Engine Overhaul Startup Costs for a 150-Job First Year

Engine Overhaul Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Separate one-time buildout from $10,000 monthly rent.
  • Outsource machining first; keep teardown and quality control in-house.
  • Inventory cash can exceed equipment for first-year jobs.
  • Compliance costs and monthly overhead need upfront funding.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for an engine overhaul shop.

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CAPEX only This calculator excludes working capital, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, taxes, financing fees, inventory, and recurring rent unless you model them separately. It is meant to size launch assets, not operating cash needs.



What does this screenshot show?

CAPEX tab in the Engine Overhaul Financial Model Template shows startup costs, timing, depreciation, amortization, funding gaps. Review assumptions.

Financial model screenshot highlights

  • 150 jobs, $940k revenue
  • $91,225 direct costs
  • $13,950 monthly overhead
  • $42,500 payroll runway
  • Validate quotes, margins
Engine Overhaul Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timelines, letting the user customize equipment, refurbishment costs, depreciation and investment schedules; fully customizable for scenario-ready planning and clear capex-driven cash needs.


How should I build an engine overhaul business funding plan?


Engine Overhaul should be funded as a working-capital plan, not just a shop launch. On the first-year model of 150 jobs, $940,000 revenue, $91,225 direct job costs, and 50% variable selling costs, monthly cash after variable costs is about $31,565. With $13,950 fixed overhead and $42,500 payroll each month, the shop carries a roughly $24,885 monthly funding gap, so lenders will want month-by-month runway, not just annual profit.

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Funding math

  • 150 jobs drive the base case.
  • $940,000 is year-one revenue.
  • Contribution is about $378,775.
  • That is roughly 40% gross margin.
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Lender readout

  • Budget $56,450 monthly overhead plus payroll.
  • Show the $24,885 monthly cash gap.
  • Link hiring to utilization, not calendar dates.
  • Use the runway plan in loan talks.

What drives engine rebuild shop equipment costs?


Your Engine Overhaul shop’s equipment cost is driven less by headcount and more by how much machining you keep in-house. With a first-year mix of 150 jobs—100 Standard V6, 15 Performance V8, 5 Classic Inline 6, 20 Commercial Diesel, and 10 Hybrid—about 67% of the load is Standard V6, so the big capex choice is full in-house machining versus outsourcing boring, honing, resurfacing, and crank work.

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Core shop gear

  • Diagnostic scanners for engine checks
  • Torque tools for rebuild accuracy
  • Hoists and engine stands
  • Compressors, washers, benches, safety gear
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CAPEX pressure points

  • Full machining lifts capex the most
  • Outsourcing cuts upfront equipment spend
  • Diesel and V8 jobs need more lift capacity
  • Hybrid work needs added diagnostic depth

What hidden costs can surprise an engine overhaul startup?


The biggest surprise for an Engine Overhaul startup is that the shop costs start before revenue does: waste oil handling, solvent disposal, used parts storage, utility upgrades, insurance deposits, software, certifications, payroll, and parts delays. Here’s the quick math: plan for $1,500/month utilities, $800 insurance, $700 software, $300 certifications, $400 admin, and $250 security, plus $26 per commercial diesel overhaul for waste disposal, and keep that cash in working capital, which is the money you need before invoices are paid, as shown in How Much Does The Owner Of Engine Overhaul Make?.

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Fixed monthly costs

  • $1,500 utilities
  • $800 insurance
  • $700 software
  • $300 certifications
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Hidden cash drains

  • $400 admin
  • $250 security
  • $26 diesel waste disposal
  • Payroll before first revenue


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table shows the main engine-overhaul startup assets and the non-CAPEX cash reserve needed before breakeven.

Highlighted CAPEX$320,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$807,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,127,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Engine Machining Center $150,000 Precision machining capacity for rebuild work Yes
Engine Assembly Clean Room Setup $75,000 Clean assembly space and contamination control Yes
Diagnostic Equipment Suite $40,000 Testing, fault finding, and verification equipment Yes
Vehicle Lifts and Hoists $30,000 Safe engine removal and install handling Yes
Workshop Tools and Fixtures $25,000 Hand tools, benches, and build fixtures Yes
Minimum Cash Reserve $807,000 Cash trough from payroll, overhead, and direct job costs No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; non-CAPEX cash needs exclude owner pay and debt service.


