How Much Does It Cost To Open A Home Decor Store? $94K-$124K CAPEX

Home Decor Store Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Inventory exposure is modeled, not a fixed startup amount.
  • Buildout needs $40,000 plus rent, utilities, cleaning.
  • Fixtures and tech need upfront cash and monthly run-rate.
  • Pre-opening payroll and marketing can drain cash fast.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for opening a home decor store.

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Exclusions This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes inventory, deposits, prepaid rent, payroll runway, debt service, working capital, launch marketing, licenses, insurance, freight, and ongoing operating expenses.



What does the CAPEX and startup view show?

This Home Decor Store Financial Model Template shows CAPEX, startup expenses, timing, and depreciation; open it to test assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • $40k build-out, $25k fixtures
  • $5k POS, $3k security
  • $7k signage, $4k computers
  • $10k website, $30k van
  • Month 1-60 timing
  • $5,850 overhead, $18,750 payroll
  • Inventory, working capital
  • Depreciation and amortization
  • Test assumptions before funding
Home Decor Store Financial Model capex inputs allowing customization of fixed asset purchases, depreciation schedules and startup investments; user-friendly interface for scenario-ready forecasting.


What hidden costs of opening a home decor store are often missed?


Hidden costs for a Home Decor Store are mostly the pre-opening deposits, setup fees, and operating cushion, and they add up fast. If you’re asking how this compares to earnings, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Home Decor Store Typically Make? for the revenue side. Here’s the quick math: $5,850 in fixed monthly costs plus $18,750 in Year 1 payroll means $24,600 in monthly cash burn before inventory reorders, so a $94,000 CAPEX plan can be underfunded.

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Pre-open costs

  • Rent deposits and first month’s rent
  • Utility deposits and insurance binders
  • Freight surcharges and delivery charges
  • Packaging, damage allowance, launch marketing
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Monthly burn

  • $4,500 lease cost each month
  • $400 utilities, $150 insurance
  • $250 POS/ecommerce, $100 CRM
  • $80 analytics, $70 security, $300 cleaning

How much money do I need to open a home decor store?


You need $94,000 in CAPEX to open a Home Decor Store, or $124,000 including the $30,000 Month 7 delivery van; track the key sales driver with What Is The Most Critical Metric To Measure The Success Of Your Home Decor Store?. Keep initial inventory and working capital separate from CAPEX, since funding moves with store size, rent market, buildout condition, inventory depth, and furniture-versus-accessories mix. Monthly operating burn is $24,600: $5,850 fixed overhead plus $18,750 Year 1 payroll. One math check: $160 × 12 units = $1,920, not $192, so validate the AOV input before buying stock.

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Startup funding

  • Budget $94,000 before delivery vehicle
  • Add $30,000 van in Month 7
  • Total CAPEX with van: $124,000
  • Fund inventory and working capital separately
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Operating math

  • Fixed overhead: $5,850/month
  • Year 1 payroll: $18,750/month
  • Total burn: $24,600/month
  • Traffic plan: 660 visitors, 40% conversion

How should I fund a home decor store?


Fund the Home Decor Store in tranches, not one lump sum. Base CAPEX runs from Month 1 through Month 7: $40,000 build-out, $25,000 fixtures, $10,000 website, and a later $30,000 delivery van, while payroll starts in Month 1 at $18,750 per month in Year 1. Here’s the quick math: add $5,850 in fixed overhead and fund enough working capital to cover inventory buys, then reruns, before sales ramp from 660 weekly visitors, 40% conversion, $192 AOV, and repeat customers at 250% of new customers.

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Fund by milestone

  • Lease signing starts the draw.
  • Release build-out cash next.
  • Pay fixtures at install.
  • Fund inventory before opening.
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Protect cash flow

  • Cover $18,750 monthly payroll.
  • Carry $5,850 fixed overhead.
  • Bridge pre-opening costs.
  • Save cash for reorder timing.


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table covers startup assets and the separate cash buffer needed before the store breaks even.

Highlighted CAPEX$110,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$109,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$219,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Store Build-out Renovation $40,000 Leasehold work, finishes, and setup Yes
Display Furniture Fixtures $25,000 Showroom fixtures and display units Yes
Delivery Van $30,000 Vehicle purchase timing and condition Yes
Initial Website Development $10,000 Build scope and launch features Yes
POS Hardware $5,000 Checkout hardware and setup Yes
Minimum Cash Buffer $109,000 Monthly lease, payroll, utilities, software, and cleaning before breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched planning assumptions; non-CAPEX items and ongoing monthly costs are excluded.


