Hair Removal Salon Startup Costs: $1325K CAPEX Plan

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Description

For this hair removal salon plan, startup CAPEX is $1325K, led by a $60K salon build-out and $25K waxing beds and treatment equipment Total funding need is much higher because the model shows $807K of minimum cash in Month 5, before the business reaches breakeven in Month 6 These are researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes or guarantees A waxing-focused studio can stay lighter, while a laser-heavy concept usually needs more equipment, compliance work, and working capital



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

This estimates capitalized startup assets only for a Hair Removal Salon, so you can size the upfront cash tied up in build-out, equipment, and opening assets.

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CAPEX only Excludes inventory, payroll runway, rent, utilities, software subscriptions, taxes, debt service, owner draw, deposits, working capital, and other operating expenses. This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only.



What does this Hair Removal Salon screenshot show?

This screenshot shows the Hair Removal Salon Financial Model Template's CAPEX, startup costs, revenue, payroll, runway. Review assumptions.

Key screenshot points

  • $1.325M CAPEX assets
  • Deposits, pre-opening costs
  • 18 visits, 310 days
  • Payroll by role
  • Depreciation and amortization
  • $807K peak in Month 5
  • Lender, investor, lease decisions
Hair Removal Salon Financial Model capex inputs detailing startup and ongoing capital expenditures, letting users customize equipment, leasehold improvements, and investment timing for accurate cash planning and runway.


How much funding do I need for a hair removal salon?


For a Hair Removal Salon, funding should cover about $1.325M in startup CAPEX plus pre-opening expenses, working capital, ramp-up losses, rent deposits, insurance, licenses, payroll, launch marketing, and contingency. The base model peaks at a $807K minimum cash need in Month 5, reaches breakeven in Month 6, and pays back in about 20 months; Year 1 EBITDA is only $9K, so the cash cushion matters more than early profit.

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Fund the build

  • Cover startup CAPEX
  • Cover pre-opening costs
  • Cover payroll ramp-up
  • Cover launch marketing
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Test the plan

  • Check lease timing
  • Check hiring plan
  • Check room count
  • Check service launch sequence

What hidden costs come with opening a hair removal salon?


Hidden costs in a Hair Removal Salon go well beyond equipment and build-out: deposits, permits, licenses, insurance setup, staff onboarding, and launch payroll can hit cash before the first client. If you want a benchmark on owner economics, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Hair Removal Salon Typically Make?

Then add $15K initial inventory, $5K signage, $8K POS hardware, and $25K security equipment. Monthly fixed costs run about $47.1K before 2% payment processing and 5% marketing in Year 1.

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Upfront cash needs

  • $15K initial inventory stock
  • $5K signage
  • $8K POS hardware
  • $25K security equipment
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Monthly cost load

  • $45K rent
  • $800 utilities, $250 insurance
  • $300 software, $400 cleaning
  • $150 security, $200 professional fees

What is the biggest cost to open a hair removal salon?


For a Hair Removal Salon, the biggest listed startup cost is usually build-out at $60K, ahead of $25K for waxing beds and treatment equipment. Lease rent at $45K/month is a separate operating cost, so don’t mix it with leasehold improvements. If the salon adds higher-cost device-based services, equipment can become the biggest item, but not every salon uses medical-grade laser equipment.

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Build-out costs

  • $60K is the top startup cost
  • Private rooms can drive it up
  • Lighting and plumbing add work
  • Reception flow and signage matter
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Equipment costs

  • $25K covers beds and equipment
  • Device-based services can cost more
  • Do not assume laser equipment
  • Rent stays separate at $45K/month


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table summarizes startup CAPEX and excluded launch cash for a hair removal salon across low, base, and high planning cases.

Highlighted CAPEX$118,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$807,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$925,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Salon Build-out & Renovation $60,000 Leasehold finish scope and materials Yes
Waxing Beds & Treatment Equipment $25,000 Equipment count and quality level Yes
Initial Inventory Stock $15,000 Opening stock depth for wax and treatment supplies Yes
Reception & Waiting Area Furniture $10,000 Front-desk and seating package size Yes
POS & Booking System Hardware $8,000 Hardware count and setup complexity Yes
Opening Cash Buffer $807,000 Payroll, rent, and launch timing through Month 5 No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched assumptions; CAPEX excludes launch cash, debt service, and owner draw.


