Farm Stay Startup Costs for a 20-Unit Working Farm Stay

Farm Stay Hotel Startup Costs
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Description

To open this farm stay, plan for property and lodging CAPEX plus enough cash to cover pre-opening expenses and early operating runway The researched model starts with 20 rentable units, 550% Year 1 occupancy, midweek rates from $150 to $280, and weekend rates from $250 to $450 Known opening overhead is $29,500 per month in fixed property costs plus $41,125 per month in Year 1 payroll, so each month of runway adds $70,625 before guest supplies, booking commissions, food, and beverage costs Total funding need is higher than buildout CAPEX because launch marketing, insurance, permits, deposits, training, and cash reserve sit outside the physical buildout budget



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a farm stay opening.

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CAPEX only Excludes working capital, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, monthly fixed expenses, booking commissions, food cost, beverage cost, guest supplies, and other non-CAPEX funding needs. Each month of operating runway adds $70,625 before variable costs.



Farm Stay’s CAPEX tab shows what?

Farm Stay’s CAPEX tab shows startup costs and timing. Open the Farm Stay Financial Model Template and review depreciation, amortization.

Screenshot highlights

  • Startup costs
  • Launch timing
  • Depreciation and amortization
Farm Stay Financial Model capex inputs allowing users to customize capital expenditures, asset purchases, depreciation schedules and investment timing for accurate startup and expansion planning, fully customizable and scenario-ready


How do I fund a farm stay business?


Fund Farm Stay with a lender-ready model that ties CAPEX, pre-opening spend, and an opening cash reserve to cash flow and debt service. Here’s the quick math: 20 units create 7,300 room-nights a year (20 x 365), so occupancy becomes the real driver of sellable nights, with midweek ADRs of $150 to $280 and weekend ADRs of $250 to $450. Lenders will also want proof the business can cover $70,625 in monthly overhead before variable costs and any loan payment, and the Year 1 revenue mix adds $34,000 from food and beverage, events, spa services, workshops, and retail.

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What lenders expect

  • Show a clear CAPEX schedule.
  • List pre-opening costs by line item.
  • Keep an opening cash reserve.
  • Prove debt service capacity.
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What to model

  • Use occupancy to set sellable nights.
  • Split midweek and weekend ADRs.
  • Include $34,000 in Year 1 extra income.
  • Use a clear source-and-use table.

How much money do I need to start a farm stay on my farm?


You need enough capital to cover the build path plus early cash burn: if you already own a suitable working farm, start with room conversion, guest separation, parking, utilities, compliance, furnishings, insurance, launch costs, and working capital for the known $70,625 monthly cash burden before variable costs. Before sizing the raise, pressure-test demand with What Is The Current Engagement Level Of Guests At Farm Stay?, because the model opens with 20 units, grows to 23 units by Year 3, and reaches 25 units by Year 4.

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Lowest-CAPEX path

  • Use existing farmhouse rooms first
  • Separate guests from farm operations
  • Fund utilities, parking, and compliance
  • Cover $70,625/month before variable costs
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Bigger funding path

  • Property purchase can dominate costs
  • Barn conversions need contractor scope
  • Cottages add more site work
  • Cabins, septic, access cost most

What hidden costs should I budget for before opening a farm stay?


Before opening a Farm Stay, budget for more than renovations: permits, inspections, legal and tax setup, website, booking tools, photography, staff training, linens, signage, opening stock, and launch ads; for return context, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Farm Stay Business Typically Earn?. The monthly fixed load is about $29,500 before payroll, and Year 1 working capital should also cover $41,125 in monthly payroll plus slow booking periods. Guest supplies can run 30% and booking commissions 40%, so cash flow matters as much as the buildout.

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One-time setup

  • Permits and inspections
  • Legal and tax registration
  • Website and booking setup
  • Photos, linens, launch ads
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Monthly burn

  • $15,000 lease or mortgage
  • $2,500 property taxes
  • $1,800 insurance and $3,500 utilities
  • $4,000 maintenance plus $1,200 equipment lease


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Startup cost table for a 20-unit farm stay across five accommodation types, split between CAPEX and excluded cash needs.

