Garbage Collection Startup Costs: $572K CAPEX Planning Guide

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Description

This US garbage collection startup cost breakdown covers the first operating year, including $572,000 in planned CAPEX, pre-opening expenses, permits, insurance, truck and container costs, and working capital needs It excludes guaranteed vendor quotes, location-specific franchise awards, owner draws, and post-launch debt service The model shows a Month 17 breakeven point, -$292,000 Year 1 EBITDA, and a 42-month payback period


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a garbage collection launch, so you can size the cash needed before operations begin.

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What this excludes This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes working capital, payroll runway, fuel float, tipping fee reserve, debt service, loan payments, deposits, inventory runway, marketing runway, and other recurring operating expenses.



How does the CAPEX tab support funding?

This Garbage Collection Financial Model Template CAPEX tab shows expense categories, launch timing, amounts, and depreciation or amortization; open it and adjust assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • $572k total assets
  • $400k trucks, $40k bins
  • Month 17 breakeven
Garbage Collection Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure items and customizable purchase, replacement and depreciation assumptions to plan fleet, equipment and facility investments.


What are the hidden costs of starting a garbage collection business?


If you’re starting Garbage Collection, the real hidden cost is cash timing: disposal fees can run 140% of Year 1 revenue, fuel 90%, variable vehicle maintenance 35%, and payment processing 15%, before you count insurance deposits, permit delays, landfill or transfer station setup, truck downtime, bad debt, and payroll timing. Add $13,850 in monthly fixed overhead, $492,000 in Year 1 payroll, and $150,000 in Year 1 marketing, and Year 1 EBITDA lands at -$292,000; breakeven doesn’t hit until Month 17. So the reserve has to fund route ramp-up, not just trucks, and the cash math sits next to How Much Does The Owner Of Garbage Collection Business Typically Make?.

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Hidden cash drains

  • 140% disposal fees
  • 90% fuel cost pressure
  • 35% vehicle maintenance
  • 15% processing fees
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Year 1 cash load

  • $13,850 monthly fixed overhead
  • $492,000 payroll in Year 1
  • $150,000 marketing in Year 1
  • -$292,000 EBITDA; breakeven Month 17

How much money do you need to start a garbage collection business?


For Garbage Collection, plan on at least $864,000: $572,000 in launch CAPEX plus the modeled $292,000 Year 1 EBITDA loss. Don’t price this like a truck purchase only; use What Is The Current Growth Rate Of Garbage Collection's Customer Base? to pressure-test the ramp to Month 17 breakeven and 42-month payback.

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Base funding need

  • $572,000 launch CAPEX
  • $400,000 truck CAPEX
  • $492,000 Year 1 payroll
  • $150,000 Year 1 marketing
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Size options

  • Lean: one truck, fewer containers
  • Base: two trucks, modeled CAPEX
  • Larger: more staff and depot capacity
  • Budget fuel, disposal, insurance, losses

How do you fund a garbage collection business?


If you’re funding Garbage Collection, the pitch has to show how the business covers $572,000 in start-up spend and survives the early cash burn. The model already points to a tough first year: -$292,000 Year 1 EBITDA and Month 17 breakeven, so lenders and investors will want a cash plan, not just a growth story.

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Use of funds

  • $400,000 truck purchases
  • $40,000 bins and carts
  • $80,000 online platform
  • $25,000 depot tools
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Cash plan

  • $13,850 monthly fixed overhead
  • $492,000 Year 1 payroll
  • Model route revenue and disposal fees
  • Include fuel, insurance, and debt service


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup Cost Summary

This table separates startup capex from excluded working capital for a garbage collection business.

Highlighted CAPEX$560,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$22,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$582,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Waste Collection Trucks $400,000 Two truck purchases and prep Yes
Recycling Bins & Carts (Initial Stock) $40,000 Initial carts and bins stock Yes
Online Platform Development $80,000 Platform build and launch setup Yes
Depot Equipment & Tools $25,000 Depot setup and tool needs Yes
Office Setup & Furnishings $15,000 Office fit-out and furniture Yes
Working Capital Reserve $22,000 Month 17 breakeven gap and early losses No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; non-CAPEX cash is working capital.


