How Much It Costs To Start A Gardening Service: $178K CAPEX Plan

Gardening Service Startup Costs
Fully Editable
Instant Download
Professional Design
Pre-Built
No Expertise Is Needed
Gardening Service Bundle
See included products:
Financial Model iGardening Service Bundle Financial Model template included in this product.
$149 $109
ADD TO YOUR ORDER
Business Plan iGardening Service Bundle Business Plan template included in this product.
$79 $59
Pitch Deck iGardening Service Bundle Pitch Deck template included in this product.
$49 $29
YOU SAVE $0 TODAY
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Created by a Former CFO
Updated for 2026
One-Time Purchase
Description

This startup cost plan uses researched assumptions for a US gardening service with $178,000 in launch CAPEX across service vans, equipment, trailers, tools, office setup, storage fitout, and initial plant inventory It also separates pre-opening and first operating year cash needs, including $6,150 in monthly fixed overhead, $60,000 in Year 1 marketing, payroll, fuel, insurance, and the $120,000 minimum cash reserve in the model


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimate capitalized startup assets only for a gardening service, including the launch equipment and setup needed before opening.

$
$
$
$
$
12%

Scope note This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes initial plant inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, marketing, fuel, insurance after launch, recurring software, and other operating expenses.



How does the Gardening Service model CAPEX and working capital?

This CAPEX tab maps Month 1–60 startup costs and working capital. Open Gardening Service Financial Model Template and review assumptions.

Financial model screenshot highlights

  • $80k service vans
  • $45k major equipment
  • $12k trailers and racks
  • $6k tools and PPE
  • $20k office/storage setup
  • $15k plant inventory
  • $6,150 monthly overhead
  • $60k Year 1 marketing
  • $120k cash reserve
  • Depreciate vans and equipment
  • Amortize setup costs
  • Track working capital
  • Revenue ramp by month
  • Seasonality planning
  • Month 33 break-even
  • 57-month payback
Gardening Service Financial Model capex inputs showing fixed asset purchases, capital expenditure schedules and depreciation assumptions so users can customize startup and growth investment needs.


What equipment do you need to start a gardening service?


A practical launch for a Gardening Service starts with the right core gear: mowers, trimmers, blowers, hedge tools, hand tools, wheelbarrows, hoses, racks, and safety gear; add sprayers only if you offer treatments. Here’s the quick math: plan about $45,000 for mowers and major equipment, $6,000 for small tools and PPE, and $12,000 for trailers and racks. The real spend moves with equipment quality, property size, service mix, crew count, and whether the founder already has a usable vehicle.

Icon

Must-have launch gear

  • Mowers for routine lawn work
  • Trimmers and blowers for cleanup
  • Hedge tools and hand tools
  • Wheelbarrows, hoses, and racks
Icon

Costs and upgrades

  • $45,000 for major equipment
  • $6,000 for small tools and PPE
  • $12,000 for trailers and racks
  • Upgrades: extra vans, specialty gear, storage

How much does it cost to start a gardening service from scratch?


A crew-ready Gardening Service launch costs $178,000 in CAPEX before operating burn, so the real startup budget must include equipment plus cash to survive year one; track the right success drivers here: What Is The Most Critical Aspect To Measure The Success Of Your Gardening Service?. A bare-minimum solo launch can cost less if you use an existing vehicle and fewer assets, while a standard local launch sits below a higher-capacity setup with vans, trailers, inventory, and crews.

Icon

Startup CAPEX

  • $80,000 vans
  • $45,000 mowers and major equipment
  • $12,000 trailers and racks
  • $6,000 small tools and PPE
Icon

Year-One Cash

  • $20,000 office and storage setup
  • $15,000 initial plant inventory
  • $6,150 monthly fixed costs
  • $120,000 minimum cash reserve

How do you fund a gardening service startup?


If you’re funding a Gardening Service, split the need into CAPEX, pre-opening spend, working capital, and first-year losses. Use $178,000 as the asset-buying anchor and keep at least $120,000 in cash reserve; the model shows negative $278,000 EBITDA in year 1, with Month 33 breakeven and a 57-month payback as borrowing checks. Start with cash, equipment financing, vehicle loans or leases, and local bank debt, then stage purchases so you do not buy two vehicles or a trailer before route density can cover fuel, payroll, and maintenance.

Icon

Funding layers

  • $178,000 CAPEX anchor
  • $120,000 cash reserve
  • Separate launch costs from losses
  • Use cash before long debt
Icon

Borrowing checks

  • Month 33 breakeven check
  • 57-month payback check
  • Buy vehicles only after density
  • Staged purchases lower cash risk


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Startup cash needs for vehicles, equipment, setup, inventory, and the non-CAPEX reserve for a gardening service.

