HVAC Cleaning Startup Costs: Plan $122K CAPEX Before Launch

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Description

The cost to start an HVAC cleaning business in this researched plan starts with about $122,000 in CAPEX before adding payroll runway, insurance, marketing, and reserve cash The largest startup assets are $60,000 for two service vehicles, $25,000 for HVAC cleaning equipment sets, and $15,000 for Year 1 marketing Total funding need is higher than equipment cost because the model shows Year 1 EBITDA of -$51,000, breakeven in Month 9, and minimum cash of $779,000 in Month 15 Treat these figures as researched planning assumptions for a US service business, not fixed prices or guaranteed outcomes



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for an HVAC cleaning business. Base case matches the model's $122,000 startup asset total.

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Excluded from CAPEX This calculator covers one-time startup assets only. It excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, licenses, insurance, marketing, and ongoing operating costs.



What does the HVAC Cleaning CAPEX tab show?

This HVAC Cleaning Financial Model Template CAPEX tab maps $122,000 startup assets, Month 1-6 timing, and depreciation; review assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • Equipment, vehicles, IT
  • Month 1-6 launch timing
  • Month 9 breakeven
  • EBITDA ramps to $1.5M
HVAC Cleaning Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timelines, letting users customize equipment, installation and upgrade costs for accurate budgeting and scenario-ready projections


How much money do I need to start an HVAC cleaning business?


You need about $122,000 in startup CAPEX plus enough runway to cover $15,000 Year 1 marketing, $187,500 Year 1 payroll, and early losses before breakeven; see What Is The Current Growth Trend For HVAC Cleaning Business? before sizing demand. Tools alone are the cheap version; a launch-ready HVAC Cleaning business needs vehicles, insurance, lead generation, payroll, and cash reserves because Year 1 EBITDA is -$51,000.

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Base Funding Need

  • $122,000 startup CAPEX
  • $15,000 Year 1 marketing
  • $187,500 Year 1 payroll
  • $4,100 monthly fixed expenses
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Cash Runway

  • Breakeven hits Month 9
  • Payback takes 29 months
  • Cash need peaks at $779,000
  • Peak occurs in Month 15

How much does air duct cleaning equipment cost?


For HVAC Cleaning, equipment-only cost usually starts around $25,000 for a full cleaning set, plus about $8,000 for advanced diagnostic tools and $7,000 for specialized duct cameras. Service vehicles add $60,000 and should stay separate from machine cost; an entry-level portable setup is far cheaper than a two-vehicle professional-ready setup.

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Core gear

  • Negative air machine
  • Brush or whip system
  • HEPA vacuum
  • Compressor and access tools
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Missed costs

  • Inspection camera and ladders
  • Storage setup and fit-out
  • Insurance, website, marketing
  • Supplies, payroll, cash reserve

How do I build an HVAC cleaning business financial plan?


For HVAC Cleaning, build the financial plan from startup cash and service math first: $122,000 of CAPEX, $15,000 of Year 1 marketing, $187,500 of payroll, $4,100 in monthly fixed expenses, 22% variable costs, and $150 CAC. Use the service mix in Year 1 at 70% residential, 15% commercial, 10% annual maintenance, and 30% add-on services, then price around $85 per hour for 4 hours residential and $120 per hour for 12 hours commercial. That gets you to Month 9 breakeven, 29-month payback, and EBITDA moving from -$51,000 in Year 1 to $185,000 in Year 2.

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Startup cost base

  • $122,000 CAPEX up front
  • $15,000 Year 1 marketing budget
  • $187,500 Year 1 payroll
  • $4,100 fixed expenses each month
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Revenue and return math

  • 22% variable cost load on revenue
  • 70% residential, 15% commercial
  • 10% maintenance, 30% add-ons
  • Month 9 breakeven, 29-month payback


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup Cost Summary Table

Startup cost summary for HVAC Cleaning showing core CAPEX and the separate working capital reserve needed before breakeven.