Garbage Collection Core Five Startup Costs



Collection Vehicles Startup Expense


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Truck CAPEX

For launch, plan $400,000 in truck CAPEX: Waste Collection Truck 1 at $200,000 and Waste Collection Truck 2 at $200,000. This is the core asset spend, not the full startup budget. Size the fleet to route volume and service mix first, because residential, commercial, yard waste, and bulk routes need different truck setups.


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Body Type Choice

Estimate cost from route type, not just truck count. Choose between rear loader, front loader, side loader, and roll-off based on whether the first routes are residential, commercial, yard waste, or bulk item removal. Add inspection, registration, decals, lift equipment, and financing deposits so the truck can earn on day one.

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Ready to Run

Set aside cash for maintenance readiness, not just the purchase price. Trucks need service parts, cleaning, and a backup plan for downtime, or one breakdown can stall a route. If you finance, include the deposit in launch cash need. One idle truck still costs you the route.


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Budget Fit

Truck CAPEX should sit beside, not replace, carts, permits, depot, and staffing costs. If you only budget the two trucks, you miss the rest of launch cash. The right question is: how many trucks do you need to cover the first routes without stretching the schedule or the crew?



Carts, Dumpsters, and Customer Equipment Startup Expense


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Container mix

Match container spend to the first service lines, not to every possible route on day one. The model uses $40,000 of initial stock for recycling bins and carts, so the real question is how many residential, commercial, and bulk customers need gear before billing starts.


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What it covers

This line item covers the containers and field work that make service possible: carts, dumpsters, roll-off boxes, labels, RFID tags if used, repairs, delivery labor, and a replacement reserve. Use quoted unit costs and the number of households or accounts that need bins before the first invoice goes out.

  • Residential trash and recycling: $48/month
  • Commercial waste collection: $220/month
  • Yard waste add-on: $32/month
  • Bulk item removal: $95
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Cut waste

Start with the container types tied to launch routes, then add commercial dumpsters or roll-off boxes only after demand is proven. Avoid stocking spare equipment for services you do not sell yet. Keep a clear replacement reserve, but do not buy deep inventory before you know turnover and damage rates.


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Bill timing

The key planning question is simple: how many customers need containers before billing starts? If bins sit in your yard, cash is tied up. If you deploy too early, you carry repair and replacement risk. Phase purchases against signed accounts and route launch dates, not against a full-year wish list.



Permits, Licensing, and Disposal Access Startup Expense


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Legal Access

This cost covers local waste hauling permits, business registration, state solid waste rules, and Department of Transportation (DOT) or motor carrier filings when trucks trigger those rules. City, county, and state rules vary, so build in application prep, legal review, and any required filings, not a fixed permit price.


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Access Cost

Build the estimate from the number of jurisdictions, account setups, and disposal contracts you need. Include landfill or transfer station accounts, disposal agreements, and any municipal franchise or contract process. If Year 1 mixes $48 residential, $220 commercial, $32 yard waste, and $95 bulk pickup, size access to the route mix. Tipping fees may run at 140% of Year 1 revenue.

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Trim the Spend

Ask for written fee schedules, renewal terms, and transfer-station lead times. File first where routes are live, and wait on expansion until disposal access is proven. That avoids paying for permits you do not use and keeps cash free for trucks and bins.


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Timing Risk

City, county, and state rules vary, and this estimate should not imply a guaranteed franchise award or fixed permit price. A permit delay can push back launch even after trucks are ready, so keep this line separate from truck CAPEX and depot costs.



Depot, Parking, and Maintenance Base Startup Expense


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Depot Base

Keep facility costs separate from tipping and disposal-site fees. This base needs a $2,000 monthly depot lease, plus secure truck parking, zoning, fencing, lighting, gate access, and washdown space. Ask one thing first: can trucks park legally overnight? If not, the whole site plan changes.


