Kegerator Installation Service Startup Costs: $905K Opening Budget

Kegerator Installation Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Treat vans and outfitting as startup CAPEX.
  • Buy tools for reliability, fewer callbacks, and commercial jobs.
  • Fund parts inventory separately to avoid return trips.
  • Keep insurance, marketing, and software in operating budget.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

This estimates upfront capitalized assets only for a kegerator installation service, not working cash or monthly operating costs.

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CAPEX only Includes only capitalized startup assets. Excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, insurance premiums, marketing spend, software subscriptions, fuel, recurring ad spend, and other operating costs.



What does the startup costs tab show?

This CAPEX tab in the Kegerator Installation Service Financial Model Template shows startup spend, timing, and runway. Review $727k cash.

Screenshot highlights

  • CAPEX and startup schedule
  • Launch timing and costs
  • Depreciation and amortization
  • Pricing and jobs per month
  • Cash runway and breakeven
Kegerator Installation Service Financial Model capex inputs showing equipment, tooling, installation setup and one‑time investment fields that let users customize startup capital, replacement schedules and assumptions for scenario planning


How much money do I need to start a kegerator installation business?


You need more than $905k to start a Kegerator Installation Service, because that figure only covers listed launch outlays; see How Increase Profits Kegerator Installation Service? for the profit-side view. Add working capital for $78k monthly overhead, $190k Year 1 payroll, $25k Year 1 marketing, $15k/month insurance, and early losses.

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Startup Cash

  • Start with $905k launch outlays
  • Include CAPEX and inventory
  • Fund website, branding, and office setup
  • Buy computers before revenue scales
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Runway Math

  • Year 1 revenue: $364k
  • Year 1 EBITDA: -$72k
  • Breakeven hits in Month 9
  • Payback takes 44 months

How to fund a kegerator installation business?


Kegerator Installation Service should be funded for the full gap: $905k in launch outlays, $364k in Year 1 revenue, and -$72k in Year 1 EBITDA mean this is a runway problem, not just a launch problem. The lender pack should show the startup budget, CAPEX schedule, launch timeline, utilization assumptions, pricing by service line, jobs per month, payroll plan, and cash runway. Here’s the quick math: the model hits Month 9 breakeven, needs $727k minimum cash in Month 28, and still shows a 44-month payback with 255% IRR.

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Funding sources

  • Owner cash covers early risk.
  • Equipment financing fits vans and tools.
  • Working capital loan fills operating gaps.
  • Line of credit handles timing swings.
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Model inputs lenders want

  • Use the Year 1 mix assumptions.
  • Commercial installs: 600%.
  • Scheduled maintenance: 300%.
  • Emergency service: 50%; residential setup: 50%.

What are the biggest costs in a kegerator installation business?


The biggest costs in a Kegerator Installation Service are the upfront gear stack and the labor base: $30k parts inventory, $20k van down payments, $16k outfitting, and $75k tools and equipment. After that, the load shifts to $190k Year 1 payroll, $45k monthly rent, $15k monthly insurance, and fuel and maintenance at 40% of revenue. Here’s the quick math: commercial installs need 150 billable hours at $125/hour, so van uptime, parts on hand, and technician scheduling set capacity.

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Big startup costs

  • $30k initial parts inventory
  • $20k service van down payments
  • $16k van outfitting
  • $75k tools and equipment
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Operating pressure points

  • $190k Year 1 payroll
  • $45k monthly rent
  • $15k monthly insurance
  • Fuel and maintenance at 40% revenue


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

Startup cost summary for service vans, equipment, and opening cash needs for a kegerator installation business, with non-CAPEX items shown separately.

Highlighted CAPEX$116,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$727,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$843,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Service Van 1 Down Payment $10,000 Fleet deposit to start service calls. Yes
Service Van 2 Down Payment $10,000 Second van deposit as demand grows. Yes
Van Outfitting $16,000 Shelving, racks, and work-ready setup. Yes
Specialized Tools & Equipment $75,000 Install tools, gauges, and test gear. Yes
Computer Equipment & Laptops $5,000 Admin and dispatch hardware. Yes
Operating Reserve / Working Capital $727,000 Runway for fixed overhead, marketing, and payroll before cash flow turns. No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched planning assumptions; non-CAPEX cash needs sit outside asset rows.