Hair Removal Salon Core Five Startup Costs



Treatment Equipment Startup Expense


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Waxing Gear

The base model sets $25K for waxing beds and treatment equipment. That should cover beds, warmers, carts, linens, applicators, sterilization tools, and storage. To size it right, count each station and get quotes by service type: waxing, sugaring, threading, electrolysis, and laser. Keep electrolysis and laser separate because device costs and state rules are stricter.


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What to Count

Estimate this line as units × unit price, then add shipping, setup, and any spare items needed on day one. Threading uses lighter gear, but it still needs private client space and sanitation supplies. If you lease or finance equipment, list the monthly payment instead of the full purchase price so the startup cash plan stays clean.

  • Count treatment stations
  • Separate purchase and lease
  • Quote higher-risk devices separately
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Cash Choice

This cost sits inside launch equipment, not rent or payroll. Decide early whether the gear is purchased, financed, leased, or added after launch, because that changes day-one cash need. If laser or electrolysis is planned later, hold it outside the base model until you have the room, the rules, and the quotes.


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Service Mix

Waxing and sugaring need a fuller setup; threading needs less gear but still needs a private, sanitary room. Laser and electrolysis usually push equipment cost higher, so model them only if they are part of launch, not a later add-on.



Build-Out And Treatment Room Startup Expense


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Build-Out Budget

The base model sets $60K for salon build-out and renovation, separate from $45K in monthly rent and lease deposits. It covers private treatment rooms, reception, waiting, storage, sanitation flow, lighting, utility access, flooring, wall finishes, client privacy, and a code-ready layout. The biggest swing factor is whether the site is second-generation salon space or a raw retail shell.


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What Drives Cost

Here’s the quick math: estimate by square footage, treatment-room count, and the quote set for finishes and utility work. Ask for line items on walls, flooring, lighting, plumbing, and any code fixes. This is capital spending (CAPEX), so it belongs in startup funds, not rent. A tight scope keeps the opening budget readable.

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Spend Smarter

Use the existing layout when you can. A second-generation salon space can reduce demo and utility work because it may already have sinks, rooms, and privacy walls. Don’t overbuild reception or storage before demand proves out. The wrong place to cut is sanitation flow or client privacy; those two affect compliance and repeat bookings.

  • Reuse existing plumbing runs
  • Keep room count lean
  • Verify code before finishes

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Location Check

Before you sign, confirm what the landlord is delivering. If it’s a raw retail shell, the $60K build-out line can move fast because you’re creating treatment rooms, utility access, and the client path from scratch. If it’s already salon-ready, more of that spend can stay in reserve for opening.



Licenses Insurance And Compliance Startup Expense


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State and city rules

Licenses and insurance are not one-size-fits-all. Hair removal rules can change by state, city, and service type, so waxing, sugaring, threading, electrolysis, and laser may each trigger different board, sanitation, and safety rules. Build the budget around required filings, renewals, and proof of coverage, not a single flat fee.


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Base monthly cost

The base model uses $250/month for business insurance and $200/month for professional fees, or $450/month before any workers compensation, employer registrations, or local license renewals. That keeps the compliance line simple: one budget for coverage, one for filings, and one for service-specific rules like laser safety if you offer it.

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What to check

Start by confirming the business license, salon license, esthetician or cosmetology board rules, sanitation standards, and any employer registrations. If you add laser, check extra safety rules early. One-liner: the service menu drives the paperwork, so every new treatment should trigger a compliance review before launch.


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Keep it lean

Keep this cost down by matching coverage to your actual services and staffing plan. A small waxing-only shop usually has a lighter compliance load than a salon adding electrolysis or laser. Don’t buy broad coverage or extra permits you don’t need, but don’t skip liability or workers compensation if you hire staff.