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Base Budget

The source model adds $3,500 office rent, $750 for utilities, $25,000 for depot tools and equipment, and $15,000 for office setup and furnishings. That is $40,000 in setup spend, before monthly rent and utilities. Here’s the quick math: $6,250 a month in fixed facility burn.

  • $40,000 upfront setup
  • $6,250 monthly fixed burn
  • Separate from disposal-site fees
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Maintenance Plan

Build the depot for spare parts storage, maintenance tools, and early-route access, not just parking. Decide if basic maintenance is outsourced or done in-house, because that changes space, labor, and tool needs fast. One-liner: parking is cheap until trucks sit idle or block route starts.

  • Check overnight parking legality
  • Budget for washdown needs
  • Plan for spare parts storage

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Site Fit

Put the depot close to the first route cluster so crews can leave early and get back fast. The best site is the one that clears zoning, supports safe access, and keeps trucks off the street at night. If the property cannot handle gates, lighting, or washdown, keep looking.



Insurance, Safety, Staffing, and Route Technology Startup Expense


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Fixed Monthly Stack

This startup carries a heavy recurring base. Monthly fleet insurance is $4,000, general business insurance is $600, and software licenses add $1,500, so fixed monthly spend is $6,100 before payroll. That does not include the one-time $12,000 IT setup or $80,000 platform build.


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Year 1 Payroll

Year 1 staffing is the biggest cash load. CEO is $130,000, operations manager is $90,000, drivers and collection crew are 30 FTE × $55,000, customer service is $42,000, and sales and marketing is $65,000. Here’s the quick math: total labor is $1,977,000.

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Launch Setup

The upfront tech build is $92,000: $12,000 for IT hardware and initial software, plus $80,000 for online platform development. Use that budget for GPS route tracking, billing setup, and customer communication tools, not for ongoing payroll or monthly licenses.


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Safety Controls

Keep PPE, driver training, compliance records, GPS route tracking, billing setup, and customer communication tools in the launch plan. Separate those controls from the $6,100 monthly fixed stack and the $1,977,000 labor load so you can see what is one-time, what repeats, and what must be funded before routes start.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Costs rise fast as the launch moves from one truck to a local route, to the source model, to a larger fleet with more bins, staff, depot space, and working capital.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison for Garbage Collection
Scenario Lean LaunchOwner-operator Base LaunchRoute-based Full LaunchCommercial-ready
Launch model A one-truck local-route launch keeps the model lean and relies on tight route density to stay efficient. This is the source model with two trucks and a balanced route-based launch plan. This version adds a larger fleet and more container-heavy service for municipal or commercial readiness.
Typical setup This setup uses limited carts, outsourced maintenance, and a smaller depot footprint, but it carries higher downtime risk. It includes two $200,000 trucks, $40,000 of initial carts and bins, $25,000 of depot tools, $80,000 of platform development, $12,000 of IT setup, and $15,000 of office setup. It needs more staff, more containers, more depot capacity, stronger insurance coverage, and more working capital.
Cost drivers
  • One truck
  • limited carts and bins
  • outsourced maintenance
  • smaller depot needs
  • basic IT setup
  • Two trucks
  • carts and bins
  • depot tools
  • platform build
  • IT and office setup
  • Larger fleet
  • container inventory
  • extra staff
  • depot capacity
  • higher insurance and working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only $250,000 - $400,000Lower cash need $550,000 - $600,000Model benchmark $800,000 - $1,100,000Higher cash need
Best fit Best for an owner-operator who wants a route-based launch and can keep service simple. Best for a route-based operator that wants the model's Month 17 breakeven path without stretching into full municipal scale. Best for a commercial-ready launch that can support higher route density and handle a tougher Month 17 breakeven risk.

Planning note: These scenario bands are planning assumptions built from the model, not exact vendor quotes. Actual bids, route density, and local compliance needs can move them up or down.

Frequently Asked Questions

The researched base plan shows $572,000 in CAPEX for the launch period The largest line is two waste collection trucks at $200,000 each, or $400,000 total The model also includes $40,000 for recycling bins and carts, $80,000 for platform development, $25,000 for depot tools, $15,000 for office setup, and $12,000 for IT