Highlighted CAPEX$178,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$120,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$298,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Service Vans x2 $80,000 Crew transport and route capacity Yes
Mowers and Major Equipment $45,000 Core mowing and landscape work capacity Yes
Trailers, Racks, Tools, and PPE $18,000 Hauling gear, small tools, and worker protection Yes
Office Setup and Storage Fitout $20,000 Admin space and equipment storage setup Yes
Initial Plant Inventory $15,000 Opening plants, mulch, and fertilizer stock Yes
Minimum Cash Reserve $120,000 Owner salary, fuel, vehicle maintenance, repairs, and hiring runway No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched assumptions; operating cash needs are excluded from CAPEX.


Gardening Service Core Five Startup Costs



Gardening Service Equipment Startup Expense


Icon

Core launch gear

If you’re launching with one crew, budget $45,000 for mowers and major equipment and $6,000 for small tools and PPE. That covers mower packages, string trimmers, blowers, hedge trimmers, pruning tools, shovels, rakes, wheelbarrows, hoses, and sprayers if treatments are offered. Bigger properties and more crews push unit counts up fast.


Icon

Crew-based counts

Plan by crew, not by guesswork: one mower package, one trimmer, one blower, and one basic hand-tool set per crew, then add sprayers only if treatments are in scope. Get quotes for each unit, because quality tier and used versus new change cash needs and repair risk. Month 1 covers core gear, Month 2 backups, Month 3 only adds capacity if route volume holds.

  • Month 1: core mower set.
  • Month 2: backup trimmer and blower.
  • Month 3: sprayer or upgrade only.
Icon

Buy for uptime

Used equipment can cut launch cash, but older mowers and blowers raise repair downtime. New gear costs more up front, yet it fits heavier property loads better. Keep consumables, fuel, repairs, and replacement reserves outside CAPEX, your capital spending budget, so the startup asset total stays clean.


Icon

Upgrade only when busy

If you add treatments or larger routes, upgrade into sprayers, extra hose length, and backup trimmers before buying another full mower package. Match spend to property size and crew count, not pride. One clean rule: buy for the next 30 days of jobs, then expand after route density proves the equipment will stay busy.



Gardening Business Vehicle And Trailer Startup Expense


Icon

Launch Transport

If you already own a usable truck, don’t force a new one into launch. Treat vehicles and trailers as capital spending (CAPEX): anchor the plan at $80,000 for two service vans and $12,000 for trailers and racks, including tie-downs, signage, storage, hitch work, and load support. That buys route capacity, not status.


Icon

Cost Build

Size transport from the job plan: equipment load, crew count, service radius, and daily job count. Use units × unit price from vendor quotes for vans, trailers, racks, and hitch work. A tight local route may need one rig; a larger spread needs more capacity. Keep fuel and maintenance out of startup cost.

  • Count vehicles by route density.
  • Quote racks and trailer hardware.
  • Match capacity to crew size.
Icon

Keep It Lean

To keep launch spend down, use owned vehicles first if they are reliable, then add trailers before adding another van. Don’t buy for a peak month. Model fuel and vehicle maintenance as variable operating costs at 5% of Year 1 revenue, so the startup budget stays focused on fixed assets only.


Icon

Capacity Rule

Transport should scale with the workbook, not the ego. If the first jobs are close together and the crew is small, one vehicle plus a trailer can be enough; if the route gets wider or the load grows, add vans later. That keeps cash tied to daily job count, not idle metal.



Gardening Service License And Insurance Startup Expense


Icon

What it covers

License and insurance cost means business registration, city or county permits, general liability, commercial auto if work vehicles are used, workers’ compensation if hiring, and pesticide applicator licensing only if you apply chemicals. Basic mowing, pruning, weeding, and planting do not imply pesticide licensing.


Icon

How to price it

Use the $600 per month insurance run-rate as an operating cost, then add registration fees, permit quotes, and any policy deposits that may land in pre-opening expense. The real drivers are service scope, state rules, employee count, subcontractors, owned vehicles, and whether chemical treatments are included.

Icon

Keep it lean

Ask what the business actually does before buying coverage. If you start with no employees, no owned vehicles, and no chemical work, the setup stays simpler and cheaper. Don’t overbuy policies or licenses you do not need; get quotes that match the exact service mix and route setup.