Opening Supplies And Consumables Startup Expense


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Opening Stock

Before the first appointments, budget $15K for opening inventory. That covers wax, sugar paste, strips, gloves, disposable applicators, towels, linens, disinfectants, aftercare items, retail products, and sanitation supplies. Estimate it from opening units times unit cost, plus enough coverage for the first booking wave. This is startup cash, not monthly supply spend.


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Recurring Supply Cost

Year 1 wax and treatment supplies are modeled at 7% of revenue, and retail product inventory COGS is 3%. COGS, or cost of goods sold, is the spend tied to each service or product sold. Model it from monthly revenue, then keep opening stock separate so you do not double count the same items.

  • Service supplies: 7% of revenue
  • Retail inventory: 3% of revenue
  • Opening stock: $15K upfront
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Buy What You Use

Order to par levels, not fear. Track appointment counts, then refill wax, strips, gloves, and aftercare from actual use. Watch slow retail items, because they trap cash. The main mistake is stocking the same product twice: once at launch and again in monthly COGS. Compare vendor quotes before you lock the first order.


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Cash Timing

The risk is cash timing, not just price. With $15K in opening inventory and ongoing supply spend at 7% plus 3% for retail, you still need room for reorders as bookings grow. Build the first purchase around launch volume and supplier lead times, so inventory does not run thin during busy weeks.



Launch Systems Staffing And Marketing Startup Expense


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Launch stack

Booking software, POS, website, local search setup, launch ads, training, and front desk coverage all sit in this cost. The base model starts with $8K for POS and booking hardware, plus $300 a month for software, 5% of Year 1 revenue for marketing, and 2% for payment processing.


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Payroll base

Year 1 staffing is the main launch cash need. The base model includes a salon manager at $60K, senior esthetician at $55K, junior esthetician at $40K, receptionist at $35K, and 0.5 FTE cleaning staff at a $20K annual salary basis.

  • Count pre-opening weeks covered
  • Match hires to booked demand
  • Keep training time in budget
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Keep it lean

Cut spend by keeping the website simple, delaying extra software, and using just enough launch marketing to fill the first calendar. Don’t cut payment setup or receptionist coverage; missed calls and slow check-in can hurt early reviews faster than small savings help.

  • Buy only needed software seats
  • Train before opening week
  • Use one launch campaign

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Cash timing

Front-load the cash for launch systems and staffing before the first bookings hit. The spend is not just setup; it also funds the $300 monthly software, 2% payment fees, and any pre-opening payroll months needed to open with smooth client flow.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Startup cost swings with room count, equipment, and payroll runway. Lean, Base, and Full show how a small waxing studio differs from a larger premium salon.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchSmall studio Base LaunchModel case Full LaunchHigher risk
Launch model A small waxing-focused studio with fewer rooms and a lighter equipment set. A full salon launch using the provided model with standard build-out, equipment, and staffing. A laser-heavy or premium multi-room salon with higher build-out, compliance, and staffing needs.
Typical setup One to two treatment rooms, basic wax gear, and a tight front desk setup. Two to three rooms, $60K build-out, $25K treatment equipment, and $15K initial inventory. Four or more rooms, stronger electrical work, more equipment, and a longer cash runway.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller build-out
  • lighter equipment
  • lower opening inventory
  • shorter payroll runway
  • 60K build-out
  • 25K treatment equipment
  • 15K initial inventory
  • full payroll
  • 807K minimum cash need
  • Larger build-out
  • laser equipment
  • compliance and electrical work
  • higher staffing
  • more working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only $250,000 - $450,000Lower cash need $800,000 - $900,000Base funding $1,000,000 - $1,500,000Higher cash need
Best fit Best for founders who want to test demand before committing to a larger salon footprint. Best for operators who want the model's core setup and enough runway to reach Month 6 breakeven. Best for founders building a premium location that needs more rooms, more staff, and more upfront cash.

Planning note: These bands are researched planning assumptions for launch planning, not exact vendor quotes or bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

In this plan, startup CAPEX is $1325K, with $60K for build-out and $25K for treatment equipment Total funding need is higher because the salon also needs payroll, rent, supplies, deposits, and ramp-up cash The model shows a $807K minimum cash need in Month 5 and breakeven in Month 6