Highlighted CAPEX$515,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$629,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,144,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Initial Room Furnishings $150,000 Guest-room fit-out and furnishings Yes
Commercial Kitchen Setup $120,000 Kitchen equipment and install Yes
Vehicle Fleet $90,000 Guest transport and farm operations Yes
Farm Equipment Purchase $80,000 Farm tools and guest experience setup Yes
Spa Facility Buildout $75,000 Spa buildout and equipment Yes
Working Capital Runway $629,000 Month 9 runway from $70,625 monthly burn No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; non-CAPEX excludes working capital, payroll runway, deposits, and launch marketing.


Farm Stay Core Five Startup Costs



Property and Site Readiness Startup Expense


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Land Cost

Property cost and site work should be priced separately. Month 1 carries $15,000 lease or mortgage, $2,500 property taxes, $4,000 maintenance, $1,200 equipment lease, and $1,000 security, or $23,700 a month. Owning land does not remove readiness spend if roads, drainage, fencing, or guest areas still need work.


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Site Scope

This budget covers the physical setup that makes the farm guest-ready: access roads, parking, signage, lighting, fencing, drainage, and separation between animals, equipment, and guests. The key input is whether the property already supports 20 guest units and whether the farmhouse and grounds need heavy repair or conversion.

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Keep It Tight

Keep acquisition and site upgrades apart, then price each quote line by line. Ask for road, utility, and fencing bids before you fund the build. One clean rule: if guest traffic still shares paths with farm work, the property is not ready.

  • Price roads before décor.
  • Fix drainage first.
  • Separate guest and work paths.

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Readiness Check

Stress-test the site before closing. Ask if roads can handle guest cars, if guest zones are fully separated from active farm work, and if the existing farmhouse is safe and comfortable for stays. If any answer is no, treat that as upfront CAPEX, not a minor fix.



Lodging Renovation and Guest Room Buildout Startup Expense


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Major CAPEX

Treat this as major CAPEX, not launch ops. It covers bedrooms, bathrooms, insulation, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, fire safety, accessibility, privacy upgrades, contractor contingency, and inspection rework. For the modeled 20-unit opening, price each unit type separately, then roll vendor bids into a per-unit and total buildout range.


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Unit Mix

The mix drives cost. Farmhouse rooms may reuse existing structure, so they often need less shell work. Barn suites and loft rooms usually need conversion scope. Cottages need standalone systems. Glamping tents shift spend outside into pads, hookups, and access. Here’s the quick math: 4 + 3 + 6 + 5 + 2 = 20 units.

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Estimate Inputs

Build the number from vendor quotes, not guesses. For each unit type, capture scope of work, materials, labor, code fixes, and inspection closeout. Then multiply by unit count and sum the 20-unit plan. Keep décor, linens, guest supplies, booking commissions, and payroll out of this bucket.


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Control Spend

Control spend by reusing sound farmhouse structure, standardizing specs across repeated unit types, and bidding barn, loft, and cottage scopes separately. Don’t buy finishes before the inspection path is clear; late fire-safety or accessibility changes can force rework. For glamping tents, price the outdoor base, not just the tent shell.



Permits, Utilities, and Code Compliance Startup Expense


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Local approvals

Permits are a real gate, not a paperwork footnote. This bucket can include zoning approval, lodging permits, health department review, septic capacity, well water testing, fire alarms, extinguishers, emergency lighting, occupancy rules, parking, inspections, and possible accessibility compliance. US rules vary by state, county, and city, so local review has to happen before funding is final.


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Utility load

The opening plan uses 20 rentable units, so septic, well, electrical, and fire-safety capacity are core risks. The known utility operating cost is $3,500 per month starting in Month 1, but startup upgrades are separate CAPEX. Price this with local quotes and inspection results, especially if food and beverage service runs on the same systems.

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Cut rework

Ask the county and utility vendors one blunt question: can the current septic, well, electrical panel, and fire systems support 20 guests units plus food service? Get that answer before closing or committing buildout dollars. The cheapest mistake is a pre-opening site review. The expensive mistake is paying twice after a failed inspection.


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Funding gate

Before funding is finalized, budget for a local code review and ask for written confirmation on zoning, occupancy, parking, septic, water, and accessibility. If any system is undersized, treat the upgrade as upfront CAPEX, not a later operating fix. That keeps the opening plan tied to what the property can actually support.



Furnishings, Amenities, and Farm Experience Startup Expense


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Durable setup

Durable items are the one-time guest assets: beds, mattresses, seating, lighting, bathroom fixtures, kitchen or breakfast-service gear, outdoor seating, Wi-Fi hardware, room locks, guest signage, and safety barriers. With 20 units, per-room choices multiply fast, so this line needs quotes by unit type, not one blended number.


