Juice Manufacturing Startup Costs For A 100,000-Unit Launch

Juice Manufacturing Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Equipment must support 100,000 units in year one.
  • Facility rent and utilities total $17,500 monthly.
  • FDA juice HACCP applies; build controls early.
  • Initial packaging and ingredients near $84,650.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates startup CAPEX for capitalized juice production assets only, based on a five-SKU launch setup.

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CAPEX only This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes raw ingredients, packaging inventory, working capital, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, marketing, insurance, and other operating expenses.



How does the CAPEX plan show up?

Juice Manufacturing Financial Model Template shows CAPEX, startup costs, working capital, and runway; Month 1, 100,000 units, $896,500 sales, $22,700 overhead, $240,000 payroll—review assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • CAPEX and startup lines
  • Month 1 launch timing
  • Depreciation and runway
Juice Manufacturing Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and timelines, letting users customize equipment, facility and startup investment assumptions for scenario-ready projections.


What financials do lenders need for funding a juice manufacturing startup?


For Juice Manufacturing, lenders want a model that proves you can fund CAPEX (equipment and build-out), startup costs, working capital, and payroll before sales and collections settle. Here’s the quick math: 100,000 Year 1 units at $896,500 revenue implies about $8.97 per unit, with $22,700 in monthly fixed overhead and $240,000 in annual leadership payroll. They’ll also want 50% of Year 1 spend in digital marketing and 25% in payment processing fees, plus a cash runway that covers the ramp.

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Key lender inputs

  • CAPEX and startup spend
  • 100,000 Year 1 units
  • $8.97 average revenue per unit
  • Launch timing and working capital
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Why they care

  • $22,700 monthly fixed overhead
  • $240,000 annual leadership payroll
  • 50% digital marketing spend
  • 25% payment processing fees

How much money do you need to start a juice manufacturing business?


For Juice Manufacturing, don’t budget from machinery alone: total funding must cover CAPEX, pre-opening costs, and ramp-up cash, with a known fixed-plus-leadership payroll load of $42,700/month before variable costs; for goal-setting, see What Is The Main Goal You Aim To Achieve With Juice Manufacturing?. Here’s the quick math: Year 1 plans show 100,000 units and $896,500 sales, or about $8.97 per unit.

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Funding Buckets

  • Fund facility CAPEX and buildout
  • Buy equipment, refrigeration, bottling
  • Cover compliance, testing, labels
  • Add deposits, insurance, launch marketing
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Cash Load

  • $22,700 monthly fixed overhead
  • $20,000 monthly known leadership payroll
  • $42,700 monthly before variable costs
  • Need ingredients, bottles, caps, sanitation

What are the hidden costs of starting a juice manufacturing business?


In Juice Manufacturing, the hidden costs are the cash drains that sit above CAPEX: working capital, spoilage, packaging minimums, sanitation, lab testing, insurance, utility deposits, temperature monitoring, permits, and regulatory prep. The quick math matters: 17% in revenue-based production add-ons on $896,500 equals about $15,241 in Year 1, and marketing plus payment processing adds another 7.5% of revenue. If you want the owner-income side too, see How Much Does The Owner Of Juice Manufacturing Business Usually Make?

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Revenue-based add-ons

  • 0.5% production waste
  • 0.3% quality control testing
  • 0.2% indirect production supplies
  • 0.4% variable factory utilities
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Startup cash needs

  • 0.3% equipment consumables
  • 7.5% marketing plus payment fees
  • Sanitation and temperature checks
  • Permits, insurance, and deposits


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup Cost Summary

Startup cost summary for juice manufacturing, separating equipment CAPEX from the operating reserve needed before breakeven.

Highlighted CAPEX$475,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$780,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$1,255,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Juice Pressing Equipment $150,000 Press size, automation, and install scope Yes
Bottling Line Machinery $100,000 Line speed, packaging format, and setup Yes
Refrigerated Delivery Vans $120,000 Fleet count and reefer specification Yes
Cold Storage Units $75,000 Storage capacity and temperature control Yes
Water Filtration System $30,000 Filtration depth, validation, and food safety Yes
Operating Reserve $780,000 Cash runway to Month 13 breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched startup assumptions; debt service and owner draws stay excluded.