Home Decor Store Core Five Startup Costs



Initial Inventory Startup Expense


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Opening Mix

This cost covers opening stock for furniture, wall decor, rugs, lighting, textiles, candles, tabletop items, seasonal goods, and display samples. The modeled starter mix uses accent chairs at 250%, decorative vases at 300%, throw pillows at 200%, area rugs at 150%, and side tables at 100%.


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Price Mix

Use retail prices of $380, $50, $35, $200, and $130 to size exposure. The weighted Year 1 unit retail price is about $160, and the source model shows $192 AOV at 12 units per order. That makes inventory depth a cash driver, not a one-time guess.

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Cash Drivers

Vendor minimums, freight, fragile goods, lead times, seasonal turns, and damage allowance push cash need up fast. A rug, vase, or light fixture can tie up money before it sells, so order depth should match delivery timing and display needs. Keep inventory separate from CAPEX.


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Budget Rule

No fixed inventory startup dollar amount is provided in the source data, so the budget should be built from the opening assortment and replenishment plan. One clean rule: size inventory to the launch mix, then add a cushion for breakage, freight, and seasonal swaps.



Lease And Buildout Startup Expense


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Build-Out Cash

The opening budget should separate $40,000 of store build-out from rent. That renovation runs from Month 1 to Month 3 and covers leasehold improvements, paint, flooring, lighting upgrades, checkout, backroom setup, and inspection readiness. It does not include monthly rent, which starts at $4,500 per month.


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Separate Rent

Keep refundable deposits and prepaid rent out of CAPEX (capital expenditures, meaning long-lived assets). At $4,500 monthly rent, the first 3 months cost $13,500 before sales. Add operating readiness costs of $400 for utilities and $300 for cleaning each month.

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Cut Fit-Out Spend

Trim build-out cost by matching the lease to the space you need. A landlord-delivered shell costs less than a full finish-out, and smaller square footage lowers lighting, stockroom, and vignette work. Keep the checkout area simple, avoid overbuilding the backroom, and ask for tenant allowances before you spend.


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What Drives the Cost

Cost swings with landlord delivery condition, square footage, lighting needs, stockroom space, and whether the store shows furniture vignettes. A simple shell with basic displays costs less than a fully staged room. If inspection work takes longer, rent and readiness costs stack up before revenue starts.



Fixtures And Displays Startup Expense


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Fixture CAPEX

Treat owned durable fixtures as capital spending (CAPEX), not supplies. The base model sets aside $25,000 from Month 2 to Month 4 for display furniture, so the store opens with a real showroom, not empty walls. Keep this separate from temporary merchandising supplies, then depreciate the asset over time.


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What It Covers

This line covers shelving, display tables, wall systems, room vignettes, a checkout counter, storage racks, mirrors, props, presentation lighting, and furniture display pieces. Size it with vendor quotes and counts: units × unit price, plus delivery and install. The floor plan should balance what is shown with what is stored.

  • More assortment needs more fixtures.
  • Furniture mix changes fixture strength.
  • Rug display method changes space.
  • Shown versus stored drives layout.
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Keep It Durable

Keep durable fixtures apart from hang tags, packaging, and seasonal props, because those are operating supplies. That split keeps the startup budget clean and avoids padding assets with short-life items. Buy the pieces that shape the room first, then reuse flexible props as collections change. One clean rule: if it lasts, capitalize it.


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Why It Pays Back

Home decor buyers need to see scale, texture, and combinations, so fixtures affect sales, not just looks. If rugs are rolled, furniture is sparse, or wall art lacks context, shoppers guess instead of buy. Spend on the display mix that makes the product feel real, and keep the rest simple.



Technology POS And Security Startup Expense


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Opening cash

Before opening, budget $12,000 in tech CAPEX: $5,000 POS hardware, $3,000 security installation, and $4,000 computer equipment. This covers the checkout stack, cameras, alarms, and back-office devices. Keep these one-time costs separate from monthly software so you do not overstate opening cash needs.