Highlighted CAPEX$122,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$779,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$901,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
HVAC Equipment, Diagnostic Tools, and Duct Cameras $40,000 Cleaning gear, inspection tools, and camera systems Yes
Service Vehicles $60,000 Two service vehicles and startup transport setup Yes
Office Furniture and IT Setup $10,000 Desk, storage, computers, and scheduling setup Yes
Initial Cleaning Inventory $5,000 First stock of cleaning agents, PPE, and parts Yes
Website Build and Signage $7,000 Launch site, hosting setup, and exterior signage Yes
Working Capital Reserve $779,000 Covers payroll, rent, marketing, fuel, and the Month 15 cash trough No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched startup assumptions; working capital excludes payroll, debt service, taxes, and ongoing costs.


HVAC Cleaning Core Five Startup Costs



HVAC Duct Cleaning Equipment Startup Expense


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Core gear

Treat the first equipment buy as CAPEX. A starter set at $25,000 plus $8,000 in advanced diagnostic tools and $7,000 in duct cameras puts launch spend near $40,000. That package covers the negative air machine, rotary brush, air whip, HEPA vacuum, compressor, access tools, inspection camera, and ladders.


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What it includes

Keep durable gear separate from consumables. Buy the machine set once, then budget cleaning agents, PPE, replacement parts, filters, and sanitizer as operating spend. If it is reused on every job, it is equipment; if it gets used up on a job, it is a consumable.

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Size the mix

Match the kit to the work mix. In Year 1, 40 residential billable hours at $85/hour equals $3,400, while 120 commercial hours at $120/hour equals $14,400. If you expect more commercial work, prioritize faster setup, stronger suction, and better inspection gear.


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Spend control

To cut the launch bill, get written quotes for each line, and avoid paying for rarely used add-ons on day one. The main mistake is mixing durable gear with monthly consumables, which hides true startup cost and distorts margin planning.



HVAC Cleaning Service Vehicle Startup Expense


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Vehicle CAPEX

Vehicle purchase or upfit is CAPEX, not a monthly expense. The researched launch plan assumes 2 service vehicles at $60,000 each, or $120,000 upfront before fuel, insurance, repairs, parking, or financing. The real question is whether a used van or newer vehicle better fits the service radius and crew count.


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Upfit and Storage

The vehicle cost should cover shelving, equipment loading, mobile storage, signage, and wrap, not just the van itself. That setup keeps tools secure and speeds jobsite turn time for two-person crews. Here’s the quick math: if the gear is heavy or bulky, the upfit matters as much as the purchase price.

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Fleet Size

Start by asking how many crews you can run on day one. A one-vehicle launch lowers upfront cash use, but it can limit jobsite mobility if crews split or work wide service areas. A two-vehicle launch fits the plan better when equipment weight, route density, and daily dispatch need more than one truck.


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Running Costs

Keep operating costs separate from purchase cost. Vehicle insurance is fixed at $600 per month, and fuel plus maintenance are budgeted at 7% of Year 1 revenue. That split helps you see the true cash burn. If financing is used, treat loan payments as a separate line from insurance and upkeep.



Licensing, Insurance, And Certification Startup Expense


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Compliance Spend

Plan on $300 per month for business insurance and $600 per month for vehicle insurance, or $900 per month before permits and certification. This usually covers general liability, commercial auto, and proof-of-insurance needs for residential and commercial jobs. If you hire, add workers compensation.


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What It Covers

Budget for local business permits, state and city requirements, and any service-scope rules tied to chemical use or employee count. These costs are operating expenses, not CAPEX. The right number comes from quotes, filing fees, renewal periods, and whether you need one city license or multiple jurisdiction approvals.

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How To Control It

Keep coverage lean but complete. Ask for quotes that separate general liability, commercial auto, and workers compensation so you can compare line by line. Don’t skip proof-of-insurance requirements, since some residential and commercial accounts will ask for it before booking. If you’re solo at launch, workers compensation may not apply yet.


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Certification Budget

If you want extra credibility, set aside a separate line item for optional certification, including National Air Duct Cleaners Association certification if pursued. Treat it like a trust expense, not a vehicle or equipment cost. The amount depends on the course, exam, and renewal schedule, which vary by state, city, and service scope.



HVAC Cleaning Supplies And PPE Startup Expense


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Launch Stock

Start with $5,000 in launch inventory. That covers vent covers, containment materials, drop cloths, respirators, gloves, sanitizer, coil cleaner, access panels, filters, replacement brushes, bags, and protective floor materials. Treat these as jobsite consumables, not durable equipment. This is the cash you need before the first job so the crew shows up ready.