Juice Manufacturing Core Five Startup Costs



Processing And Bottling Equipment Startup Expense


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Line Setup

Processing and bottling equipment covers presses, grinders, blenders, tanks, filtration, pasteurization or cold-processing, filling, capping, labeling, coding, conveyors, washdown gear, and line controls. Price depends on throughput, automation, bottle format, SKUs, sanitation needs, and new versus used equipment. Base capacity should fit 100,000 Year 1 units and scale toward 225,000 Year 2 units.


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Cost Inputs

Price this as a quote-driven line item, not a guess. You need unit quotes for each machine, install and integration costs, and any sanitation or changeover upgrades. If you choose high-pressure processing (HPP), it can be outsourced or brought in-house, but this research does not include a vendor quote.

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Right-Size It

Keep the first line matched to your launch volume, not your best-case dream. The cleanest savings come from using used equipment where sanitation rules allow, limiting SKUs at launch, and avoiding over-automation before demand is proven. One line should still handle washdown and changeovers without bottlenecks.


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Scale Plan

Build around the 100,000-unit Year 1 base, then check whether the same line can reach 225,000 units in Year 2 with added shifts, higher line speed, or a second module. That keeps the bottleneck visible early, which matters because throughput drives both equipment choice and total startup cash needs.



Facility Buildout And Leasehold Startup Expense


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Buildout Scope

Facility buildout covers the space, not the machines: rent deposits, food-grade flooring, floor drains, washable walls, plumbing, electrical upgrades, ventilation, utility capacity, production flow, storage zones, inspection readiness, and office space. The fixed base is $12,000 per month for production rent, $3,000 for admin office rent, and $2,500 for fixed utilities, or $17,500 monthly before leasehold work.


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What Drives Cost

Here’s the quick math: a space already set up for food use needs less work than a raw shell. The big cost inputs are drainage, washdown surfaces, electrical load, ventilation, and whether refrigeration is built into the leasehold improvements. If those items are missing, buildout cost rises fast, even before equipment spend starts.

  • Check existing drains first.
  • Measure electrical capacity early.
  • Map cold storage before signing.
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How To Keep It Lean

Use a space with existing food-grade features, then add only what the plant needs for cleaning and flow. That can cut wasted spend on finishes you never use. Don’t overbuild refrigeration into the lease if cold storage can sit elsewhere at first. The main mistake is signing before checking drain layout, utility load, and inspection needs.

  • Reuse existing washdown areas.
  • Phase office buildout later.
  • Get landlord work scope in writing.

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Leasehold Budget

The leasehold budget should sit beside equipment, not inside it. For planning, the known fixed occupancy cost is $210,000 per year from $17,500 monthly rent and utilities, before deposits and tenant improvements. What this estimate hides is the landlord’s scope, so quote the shell condition, washdown work, and refrigeration path before you lock the lease.



Food Safety And Compliance Startup Expense


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Compliance Scope

HACCP means Hazard Analysis and Critical Control Points, a food safety system for identifying and controlling hazards. For juice makers, startup compliance covers the food safety plan, process validation, sanitation procedures, lab testing, nutrition facts panels, label review, permits, and inspection prep. US juice processors are subject to 21 CFR Part 120, and other rules can apply by product, state, and channel.


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Cost Drivers

Budget this line as a mix of outside help and recurring checks. A clean benchmark is quality control testing at 0.3% of revenue, or about $2,690 on $896,500 in Year 1 sales. The real inputs are lab quotes, number of SKUs, label versions, permit count, and how many validation and sanitation records you need.

  • Count every SKU and label version.
  • Quote lab panels by test type.
  • Map permits by state and channel.
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Keep It Tight

Use one core formula, one label format, and one testing plan where you can, then reuse records for new lots and launches. That cuts waste without weakening compliance. The biggest mistake is paying for rework after a bad label, missing sanitation logs, or a weak validation file. Avoid legal advice here; use a food safety consultant and lab quotes.


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Budget Risk

What this estimate hides is timing. If inspection prep, label review, or validation slips, cash goes out before sales start. Build the budget around the longest lead item, not the easiest one, and leave room for product-specific, state-specific, and channel-specific requirements that can add extra review and testing work.