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Consumable stock

Consumables are the repeat-use items: linens, towels, toiletries, cleaning supplies, welcome items, and pantry stock. The opening stock is a pre-opening cash item, while Year 1 variable guest supplies are modeled at 30%. Here’s the quick math: use unit count, par levels, and months of coverage.

  • Price by item and count
  • Set opening stock levels
  • Separate refill from launch cash
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Farm experience

Farm experience setup covers tour paths, animal-viewing areas, workshop space, guest rules, and barriers around equipment or animals. This is guest safety and flow, not décor. Cost it with path length, barrier count, signage, and space buildout. If guests cross active work zones, rework costs usually rise.


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Keep it lean

To control this budget, standardize room packages and reuse the same fixture set across units. Mix only where the room type forces it. The big mistake is treating linens, pantry stock, and guest gifts like fixed assets; they’re not. That split keeps the opening budget clean and stops Year 1 refill costs from hiding in startup CAPEX.



Insurance, Marketing, Booking, and Launch Readiness Startup Expense


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Pre-opening spend

Treat this as a pre-opening bucket unless the spend creates a durable asset. It covers liability and property insurance, legal documents, accounting setup, tax registration, website, booking engine, photography, launch ads, staff onboarding, cleaning process setup, and guest communications. In Month 1, model $1,800 for insurance plus $500 for admin software.


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What to include

Build the budget from quotes and timing. Decide what is one-time and what lasts after opening. The 40% Year 1 booking commission is a running cost, not a setup cost. Here’s the quick math: launch cash also has to support $493,500 in annual staffing, or $41,125 per month, plus $34,000 in extra income beyond room revenue.

  • Separate setup from monthly fees
  • Use vendor quotes, not guesses
  • Fund the full opening ramp
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Control the run-rate

Keep this spend lean by batching legal, tax, site, and booking work before ads start. Don’t overbuild the website or photography before the room mix is locked. Don’t confuse commissions with launch spend, and don’t cut onboarding too hard; weak cleaning or guest messaging hurts reviews fast. One clean rule: pay once for setup, then watch monthly fees.


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Launch cash

Set launch cash against the full first-year plan, including $34,000 in extra income beyond room revenue. If the cushion is thin, ads, onboarding, and guest support will be the first places to break. Keep the reserve in place until bookings and service are stable, because payroll and commissions start before the business settles.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Startup costs swing fast here because rooms, food service, utilities, and guest amenities scale with the launch model. Lean keeps the farm simple, Base matches the 20-unit plan, and Full adds more buildout and runway.

Lean, Base, and Full farm stay launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchOwner-operator test Base LaunchLender-ready launch Full LaunchDestination farm stay
Launch model Use a few existing farmhouse rooms or limited converted space with simple breakfast and direct bookings. Open with the modeled 20 units: 4 Barn Suites, 3 Cottages, 6 Loft Rooms, 5 Farmhouse Rooms, and 2 Glamping Tents. Add more units, cabins, expanded amenities, larger food service, and broader farm-experience infrastructure.
Typical setup Own the property, keep the site work light, use existing septic, and avoid major amenity buildout. Match the research model with full room buildout, core food service, and a mix of direct booking and paid channels. Assume acquired property or major upgrades, utility work, spa and workshop buildout, and heavier paid channels.
Cost drivers
  • Room refreshes
  • basic furnishings
  • light site work
  • direct bookings
  • small launch marketing
  • 20-room buildout
  • kitchen setup
  • furnishings
  • staffing
  • launch runway
  • Extra units
  • utility upgrades
  • spa buildout
  • paid channels
  • larger staff
Planning rangeCAPEX only $300,000 - $550,000Small cash band $950,000 - $1,250,000Bankable launch $1,500,000 - $2,200,000Largest cash band
Best fit Fits an owner-operator who wants to test demand before adding more rooms or services. Fits a team that needs a financeable launch and can carry the $70,625 monthly burden from day one. Fits a destination concept that wants a bigger guest offer and a longer runway before cash turns.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact quotes.

Frequently Asked Questions

The provided research supports a 20-unit opening model, but it does not include vendor-quoted land, construction, or renovation prices Known funding needs include $29,500 per month in fixed property costs and $41,125 per month in Year 1 payroll Your full startup budget should add CAPEX, pre-opening expenses, and cash runway