How Much Does It Cost To Start A Junkyard? $652k Cash Plan

Junkyard Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Site prep CAPEX is separate from monthly yard rent.
  • Permits and compliance delays can burn payroll runway.
  • Equipment and opening inventory drive first-year cash need.
  • Security, software, and staffing are readiness costs.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a junkyard under lean, base, and full yard setups.

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Exclusions This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes inventory, payroll runway, monthly rent, debt service, working capital, operating losses, and other ongoing operating costs. The source model also lists a crusher lease deposit, but deposits are excluded from the CAPEX fields in this block.



Is this Junkyard CAPEX tab enough?

This CAPEX tab shows startup costs, launch timing, and funding needs for Junkyard Financial Model Template; check $280,000 CAPEX and $652,000 cash before raising capital.

Screenshot highlights

  • Startup expenses by category
  • Month 13 breakeven
  • Year 1 EBITDA -$29,000
Junkyard Financial Model capex inputs allowing users to customize equipment purchases, yard upgrades, vehicle acquisition and depreciation schedules for accurate capital planning and scenario-ready forecasts.


Do you need land to start a junkyard?


You do not have to own land to start a Junkyard, but you do need control of a compliant site. A leased yard can work, and this model assumes a $8,000 monthly yard lease plus $75,000 for site prep, so land access and layout are the first cost gates. Add $25,000 for fluid drainage and $10,000 for security cameras and access control, and site-related startup costs reach about $110,000 before inventory and equipment.

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Land choice

  • Lease or own the yard.
  • Zoning approval can block a site.
  • Layout sets safe storage capacity.
  • Vehicle lanes keep traffic moving.
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Cost drivers

  • $75,000 site prep is the base.
  • $25,000 fluid drainage is a must.
  • $10,000 security and access add up.
  • $8,000 monthly lease hits cash flow.

What costs are often missed when starting a junkyard?


The costs people miss are the pre-opening items and the cash needed to keep a Junkyard running before sales catch up: environmental testing, cleanup reserves, stormwater planning, hazardous fluid handling, permit delays, insurance deposits, security setup, title processing, towing, parts listing labor, and early payroll. That’s why funding can reach $652,000 even when stated CAPEX is only $280,000; see How Much Does The Owner Of Junkyard Make From Selling Scrap Metal And Vehicle Parts? for the revenue side. Here’s the quick math: monthly fixed costs are $14,350 and Year 1 wage load is $270,000, or about $22,500 a month.

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Pre-opening costs

  • Pay for environmental testing first.
  • Set cleanup reserves before opening.
  • Budget stormwater and fluid handling.
  • Expect permit and insurance delays.
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Working capital needs

  • Cover $14,350 fixed costs monthly.
  • Plan for $270,000 Year 1 wages.
  • Vehicle buys can hit 120% revenue.
  • Disposal and software can take 40% and 20%.

How much does it cost to start a junkyard in the US?


A US Junkyard needs about $652,000 in minimum startup cash, including $280,000 in CAPEX, not just equipment; see What Is The Main Goal Of Junkyard To Achieve Success? for the operating target behind that funding need. A leased-yard setup assumes an $8,000 monthly yard lease and about $14,350 in fixed monthly overhead.

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Startup cash need

  • $652,000 minimum funding need
  • $280,000 CAPEX included
  • $8,000 monthly yard lease
  • $14,350 fixed monthly overhead
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Year 1 math

  • 3,000 parts × $150
  • 150 scrap sales × $300
  • 800 cores × $75
  • $555,000 total revenue


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table shows the main startup assets and the separate launch cash needed before breakeven for a vehicle-salvage yard.

Highlighted CAPEX$235,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$652,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$887,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Yard Site Preparation $75,000 Grading, cleanup, and yard setup Yes
Office & Customer Area Buildout $60,000 Front office and customer-facing space Yes
Heavy Duty Forklift $45,000 Material handling and vehicle movement Yes
Vehicle Lifts & Dismantling Tools $30,000 Dismantling equipment and shop tools Yes
Environmental Fluid Drainage System $25,000 Fluid capture and environmental compliance Yes
Operating Reserve $652,000 Month 1-13 payroll, overhead, and operating losses before breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; non-CAPEX cash covers payroll runway, overhead, and breakeven losses.