Engine Overhaul Core Five Startup Costs



Facility and Shop Buildout Startup Expense


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Lease stack

Separate the deposit, one-time buildout, utility upgrades, and recurring rent. In the researched model, monthly workshop rent is $10,000, so opening cash is more than the lease check. Ask what the deposit covers and when rent starts, because timing changes the first cash draw.


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Buildout scope

The buildout is the one-time work that makes the shell usable: floor layout, ventilation, electrical capacity, compressed air lines, drainage, lighting, customer reception, secure parts storage, and heavy-equipment access. Price it from square footage, contractor quotes, and missing systems. A space with industrial power, floor drains, and lift clearance is cheaper to finish.

  • Get contractor quotes by square foot
  • Price missing power and drainage
  • Confirm waste-handling needs early
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Cut upgrade cost

Pick a bay that already has industrial power, floor drains, lift clearance, and waste handling. That cuts utility upgrades and shortens opening time. The mistake is signing for low rent and then paying to add power, drainage, or ventilation after the fact.

  • Check service specs before signing
  • Ask for lift and bay dimensions
  • Price only missing upgrades

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Budget order

Put the budget in four lines: deposit, buildout, utility upgrades, and monthly rent at $10,000. That keeps one-time cash separate from operating rent and makes the launch plan easier to review. If the landlord can’t show what is already installed, treat the missing work as a real startup cost.



Heavy Equipment and Machining Startup Expense


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In-House Scope

For an overhaul shop, the big choice is how much machining stays inside. A lean launch can outsource cylinder boring, honing, resurfacing, and crankshaft work while keeping teardown, assembly, diagnostics, and quality control in-house. That cuts startup cash and still supports a credible rebuild offer.


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Core Machine Spend

This cost covers rebuilding machines, cleaning systems, measurement tools, and installation. Price it from vendor quotes for the machine, freight, setup, electrical needs, and any calibration or training. Tie the spend to your 150-job first-year plan and the mix of V6, V8, inline 6, diesel, and hybrid work.

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Lean Start

Don’t buy every machine on day one. If early volume is uneven, outsource machining and keep cash for workflow, parts, and labor that drive turnaround. The mistake is paying for idle capacity before demand proves it. Buy depth only when it raises throughput or protects quality.


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Quote and Buffer

Ask for separate quotes for equipment, installation, utilities, and a contingency. That buffer matters because floor power, air, ventilation, and access can change the install cost fast. If the shop already has industrial power and lift clearance, you save money; if not, the machine bill is never the full bill.



Specialty Tools and Workflow Equipment Startup Expense


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Tool Mix

Start with support tools, not machine-shop gear. Engine stands, hoists, torque tools, scanners, parts washers, compressors, teardown benches, storage, hybrid-safe tools, PPE, and carts should match your mix of V6, V8, classic inline 6, commercial diesel, and hybrid jobs. For a 150-job year, size the set around the engines you’ll touch most.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate this cost from unit count × quote, then add install, delivery, and a replacement reserve for high-use items. Keep teardown benches and carts separate from heavy machining equipment. Ask quotes for each tool class, plus battery-safe hybrid gear. This line sits between the $10,000/month shop lease and your parts inventory.

  • Count each tool by job mix.
  • Quote install and delivery.
  • Add wear-item reserve.
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Buy Smart

Buy to your first-year mix, not your wish list. If diesel or hybrid jobs are still light, outsource those edge cases and keep the core tools in-house. Used storage, benches, and carts can lower spend, but torque tools, scanners, and battery-safe gear should stay reliable. One clean rule: don’t buy full machine-shop depth on day one.

  • Outsource rare specialty work.
  • Buy used noncritical fixtures.
  • Keep precision tools dependable.

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Wear Reserve

High-use tools fail first, so build a replacement reserve into startup cash. That matters most for hoists, torque tools, scanners, and compressors because downtime stops jobs, not just repairs. As your share of commercial diesel and hybrid work rises, the tool mix gets heavier and the reserve should rise with it.