Kegerator Installation Service Core Five Startup Costs



Service Van And Mobile Setup Startup Expense


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Van Deposits

Start with $10k for Service Van 1 in Month 1 and $10k for Service Van 2 in Month 7. Treat both as CAPEX, not operating spend. Used vs. new only changes cash timing and repair risk, so price that choice with quotes, not guesses.


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Van Buildout

Plan $16k of van outfitting from Month 2 to Month 8 for shelving, racks, bins, storage, branding, safety gear, lockable storage, parts bins, and mileage coverage for local service calls. That turns the van into a rolling shop and keeps installs organized. Fuel and maintenance stay out of CAPEX.

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Cash Control

Stage the build so you only buy what the first routes need. Add the second van when booked work supports it, and keep the startup budget clean by separating repairs, tires, and fuel from asset costs.


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Fuel Budget

Keep fuel and maintenance separate from startup CAPEX. For Year 1 and Year 2, set operating cash at 40% of revenue so local service miles, oil changes, and repairs do not squeeze install cash. That matters most when emergency calls push daily driving up.



Specialized Tools And Installation Equipment Startup Expense


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Tool Kit Budget

The model sets $75,000 for specialized tools and equipment in Month 1 to Month 3. That covers drills, hole saws, wrenches, tubing cutters, clamps, pressure gauges, leak testing tools, line-cleaning gear, ladders, and jobsite safety tools. This is the install core, not office gear, software, payroll, or consumable parts.


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What It Covers

Here’s the quick math: the tool spend is sized to support reliable installs and 150 billable hours in Year 1. Better tools cut callbacks, protect margins, and help with commercial jobs where fit, pressure checks, and clean lines matter. The budget should be quoted as a tool kit subtotal, with a separate replacement reserve tracked outside the main buy.

  • Use commercial-grade tools first.
  • Price by quote, not guess.
  • Keep reserve cash separate.
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How To Control Cost

Don’t cheap out on gauges, cutters, or leak-testing tools; weak gear drives rework and wasted time. Buy the core kit first, then add extras only when the job mix proves the need. A clean setup with durable tools is cheaper than repeat truck rolls, especially when a missed seal or bad pressure check can turn one install into two visits.

  • Buy for reliability, not volume.
  • Delay noncritical add-ons.
  • Track wear by tool type.

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Replacement Reserve

Keep the $75,000 tool kit separate from a replacement reserve so worn cutters, hoses, clamps, and test gear don’t drain working cash. That reserve matters most when emergency repairs pick up, because a dead pressure gauge or failed leak test can stop a job the same day and delay billable hours.



Initial Parts, Fittings, And Consumables Startup Expense


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Parts Inventory

$30k covers the Month 1 to Month 3 parts build: beer lines, clamps, faucets, shanks, couplers, regulators, drip trays, cleaning chemicals, fittings, and emergency replacement parts. Treat it as a separate startup funding need, not office CAPEX. This stock keeps techs ready on day one and cuts return trips when a part fails mid-job.


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Reorder Math

For ongoing replenishment, use COGS (cost of goods sold) assumptions: draft system components at 150% of Year 1 revenue and cleaning supplies and chemicals at 30%. That means the inventory budget must scale with jobs, not headcount. If service volume rises, parts cash rises with it.

  • Use Year 1 revenue forecast
  • Track job mix by service type
  • Check supplier lead times
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Readiness

Depth matters because emergency service is 50% of Year 1 mix. Fast replacement parts let techs fix leaks, bad couplers, and worn lines on the first visit, which protects uptime and customer trust. If stock is thin, callbacks rise and billable time falls.


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Parts Policy

Keep these parts on the startup funding list, separate from fixed equipment and office buys. One clean rule: if a missed part sends a tech back, it belongs in the launch inventory budget. That line item is what makes same-day service real.



Insurance, Licensing, And Compliance Startup Expense


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Insurance Budget

Plan on $15k per month from Month 1 for liability and fleet insurance, plus $400 per month for legal and accounting support. These are startup operating costs, not CAPEX. They sit alongside registration and licensing, and they protect jobs, vehicles, and client contracts from day one.