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POS stack

The POS line should cover payment terminals, barcode scanners, label printers, inventory software setup, Wi-Fi, and any ecommerce add-on planned for Year 1. Size it from vendor quotes, number of lanes, and number of devices. One clean rule: hardware is upfront CAPEX, while software and support belong in monthly run-rate.

  • Count every checkout device
  • Quote setup fees separately
  • Split store and online tools
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Monthly burn

Recurring tech overhead is $500 per month: $250 POS/ecommerce platform, $100 CRM, $80 analytics, and $70 security monitoring. On top of that, Year 1 ecommerce sales carry 20% transaction fees, and card processing sits separately. Here’s the quick math: monthly software is fixed, but online fees rise with sales.


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Fee control

Cut waste by buying only the lanes and devices you need, then scale after opening. Ask for bundled installation, but avoid turning monthly subscriptions into one-time costs. The biggest mistake is mixing hardware, software, and payment fees in one bucket; that hides burn and makes break-even look better than it is.

  • Buy by device, not by package
  • Keep subscriptions on a monthly line
  • Review payment fees before launch


Pre-Opening Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch Cash

Pre-opening readiness is mostly cash, not assets: business registration, resale permit setup, insurance binders, hiring, training, product photos, launch marketing, signage, packaging, bags, cleaning, and store supplies. In this model, carry $150/month insurance, 30% of Year 1 sales for launch marketing, $5,850/month fixed overhead, and $18,750/month payroll from Month 1.


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What To Budget

Budget each line from quotes and coverage periods: filing fees, permit fees, insurance binders, professional fees, training days, photo shoots, and short-run packaging, shopping bags, and signs. Keep these as startup cash or working capital unless the item is durable. The quick math uses quotes, units, and months of coverage.

  • Use vendor quotes.
  • Separate CAPEX from cash.
  • Track months of coverage.
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Keep It Lean

Keep launch spend tight: buy only what opening week needs, batch print signage, and reuse photo content across store and web. Don’t overbuy bags, props, or cleaning goods just because they’re cheap. If it won’t last, treat it as working capital, not a durable asset.

  • Order supplies in small runs.
  • Reuse photo assets.
  • Delay nonessential extras.

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Early Burn

Payroll starts in Month 1 at $18,750/month across five roles, so cash can drain before sales settle. Add $5,850/month fixed overhead and $150/month insurance, and the store carries a heavy base cost before variable marketing at 30% of Year 1 sales.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Store size, inventory depth, and staffing move startup cash fast. Lean keeps the launch tight, base matches the model, and full adds stock, displays, and delivery muscle.

Funding bands for accessory-led, neighborhood base, and showroom launches.
Scenario Lean LaunchAccessory-led Base LaunchNeighborhood base Full LaunchFurniture showroom
Launch model Accessory-led shop with a smaller floor, lighter furniture depth, delayed van purchase, and limited paid launch spend. Neighborhood home decor store with the model's opening-period CAPEX and the Month 7 delivery van. Furniture showroom with deeper stock, stronger displays, larger staff, delivery capacity, and more working capital.
Typical setup Focus on pillows, vases, and a few hero pieces; keep the buildout simple and use third-party delivery at first. Carry a balanced mix of furniture and decor, finish the standard buildout, and keep one delivery vehicle in plan. Build a broader showroom, hold more large-ticket furniture, and support in-house delivery and service.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller buildout
  • lighter inventory
  • delayed van
  • lower launch marketing
  • basic staffing
  • Standard buildout
  • mixed inventory depth
  • launch marketing
  • one delivery van
  • full opening staff
  • Larger buildout
  • deeper inventory
  • more staff
  • delivery capacity
  • higher working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only $70,000 - $95,000Lean band $94,000 - $124,000Core band $140,000 - $200,000Growth band
Best fit Best for founders testing demand in a tight neighborhood location with limited upfront cash. Best for operators who want the modeled store mix and a clean path to breakeven planning. Best for well-funded teams targeting a fuller showroom experience and a larger average ticket.

Planning note: These ranges are planning assumptions built from the model, not supplier quotes or lease bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

The source model does not give one fixed inventory dollar amount, so size it from the sales mix Year 1 mix is 250% accent chairs, 300% decorative vases, 200% throw pillows, 150% area rugs, and 100% side tables At the modeled prices, the weighted retail price is about $160 per unit and about $192 per order