Refrigeration Storage And Cold Chain Startup Expense


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Cold Chain

This spend covers walk-in coolers, ingredient refrigeration, finished-goods cold storage, temperature monitoring, backup controls, pallets, racks, hand trucks, and other warehouse gear. If you outsource delivery, cold chain logistics runs about $0.08 per unit, or $8,000 for 100,000 Year 1 units.


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What Drives It

Refrigeration needs depend on shelf life, pasteurization method, volume, wholesale versus retail distribution, and delivery radius. Longer routes and slower turns usually mean more cold space, stricter monitoring, and higher delivery cost.

  • Short shelf life needs tighter control.
  • Wholesale often needs more storage.
  • Long routes raise delivery spend.
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Keep It Lean

A lean setup is to use a third-party cold logistics source first, then add in-house cold storage only when route density justifies it. Keep backup controls and temperature checks, but size the system to the 100,000-unit Year 1 plan, not the Year 2 ramp.

  • Outsource low-volume delivery.
  • Buy space after route proof.
  • Protect product with checks.

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Budget Check

Add $2,500 per month in fixed utilities and variable factory utilities at 0.4% of revenue. That utility load sits beside storage, not inside it, so the model should separate equipment CAPEX from monthly operating cost.



Ingredients Packaging And Launch Inventory Startup Expense


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Packaging Cash

For 100,000 Year 1 units, the base packaging set-up is $20,000 for bottles, caps, and labels at $0.20 per unit. That sits in working capital, not equipment, and it comes before cartons, cases, sanitation supplies, and test batches hit the cash plan.


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Fresh Produce

Fresh produce is the biggest cash sink. At $0.50 to $0.70 per unit by SKU, the weighted Year 1 ingredient total is about $59,650. Add fruits, vegetables, and supplier minimum order quantities to the first buy, because the farm-to-bottle model needs cash before sales settle.

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Stock Control

Keep launch stock tight, not thin. Buy to the first production run, then refill from actual sell-through, but don't cut safety stock below spoilage risk or MOQ thresholds. Ingredient blending adds $0.05 per unit, or $5,000 for Year 1, and production waste is modeled at 0.5% of revenue.


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Launch Buffer

Plan the cash buffer around the whole launch basket: packaging, produce, blending inputs, sanitation supplies, cartons, cases, test batches, and spoilage. For a 100,000-unit Year 1 plan, that means inventory cash must clear before revenue catches up, so keep room for reorders tied to sales timing.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario Table

Juice plants get expensive fast because bottling, cold storage, and distribution scale with volume. Lean, Base, and Full show how production control changes cash need and fixed overhead.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchLeanest build Base LaunchResearch-backed base Full LaunchScale-first build
Launch model Smaller-batch production with outsourced high-pressure processing (HPP) and limited cold distribution. In-house production built for the Year 1 plan, the five-SKU mix, and the modeled 100,000-unit run with $896,500 in sales. Larger in-house production built toward the Year 2 ramp of 225,000 units and $2,051,250 in modeled sales.
Typical setup Fewer fixed commitments, founder-led selling, and light automation keep control simple. Core pressing and bottling equipment, cold storage, refrigerated vans, and $240,000 in annual leadership payroll. More automation, deeper staffing, bigger cold storage, and heavier logistics depth raise control and complexity.
Cost drivers
  • Outsourced HPP
  • cold storage
  • packaging
  • freight
  • founder labor
  • Pressing line
  • bottling line
  • cold storage
  • payroll
  • utilities
  • Automation
  • larger facility
  • cold chain
  • logistics fleet
  • working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only $300,000 - $600,000Lowest cash need $1,100,000 - $1,500,000Model-backed range $1,700,000 - $2,300,000Highest cash need
Best fit Best for founders testing demand before they lock in a bigger plant. Best for operators who want the researched base case and tighter process control. Best for founders who are planning for scale and can carry more fixed cost.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or guaranteed bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

It can be, but only if volume, waste, pricing, and fixed costs line up In the researched first-year model, 100,000 units generate $896,500 in sales Direct unit costs plus revenue-based production add-ons are about $117,891 before marketing, fixed overhead, and payroll Fixed overhead is $22,700 per month, so underfilled capacity can erase margin fast