Icon

Scope check

Before launch, confirm four things: employees, subcontractors, owned vehicles, and chemical treatments. Those answers decide whether you need workers’ comp, commercial auto, or pesticide licensing, and they shape the total startup budget more than the paperwork itself.



Initial Supplies And PPE Startup Expense


Icon

Safety Kit

Launch with a tight safety-and-tools kit, not a full stockroom. Budget $6,000 for gloves, eye and ear protection, uniforms, first-aid kit, trash bags, small replacement parts, fuel cans, cleaning supplies, and starter consumables. This is one-time CAPEX for crew readiness, separate from plants, mulch, and soil billed to customers.


Icon

Plant Stock

Use $15,000 for initial plant inventory and keep it apart from customer-billed plants, mulch, and soil. Estimate it from units × unit price, plus weeks of coverage and season mix. In Year 1, recurring plants, mulch, and fertilizer run at 8% of revenue, with seasonal supplies and commission at 5%.

  • Stocked: plants, mulch, fertilizer
  • Ready: gloves, PPE, first-aid kit
  • Job-billed: plants, mulch, soil
Icon

Control Waste

Buy only what the first crew needs for Month 1, then refill from quotes and job volume. Don’t overbuy seasonal plants or consumables; dead stock ties up cash fast. Keep safety gear fully funded, but push excess plant variety into customer orders so launch stock stays lean and usable.


Icon

Separate Costs

Keep one-time launch supplies separate from pass-through materials. That means PPE and small tools stay in startup CAPEX, while plants, mulch, and soil move through the job ticket. This makes Year 1 spending cleaner and keeps recurring material cost tied to revenue instead of buried in launch cash.



Marketing Website And Software Startup Expense


Icon

Launch stack

This is pre-opening spend, not equipment CAPEX. Build the website, local search setup, search profile, email, scheduling, invoicing, payment links, flyers, door hangers, referral cards, and launch promos before day one. With a $60,000 Year 1 marketing budget and $120 CAC, the plan funds about 500 customers.


Icon

Cost inputs

Estimate this from vendor quotes, months of coverage, and setup tasks. The running base is $400 software, $150 hosting and maintenance, and $300 utilities and phone, or $850 a month. It should support the core launch stack, not buy gear.

  • Website and local search
  • Phone, email, scheduling
  • Invoicing and payment setup
Icon

Spend control

Keep paid ads optional until local search and referral materials work. Use launch spend to prove demand before buying more equipment or hiring extra crew. At $120 CAC, every $1,200 should bring roughly 10 customers.

  • Test one channel first
  • Track CAC weekly
  • Scale only after repeat sales

Icon

Budget gate

If customer acquisition does not stay near $120 CAC, slow the launch and fix the funnel first. The monthly base is only $850, so the real risk is overspending on ads or headcount before demand is proven.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

A lean start keeps cash needs low with one owner, an existing vehicle, and fewer fixed costs. Base matches the full capex plan, while Full adds staffing, marketing, and cash reserve.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchOwner-operated start Base LaunchModel-backed setup Full LaunchGrowth-ready build
Launch model Run the business with one owner, an existing vehicle, and a small tool set. Use the researched startup plan as written, with the full core equipment buildout. Launch with stronger crew readiness, broader equipment, and more working capital.
Typical setup Keep fixed space light, defer trailer or van purchases, and limit marketing spend. Buy two vans, major equipment, trailers, tools and PPE, office storage fitout, and initial plant inventory. Plan for $6,150 monthly fixed overhead, $60,000 Year 1 marketing, and a $120,000 cash reserve.
Cost drivers
  • Owner labor
  • existing vehicle
  • fewer tools
  • limited marketing
  • deferred trailer
  • Two vans
  • major equipment
  • trailers and racks
  • office storage fitout
  • plant inventory
  • Crew buildup
  • broader equipment
  • higher marketing
  • working capital
  • fixed overhead
Planning rangeCAPEX only $50,000 - $100,000Lowest cash need $178,000Reference plan $350,000 - $450,000Highest cash need
Best fit Best for founders who can work in the field and want to keep startup risk low. Best for owners who want a balanced launch built around the researched model. Best for teams that want faster growth and can carry higher fixed costs.

Planning note: These scenario ranges use researched planning assumptions from the model, not exact vendor quotes or guaranteed costs.

Frequently Asked Questions

This researched plan carries a $120,000 minimum cash reserve, with the lowest cash point shown in Month 38 That reserve matters because the model does not break even until Month 33 and shows negative $278,000 EBITDA in Year 1 Treat cash reserve as working capital, not equipment cost