How Much It Costs to Start a Dog Daycare: $71K CAPEX Plan

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Description

The researched planning assumption for this dog daycare is $71,000 in startup CAPEX before adding deposits, payroll runway, insurance, permits, marketing, and working capital That CAPEX includes $30,000 for facility build-out and fencing, $10,000 for dog play equipment, $8,000 for kennels and crates, and smaller systems for cleaning, technology, security, and grooming setup The cost to start a dog daycare also depends on facility size, lease condition, outdoor space, staffing before revenue stabilizes, and local approval requirements In this model, the lowest cash point is $884,000 in Month 2, so total funding should be planned as CAPEX plus the cash cushion needed to operate safely



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a dog daycare; base CAPEX is $71,000 before contingency.

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Exclusions Excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, launch marketing, insurance premiums, permits, rent deposits, and other operating costs. Covers startup assets scheduled across Month 1 through Month 7 only.



What does the CAPEX tab show?

This Dog Daycare Financial Model Template CAPEX tab lists startup costs. It shows categories, timing, amounts, and depreciation/amortization. Review assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • $71,000 CAPEX schedule
  • Month 1 to 7
  • Launch and break-even timing
Dog Daycare Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timing, letting users customize startup equipment, facility build-out and asset lifecycles for scenario-ready projections.


What hidden dog daycare startup costs should founders budget for?


Dog Daycare founders should budget for monthly costs that are not capital assets: $500 insurance, $350 software, $100 security, $400 professional services, $1,500 utilities, $300 repairs, and a $7,500 lease. If you want the earnings side too, see How Much Does The Owner Of Dog Daycare Typically Earn?—because these costs hit before occupancy ramps. Add staff onboarding, temperament-test setup, and vaccination record setup, then plan for cleaning supplies at 20% of Year 1 revenue, treats and enrichment at 15%, marketing and promotions at 80%, and payment processing at 25%.

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Monthly overhead

  • $7,500 facility lease
  • $1,500 utilities
  • $500 insurance
  • $400 professional services
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Launch cash needs

  • Permits and zoning reviews
  • Rent deposits and owner draw
  • Debt service and cash reserve
  • Variable costs can be large

What drives dog daycare buildout costs?


Dog Daycare buildout costs are driven by dog-safe space, not a generic retail finish. The base model uses $30,000 for facility build-out and fencing from Month 1 to Month 3, and the big cost items are washable flooring, drainage, ventilation, outdoor fencing, gate systems, play-zone layout, sound control, reception flow, and sanitation setup. Cleanable surfaces and safe separation matter because dogs must be grouped by size, temperament, and activity level, and city, county, and state rules vary.

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Main cost drivers

  • Washable flooring lowers cleanup risk
  • Drainage matters if floors get wet
  • Ventilation helps control odor and heat
  • Gate systems support safe dog separation
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When costs rise

  • No drains pushes build cost up
  • Poor air movement needs more fixes
  • Outdoor runs add fencing and gates
  • Neighbor noise can force sound control

How should a dog daycare financial plan use startup costs?


Use the $71,000 startup budget as a launch map, not a lump sum. Spread CAPEX across Month 1 through Month 7, then size funding for payroll runway, deposits, debt service, and slower onboarding. At the stated capacity mix, Dog Daycare can generate about $34,000 a month before occupancy, but the Year 1 ramp still needs a cash check against Month 1 breakeven and the $228,000 EBITDA target.

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Launch cash plan

  • Spread $71,000 across Month 1-7.
  • Match each draw to build milestones.
  • Protect payroll runway before opening.
  • Hold cash for deposits and slow onboarding.
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Revenue and break-even test

  • Full capacity revenue is about $34,000 a month.
  • Full-time places contribute $17,000.
  • Part-time, flexi, and services add $17,000.
  • Slower billable days can delay Month 1 breakeven.


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table splits dog daycare startup costs into CAPEX and non-CAPEX cash needs across low, base, and high plans.

Highlighted CAPEX$60,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$884,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$944,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Facility Build-out & Fencing $30,000 Leasehold work, fencing, and yard setup Yes
Dog Play Equipment $10,000 Play structures and durable daycare gear Yes
Kennels & Crates $8,000 Holding capacity and rest-area equipment Yes
Advanced Cleaning System $5,000 Sanitation system depth and install scope Yes
Office Furniture & IT $7,000 Front desk setup, computers, and admin equipment Yes
Operating Reserve $884,000 Excluded cash for payroll, lease, utilities, and launch timing gaps No

Planning note: Ranges are researched planning assumptions; non-CAPEX excludes operating reserve, deposits, and launch cash.