Junkyard Core Five Startup Costs



Land And Site Prep Startup Expense


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Rent Split

Treat the $8,000 monthly yard lease as operating cost, not site buildout. The launch budget should separate that rent from grading, fencing, gates, lighting, drainage, signage, office access, and customer flow work, plus any lease deposit. Keep land financing and site improvements on different lines so the yard cost does not get overstated.


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Site Buildout

Use $75,000 as base site-prep capital spend for Months 1 to 3. Add the $25,000 environmental fluid drainage system and $10,000 security camera and access system for full yard readiness. That puts core site spend at $110,000 before rent, deposits, or long-term property financing.

  • Acreage and zoning status
  • Paved or gravel surface
  • Stored vehicle count and runoff rules
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Yard Flow

Lay out wide lanes, clear part rows, a scrap zone, and direct office access so buyers move in and out fast. Spend first on compliance and control, then on convenience. The usual miss is building too much yard before you know vehicle volume, title delays, and local environmental limits.

  • Quote grading by acre
  • Phase fencing and lighting
  • Separate drainage from paving

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Sizing Checks

Ask three things before signing: how many acres you need, what zoning allows, and whether the site needs stormwater controls beyond basic drainage. Paved yards cost more upfront than gravel, but local environmental rules can make gravel expensive fast if runoff controls are tight.



Permits, Licenses, And Environmental Compliance Startup Expense


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Permit Stack

Before you open, budget for zoning approvals, a business license, and local salvage dealer or dismantler licensing. Add stormwater plans, hazardous fluid handling, and waste disposal setup. These are mostly local cost variables, so the real work is document prep, review fees, and professional support before any parts revenue starts.


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Cost Inputs

Use three numbers to frame this startup cost: local permit fees, the $25,000 environmental fluid drainage CAPEX, and ongoing readiness support. The monthly retainer is $1,200 for accounting and legal help, which keeps filings current and avoids rushed fixes. One line of math matters: permit work is cheaper than a shutdown.

  • Check zoning first.
  • Price local review fees.
  • Confirm drainage scope.
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Disposal Load

Waste handling is not a one-time buy. Plan for $1,000 per month in waste disposal services plus environmental disposal costs at 40% of Year 1 revenue. At $555,000 in Year 1 revenue, that is $222,000. This cost moves with volume, fluid removal, and haul frequency, so tighter sorting helps.


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Delay Buffer

Permit delays can stretch your payroll runway before revenue starts, so keep extra cash for staff, site oversight, and compliance work during the wait. The practical fix is simple: start filings early, line up environmental professional support, and keep the legal review active while the yard is still not selling.



Equipment, Tools, Towing, And Material Handling Startup Expense


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Core gear

This line item is the yard’s handling base. Use $45,000 for the heavy-duty forklift, $30,000 for vehicle lifts and dismantling tools, and $20,000 for the crusher lease deposit. That is $95,000 of known startup cash before smaller gear, tow units, or outsourced hauling.


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Budget split

Model owned gear separately from rented, financed, or outsourced work. Forklifts, loaders, vehicle lifts, dismantling tools, tire equipment, fluid recovery tools, parts racks, containers, and scales sit in the equipment budget. Towing and crusher access can stay off-balance-sheet early. Size quotes around daily vehicles processed, scrap volume, lift bays, and tow radius.

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Trim the cash need

Keep crusher access leased during ramp-up, not bought, and compare in-house towing with outside transport rates. The usual mistake is buying every tool before vehicle flow is proven. Tie spend to actual throughput, because idle lifts, racks, and tow units burn cash without lifting revenue.


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Size the yard

Refine the budget from daily vehicles processed, scrap metal volume, lift bays, and tow radius. If towing stays in-house, add tow vehicles to the plan; if it’s outsourced, keep that cost out of CAPEX. The crusher lease deposit stays a ramp-up choice, so don’t force a purchase before volume justifies it.



Opening Vehicle Inventory Startup Expense


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Opening buy

The opening vehicle buy is the cash that gets wrecked units onto the lot, through title work, and into the first parts list. For Year 1 revenue of $555,000 from 3,000 used parts at $150, 150 scrap sales at $300, and 800 cores at $75, the provided acquisition anchor is about $66,600.