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Year 1 Run Rate

Plan year-one consumables at 8% of revenue for cleaning agents and supplies, plus 4% for disposable PPE and equipment parts. Build the estimate from expected jobs, then apply those percentages to gross revenue. That keeps refill buying tied to demand, not guesswork, and it separates stocking spend from your equipment budget.

  • Use job count times supply rate.
  • Quote refills by service scope.
  • Track parts separately.
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Scope And Consent

Do not mix chemical treatment into every estimate. Some jobs only need standard cleaning, and extra treatments should be added only when the scope calls for them and the customer agrees. That protects margin and avoids overbuying product that may sit on the shelf. One clean rule: no consent, no add-on.

  • Price add-ons by job.
  • Document customer approval.
  • Stock only common SKUs.

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Buy What Turns Fast

Keep launch inventory lean by buying the highest-use items first and replenishing only after bookings start. The win is matching shelf stock to service mix, since recurring spend is driven by 8% supply use and 4% PPE and parts. If a product is used on only some jobs, don't tie up cash in it.



Website, Marketing, And Booking Startup Expense


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Launch Budget

This is a pre-opening and early launch cost, not proof of demand. The known plan is $4,000 for website development, $3,000 for branded signage, and $15,000 for Year 1 marketing, or about $22,000 before monthly software and hosting.


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Booking Stack

The build should cover website pages, local SEO setup, business profile setup, review generation, phone routing, and booking flow. Add CRM scheduling software at $150/month and website hosting and maintenance at $100/month; that is $3,000/year in recurring support before ads.

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Lead Cost

At a Year 1 customer acquisition cost (CAC) of $150, a $15,000 marketing budget implies about 100 customers if the rate holds. The real test is lead quality, booking speed, customer reviews, and service-area density, not clicks. Fast answers and tight zip-code coverage usually matter more than broad spend.


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Spend Control

Keep spend tied to launch assets that help people book: clean pages, fast calls, proof from reviews, and clear service-area coverage. If one channel brings weak leads or slow bookings, shift dollars to the zips with better demand and fewer wasted quotes. Spend for flow, not for vanity traffic.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup Cost Scenarios

Lean works for an owner-led start with one vehicle and a tight tool set. Base fits a local launch with two service vehicles and standard buildout, while Full funds crews, wider reach, and a deeper cash buffer.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison for HVAC cleaning
Scenario Lean LaunchLowest cash need Base LaunchStandard launch Full LaunchCrew-ready scale
Launch model Owner-led launch with one vehicle, limited upfit, and a small marketing push. Local launch built around the researched $122,000 capex, $15,000 Year 1 marketing, and $187,500 Year 1 payroll. Scaled launch with stronger equipment capacity, staffed crew readiness, broader service area, and more marketing.
Typical setup Uses a tight tool set, basic website, and only the gear needed for early jobs. Includes two service vehicles, equipment sets, website, signage, diagnostics, and cameras. Adds deeper reserves, more field capacity, and room to support multi-crew work.
Cost drivers
  • One vehicle
  • limited equipment
  • smaller marketing
  • owner sales
  • lower cash reserve
  • Two vehicles
  • equipment sets
  • website and signage
  • diagnostics and cameras
  • Year 1 payroll
  • Expanded equipment
  • larger reserve
  • more marketing
  • crew staffing
  • wider service area
Planning rangeCAPEX only $150,000 - $250,000Tight budget $300,000 - $450,000Model-based base $700,000 - $900,000Reserve heavy
Best fit Best for an owner-operator testing local demand before adding crews. Best for a professional local launch that needs a full operating setup from day one. Best for a multi-crew launch that wants faster coverage and more buffer for slow ramp-up.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact quotes. Breakeven lands in Month 9, and the model shows minimum cash of $779,000 in Month 15, so reserve planning matters.

Frequently Asked Questions

Keep more than the equipment budget, because this model peaks at $779,000 of minimum cash need in Month 15 The business reaches breakeven in Month 9, but Year 1 EBITDA is still -$51,000 That means payroll, marketing, insurance, fuel, and slow early sales can create a cash gap before profits catch up