Dog Daycare Core Five Startup Costs



Facility Buildout And Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense


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Build-Out Scope

$30,000 is the base CAPEX line for Month 1 to Month 3 build-out and fencing. It covers dog-safe flooring, drainage, washable wall surfaces, HVAC and ventilation, reception, supervised play-zone layout, gates tied to the space, and sound control where needed. One clean question: does the leased space already have drains and proper airflow?


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Budget Inputs

Build the estimate from site condition, not just size. Separate landlord improvements, tenant-paid improvements, and dog-specific safety upgrades. Check for outdoor access, code-compliant restrooms, and adequate ventilation; missing items can materially change the budget output. Here’s the quick math: $30,000 is the starting build-out pot for Months 1-3.

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Cost Control

Keep cost down by reusing anything that already meets code and safety rules. A space with drains, ventilation, and restrooms can save real money; a shell space can push the budget up fast. Get separate quotes for tenant work and safety items so rent does not hide upgrade costs. No cheap shortcuts on washable surfaces or gate layout.


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Lease Check

Ask before you sign: drains, outdoor access, restrooms, and ventilation. Those four items decide whether the $30,000 Month 1-3 budget holds or needs a reset. If the site already fits dog use, spend shifts toward safety upgrades; if not, landlord and tenant work rise fast.



Dog Safety Containment And Play Equipment Startup Expense


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Safe Gear

This line covers durable gear that keeps dogs separated and supervised. The budget is $18,000 total: $10,000 for dog play equipment and $8,000 for kennels and crates, bought from Month 2 to Month 4. It should include gates, partitions, play structures, fencing, feeding stations, and safety barriers, not toys, treats, or refill items.


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Layout Count

Estimate it from unit counts and quotes: how many gates, partitions, crates, kennels, barriers, and run sections you need. The biggest driver is the layout, since dogs must be split by size, temperament, activity level, and supervision zone. This is a one-time startup asset, so it belongs in CAPEX, not monthly spend.

  • Count each gate and partition.
  • Separate calm and high-energy dogs.
  • Leave room for isolation spaces.
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Buy Small

Buy to the smallest safe layout first, then add pieces only when occupancy is proven. Modular gates and partitions are easier to resize than fixed builds, and they help avoid paying for empty capacity. The mistake is overbuying for peak volume before you know the dog mix. One rule: match each area to a clear use.


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Sizing Check

Use three questions before you order: target dog capacity, indoor vs. outdoor play area, and the number of isolation or rest spaces. Those answers decide how many crates, kennels, barriers, and feeding stations you need, and they keep the spend tied to real operating flow instead of guesswork.



Licensing Insurance And Professional Readiness Startup Expense


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Required Setup

Before you take the first dog, budget for the regulated setup. This covers business license, zoning approval, animal care permit where required, liability insurance, workers’ compensation if staff are employed, legal setup, accounting setup, safety policies, and intake forms. In the model, monthly insurance is $500 and professional services are $400, so plan for $900/month plus local filing fees. This is funding need, not CAPEX.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate this line from local quotes and filing rules: one-time permit and setup fees, plus the recurring $500 insurance and $400 professional support in the model. Requirements change by city, county, and state, so confirm the exact filings before opening. One clean rule: if the paperwork is incomplete, the doors should stay closed.

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Risk Control

Keep costs lean by bundling legal, accounting, and policy drafts early, then renewing only what the local authority requires. Do not skip liability insurance or workers’ comp if you hire staff; those costs are small next to a bite claim, escape, illness, employee injury, or customer dispute. The best savings come from clear intake forms and strong safety rules.


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Open Safely

Build the compliance file before accepting dogs: license, permit proof, insurance certificate, staff injury coverage if needed, signed policies, and intake forms that capture vaccines, behavior notes, and emergency contacts. That prep lowers the odds of denied coverage, fines, and shutdown risk, and it also makes customer disputes easier to settle fast.