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What It Covers

Budget for business registration, local licensing, general liability, commercial auto, workers’ compensation if you hire, and certificates of insurance for commercial clients. Requirements change by state, city, jobsite, and scope of work, so get quotes before launch. If electrical or plumbing work needs a license and it’s outside your team’s scope, subcontract it.

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Keep It Separate

Keep insurance deposits and monthly premiums out of the equipment budget. Ask for certificates early, since many commercial jobs won’t start without them. One missed certificate can delay revenue, so build renewals, proof of coverage, and filing dates into your admin checklist. That saves time without cutting coverage.


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Scope Control

When a job moves into licensed electrical or plumbing work, stop and bring in the right subcontractor. That keeps the install moving and avoids rework, unbilled labor, and compliance risk. Use legal and accounting help to track local rules and renewals, because the needed coverage and filings can change by jurisdiction and project type.



Marketing, Website, And Operating Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch budget

Use this as launch funding, not CAPEX, unless the model capitalizes it. The plan includes $8k for website development and branding from Month 2 to Month 4, plus a $25k Year 1 marketing budget and $500 CAC (customer acquisition cost) per new customer. That spend supports the first sales push, not long-term fixed assets.


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What it covers

This bucket covers the full go-to-market stack: website, local SEO, business profile setup, branded materials, phone system, scheduling software, CRM, uniforms, and launch ads. Keep the math simple: $8k for build-out, then $25k for Year 1 demand gen. That budget should match the service mix, especially 600% commercial installs and 300% scheduled maintenance in Year 1.

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Recurring ops

Build recurring operating costs into the model from day one: $600 per month for software subscriptions and $300 per month for telephone and internet. That is $10.8k in Year 1 before any ad spend. Keep these separate from launch costs so you can see if lead volume, conversion, or monthly overhead is the real drag.


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Spend control

Cut waste by staging spend with demand. Start with the website, profile setup, and ads that feed the highest-margin jobs first, then add software and branded materials only when booking volume holds. One clean rule: if CAC moves above $500, fix targeting or sales follow-up before raising the budget.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario Table

Vans, inventory, tools, and payroll drive startup cash here, and revenue ramps after the install base builds. Lean, Base, and Full show how far coverage and runway can stretch.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost bands for a kegerator installation service.
Scenario Lean LaunchOwner-operator Base LaunchProfessional mobile setup Full LaunchMulti-tech launch
Launch model This is an owner-operator launch with tight market coverage and a narrower service mix. This matches the model source and aims for balanced coverage across commercial installs, maintenance, emergency work, and residential setup. This is a multi-tech launch built for wider coverage, faster response, and more job volume.
Typical setup One owner-technician uses one van down payment, existing tools, lighter inventory, and limited launch marketing. The base model uses two van down payments, $30k inventory, $75k tools, $16k outfitting, $8k website and branding, and $25k Year 1 marketing. The full model adds larger vehicle capacity, deeper parts inventory, helper capacity, stronger launch marketing, and more payroll runway.
Cost drivers
  • One van down payment
  • used tools
  • lighter inventory
  • limited launch marketing
  • owner payroll
  • Two van down payments
  • $30k inventory
  • $75k tools
  • $16k outfitting
  • $25k Year 1 marketing
  • Larger vehicle capacity
  • deeper parts inventory
  • helper payroll
  • stronger launch marketing
  • runway reserve
Planning rangeCAPEX only $650,000 - $775,000Lower cash need $900,000 - $910,000Model-source base $1,000,000 - $1,250,000Runway critical
Best fit Best for a founder testing local demand with one truck and a small service radius. Best for a founder who wants a full mobile setup and the service mix used in the model. Best for a team that needs broader market coverage and can fund the $727k minimum cash need in Month 28.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

The model points to a large runway need, not just a $905k opening spend It shows -$72k EBITDA in Year 1, breakeven in Month 9, and a $727k minimum cash need in Month 28 Hold enough cash for payroll, insurance, rent, fuel, inventory replenishment, and slow collections during the early ramp-up period