Initial Inventory, Parts, Cores, and Consumables Startup Expense


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Inventory Stock

Treat inventory as launch funding, not CAPEX. This bucket covers gaskets, bearings, seals, fluids, lubricants, filters, solvents, common parts kits, engine cores, and supplier minimums. Research shows direct unit costs of $334 for Standard V6, $1,495 for Performance V8, $2,800 for Classic Inline 6, $761 for Commercial Diesel, and $618 for Hybrid Engine Service.


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Size the Buy

Size the buy list from forecast jobs × unit cost, then add minimum orders and slow movers. Here’s the quick math: first-year direct job costs total about $91,225; over 150 jobs, that’s about $608 per job. What this estimate hides is cash tied up in rare cores and premium parts.

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Control Cash

Keep common consumables on the shelf, but buy specialty parts against booked work. That means sealing kits, fluids, and filters stay ready, while classic and performance cores get ordered late. One clean rule: if a part may sit for weeks, it needs a cash check before purchase.


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Cash Tie-Up

Track inventory like working capital, the cash you need to run day to day. Review dead stock monthly, set reorder points, and avoid overbuying rare inline 6 and V8 parts. The main risk is simple: strong parts stock helps speed, but too much premium stock can freeze cash fast.



Compliance, Insurance, and Pre-Opening Readiness Startup Expense


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Compliance First

Keep this cost bucket separate from equipment. The researched monthly base is $2,450: $800 insurance, $300 certifications, $700 software, $400 admin, and $250 security. One-time formation, permits, legal review, and launch setup sit outside machine CAPEX, so don’t hide them in shop buildout.


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What It Covers

This bucket covers business formation, local permits, environmental handling, waste oil and solvent processes, garage liability, workers’ compensation, accounting setup, legal review, website, pre-opening marketing, certifications, and launch admin. Here’s the quick math: $2,450 per month equals $29,400 for 12 months, before any one-time filing or setup fees.

  • Collect quotes for each license.
  • Separate one-time and monthly costs.
  • Check workers’ comp early.
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Keep It Tight

Start with the licenses, insurance, and software you need to open, then add extra marketing only after the first jobs book. The main mistake is bundling compliance into buildout. In Year 1, selling costs are modeled at 30% commissions plus 20% marketing per project, so every job has to carry that load.


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Launch Admin

Budget this as a cash gate, not a nice-to-have. If permits, insurance binders, and certifications aren’t in place before opening day, the shop can’t bill cleanly or safely. The fixed monthly base is $2,450, so e very delay adds real burn before the first overhaul is delivered.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup Cost Scenarios

A lean outsourced model keeps machining off-site, the base plan adds core shop gear, and the full build moves more work in-house. At 150 first-year jobs and $940,000 revenue, cash needs rise fast with setup depth.

Lean, base, and full launch cost comparison for an engine rebuild shop
Scenario Lean LaunchLowest setup Base LaunchBalanced build Full LaunchHighest risk
Launch model Keep machining with outside vendors and do teardown, assembly, and testing in-house. Handle most rebuild work in-house, but still outsource some specialty machining. Run a fully equipped rebuild and machining shop with most work done on site.
Typical setup Use a small shop, basic lifts, hand tools, and vendor machining contracts. Add core tools, diagnostics, lifts, and selected machining gear in a standard workshop. Add deeper machine-shop equipment, clean-room assembly, and higher utility load.
Cost drivers
  • Outsourced machining
  • basic tools and lifts
  • payroll and lease
  • parts cash float
  • Machining center
  • diagnostics and lifts
  • skilled labor
  • utilities and insurance
  • Deeper machine shop
  • clean-room setup
  • higher utilities
  • heavier payroll
  • more working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only $450,000 - $650,000Lower cash need $700,000 - $850,000Mid cash need $900,000 - $1,150,000Heavy cash need
Best fit Best for founders who want to test demand, protect cash, and keep fixed overhead tight. Best for operators who want a real in-house rebuild shop without a full machine-shop buildout. Best for teams with strong volume, deep funding, and a plan to own more machining margin.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions based on the model, not vendor quotes or fixed bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

The researched first-year model shows $940,000 from 150 total jobs That includes 100 Standard V6 Overhauls at $4,500 each, 20 Commercial Diesel Overhauls at $8,000 each, and 15 Performance V8 Builds at $12,000 each Treat that as a planning case, not guaranteed demand