Software Security And Operating Systems Startup Expense


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Setup Split

Your tech stack starts with $12,000 of one-time CAPEX, then $450 a month in recurring software and security fees. The setup covers booking, payments, vaccination records, customer messages, access control, webcams, POS hardware, staff scheduling, and incident notes. Keep payment processing separate at 25% of revenue each year.


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What Gets Bought

Budget the setup as $3,000 for POS and booking from Month 3 to Month 6, $2,000 for security cameras from Month 2 to Month 4, and $7,000 for office furniture and IT from Month 1 to Month 3. One clean line: hardware and install come first, then software runs every month.

  • Use quotes for each vendor.
  • Track setup months separately.
  • Separate hardware from subscriptions.
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How To Control It

Keep costs tight by buying only the seats and devices you need at launch, then adding extras after occupancy proves out. Don’t bundle recurring software into CAPEX, and don’t miss install fees. The real test is whether the system covers intake, safety, and staff use without paying for features your team won’t touch.

  • Match tools to dog volume.
  • Confirm integrations before signing.
  • Review add-ons every month.

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Monthly Run Rate

Recurring spend is $350 for software subscriptions plus $100 for the security system, for $450 a month before card fees. Payment processing stays at 25% of revenue in every forecast year, so the biggest swing is sales volume, not software cost.



Pre-Opening Staffing Supplies And Launch Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch Pay

This bucket covers cash needed before the first paying dogs arrive, and it is usually expensed, not capitalized. Year 1 staffing totals $223,000: owner/manager $80,000, lead attendant $45,000, two attendants at $32,000 each, half-time groomer and trainer $19,000, and half-time admin assistant $15,000.


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Startup Stack

Add hiring, training, trial daycare days, temperament tests, first aid supplies, cleaning supplies, enrichment items, grand opening marketing, and customer onboarding. The model sets cleaning supplies at 20% of Year 1 revenue, dog treats and enrichment at 15%, and marketing at 80%, so launch cash has to cover both payroll and early variable spend.

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Hold the Line

Cut risk by staggering hires to opening date, using trial days to test staffing needs, and buying only the cleaning and enrichment stock you can turn quickly. The common mistake is underestimating onboarding time; if it stretches out, the payroll cushion becomes the real constraint, not toys or detergent.


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Protect Cash

Plan around cash burn, not just the headcount chart. The hard number is $223,000 in Year 1 staffing, and every extra week before steady bookings adds wage pressure. One clean rule: if onboarding slips, protect payroll first and delay nonessential laun ch spend.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Larger sites need more fencing, equipment, and staffing, so Lean, Base, and Full launches change both capex and cash cushion for Dog Daycare.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchSmaller build Base LaunchSource model Full LaunchLarger build
Launch model Small-footprint launch with fewer play zones, limited grooming, and a short staffing runway. Standard launch using the model's base mix of full-time, part-time, and flexi-pass care. Larger launch with higher supervised capacity, a stronger outdoor yard, and a fuller grooming service.
Typical setup About 1,500-2,000 sq ft, a modest outdoor area, basic cameras, and simple booking tech. Year 1 occupancy is 45%, with 16 billable days a month, a balanced 20/20/10 place mix, and mid-level tech. About 2,500-3,500 sq ft, more fencing, more cameras, fuller tech, and a longer cash reserve.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller leasehold build-out
  • fewer fences and gates
  • limited grooming setup
  • basic booking tech
  • lean staffing start
  • Source CAPEX build-out
  • play equipment
  • kennels and crates
  • grooming station setup
  • booking system
  • Larger build-out
  • extra fencing
  • fuller grooming station
  • more cameras
  • bigger reserve
Planning rangeCAPEX only $45,000 - $60,000Tight build $71,000Source capex $90,000 - $125,000Higher build
Best fit Founders testing local demand with less space, less tech, and lower startup cash. Operators who want the modeled setup and a middle-of-the-road cash plan. Owners with a bigger lease, stronger demand, and cash to cover a slower ramp.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact vendor quotes or guaranteed launch costs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Space depends on dog count, play-zone design, outdoor access, and local rules This model is built around capacity assumptions, not square footage: 20 full-time monthly places, 20 part-time monthly places, and 10 flexi passes in Year 1 Occupancy starts at 450%, then rises to 650% in Year 2 and 800% in Year 3