance binder in the opening budget so nothing blocks financing or utilities. Skip alcohol licensing unless the menu truly needs it. One missed permit can cost more than the fee itself, because the bigger hit is idle rent, labor, and utilities.



Pre-Opening Inventory, Payroll, and Launch Readiness Startup Expense


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What It Covers

Pre-opening expenses and working capital cover the first cash drain, not long-term assets. Use $20k for opening stock, then add fresh and frozen ingredients, packaging, uniforms, cleaning supplies, smallwares, recipe testing, soft-opening meals, hiring, training, and opening marketing before paid sales start.


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How To Size It

Build the budget from units × unit price, vendor quotes, and coverage days. The $20k stock target should split across ingredients, packaging, and cleaning supplies, plus test batches and soft-opening meals. Fresh items need tighter ordering; frozen items can carry more buffer.

  • Count opening days of supply
  • Separate fresh from frozen
  • Price smallwares by set
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Payroll Burn

$350k in annual wages equals about $29.2k per month, and adding $117k of fixed overhead means roughly $146.2k before variable costs. Year 1 also carries 100% food and beverage costs, 25% packaging, 30% marketing, and 15% online platform fees.

  • Use wages, not headcount alone
  • Track launch burn weekly
  • Keep soft-opening spend lean

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Launch Control

Match hiring, training hours, and opening marketing to the actual open date. The fastest way to protect cash is to avoid overbuying perishables, printing too much packaging, or running a long soft opening; still, don’t cut below health, safety, or service needs.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Scenario scale changes cash needs fast in a dim sum restaurant because kitchen gear, leasehold work, and seating drive most of the spend. Lean trims buildout, Base matches the model, and Full pushes capacity and funding risk higher.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchLow buildout Base LaunchModel fit Full LaunchHighest spend
Launch model Use a second-generation restaurant space with a tighter menu and limited dining buildout. Use the researched plan with the full core kitchen and dining setup from the model. Use a larger dining room, broader menu, and higher-capacity service setup with extra equipment.
Typical setup Keep the kitchen lean and serve a smaller seating area with less front-of-house spend. Fund the core buildout, dining furnishings, POS hardware, and opening inventory from the base case. Add more refrigeration, larger steamer capacity, and optional cart-style service to raise seating and throughput.
Cost drivers
  • Leasehold improvements
  • kitchen equipment
  • POS setup
  • opening inventory
  • Kitchen equipment
  • leasehold improvements
  • dining furnishings
  • POS hardware
  • opening inventory
  • Larger buildout
  • more refrigeration
  • bigger steamer capacity
  • added seating
  • cart service
Planning rangeCAPEX only Sub-$328,000Lower cash need $718,000Base cash need Above $718,000Funding risk
Best fit Fits founders testing demand with a smaller footprint and tighter upfront spend. Fits operators who want the planned opening scope and a cash buffer aligned to the model. Fits teams aiming for a larger guest count and more service complexity from day one.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Plan from the $718k minimum cash requirement, not only the $328k listed startup spend The gap is about $390k, which protects the opening month, payroll readiness, and early ramp-up The model also carries about $117k in monthly fixed overhead before wages and about $292k in monthly Year 1 payroll