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Cost inputs

This budget covers purchase price, towing, title delays, fluid drain, and the labor to photograph, tag, and list parts. Separate it from monthly scrap-buying float, so the opening yard build doesn’t eat working cash.

  • Count wrecked units first
  • Quote tow and title lag
  • Track photo and tagging labor
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Buy smart

Buy wrecks with the fastest part yield, not the highest sticker volume. Here’s the quick math: every unit must support parts sales, scrap sales, or core sales fast enough to keep cash moving. That keeps opening inventory from turning into dead metal on day one.

  • Price by recoverable parts
  • Watch tow miles and fees
  • Avoid slow title units

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Launch buffer

Opening depth should cover the first sales run, not just the first trucks. If titles lag, the yard owns metal but can’t sell it, so keep extra cash for processing delays and intake labor. That buffer belongs in launch funding, not rent.



Insurance, Software, Security, Staffing, And Launch Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch Readiness Cost

Insurance, security, software, and staffing are startup readiness costs, not long-term overhead. Here’s the quick math: monthly operating spend is $2,650 from $750 insurance, $600 security, $1,000 marketing, and $300 office/admin, plus $25,000 in CAPEX for systems. Staffing should be tied to opening volume, not wishful demand.


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What It Covers

This bucket covers general liability, garage liability, pollution coverage, and workers’ comp, plus point-of-sale and inventory software, cameras, office setup, hiring, training, and launch marketing. To estimate it, use months of coverage, vendor quotes, headcount, and implementation fees. The main CAPEX items are $15,000 for the digital inventory system and $10,000 for camera and access control.

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Keep It Tight

Cut waste by buying only the coverage and software you need at opening, then add extras after parts volume proves out. Get three quotes on insurance, security, and software, and avoid overbuilding the office on day one. The mistake to avoid is paying for full-scale staffing before inventory flow is live. Small delays in opening can burn cash fast.


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Year 1 Staffing

The Year 1 plan lists 10 owner/operator at $90,000, 10 lead mechanic at $65,000, 10 yard hand at $45,000, 10 inventory and sales associate at $50,000, and 05 customer service representative at $20,00 0. Treat this as readiness and early operating cost, then match hires to vehicles processed, parts listed, and customer calls answered.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario Table

A lean yard keeps costs down by leasing land and outsourcing crusher access, while a full-service yard needs more owned equipment, deeper inventory, and a bigger payroll runway.

Lean, base, and full launch cost bands for a junkyard.
Scenario Lean LaunchLow-control pilot Base LaunchLender-ready base case Full LaunchGrowth yard
Launch model Lease the yard, rent crusher access, and keep the opening team small. Use the model's leased yard, owned core equipment, and a full starter team. Build a larger yard with more owned equipment, deeper inventory, and a wider service mix.
Typical setup Use low owned assets, limited inventory, and only the core service flow. Fund the $280,000 CAPEX plan, $14,350 monthly fixed costs, and $270,000 Year 1 wages. Add more site work, more environmental controls, and a bigger payroll cushion.
Cost drivers
  • Leased land
  • outsourced crusher access
  • smaller staff
  • lower opening inventory
  • fewer site upgrades
  • Yard lease
  • core equipment buy
  • site prep
  • environmental systems
  • full starter payroll
  • Larger site
  • more equipment ownership
  • deeper inventory
  • added site improvements
  • bigger payroll runway
Planning rangeCAPEX only $450,000 - $625,000Capital light $650,000 - $750,000Model anchor $800,000 - $1,050,000Higher runway
Best fit Fits owners testing demand with tight cash and low control. Fits lenders or investors who want the modeled base case. Fits operators chasing scale, control, and a wider operating cushion.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or a firm bid.

Frequently Asked Questions

It can be, but this model needs time to ramp Year 1 EBITDA is -$29,000, then improves to $254,000 in Year 2 and $687,000 in Year 3 Breakeven occurs in Month 13, with a 29-month payback Profit depends on vehicle acquisition cost, parts sales volume, scrap pricing, labor control, and compliance costs