How Much Does It Cost To Open A Kickboxing Studio? $78k CAPEX Plus Runway

Kickboxing Studio Startup Costs
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You’re not just buying bags and mats you’re funding the opening month, the early ramp-up period, and the cash cushion that keeps classes running In the researched US planning model, startup capital expenditures total $78,000, while modeled minimum cash need reaches $885,000 in Month 2 The goal is to separate buildout, equipment, pre-opening spend, working capital, and total funding need so you don’t underfund the launch


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for opening a kickboxing fitness studio.

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CAPEX only This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only and assumes Month 1 through Month 6 timing. It excludes rent reserve, payroll runway, launch marketing, insurance premiums, working capital, debt service, deposits, inventory runway, and owner draws; those belong in non-CAPEX funding still needed.



What does the CAPEX screenshot show?

The Kickboxing Fitness Studio Financial Model Template CAPEX tab shows Month 1–6 spend, $78,000 source lines, and depreciation/amortization; test assumptions before leasing.

Screenshot highlights

  • Total CAPEX: $78,000
  • Buildout, bags, gear
  • Reception, tech, signage
  • 350% to 850% occupancy
  • $885,000 cash need
Kickboxing Fitness Studio Financial Model capex inputs allowing customization of startup and equipment investments, build-out costs and depreciation schedules; user-friendly, scenario-ready capital planning


What hidden costs of opening a kickboxing studio should I plan for?


The hidden costs for a Kickboxing Fitness Studio are the monthly and revenue-linked items that hit cash after build-out: $500 insurance, $350 software, $800 cleaning, $400 accounting, and $300 equipment maintenance. If you’re tracking margin too, start with What Five KPIs Should Kickboxing Fitness Studio Track? so you can see these costs against member growth. Also plan for instructor onboarding, waivers, music licensing, supplies, rent before full revenue, and payment setup.

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Fixed monthly costs

  • $500 insurance coverage
  • $350 software subscription
  • $800 cleaning services
  • $400 accounting fees
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Revenue-linked cash hits

  • 30% of Year 1 revenue for processing
  • 80% of Year 1 revenue for marketing
  • 40% of Year 1 revenue for utilities
  • 40% of Year 1 revenue for inventory

How much money do I need to open a kickboxing studio?


You need $78,000 for CAPEX, but that is not the same as total funding need; for How Do I Launch Kickboxing Fitness Studio Business?, use $885,000 minimum cash in Month 2 as the funding-readiness marker. That opening cash covers equipment, buildout, rent, payroll, insurance, software, cleaning, accounting, maintenance, and working capital. These are researched planning assumptions, not vendor quotes.

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Startup Cash

  • $78,000 CAPEX for launch assets
  • $885,000 Month 2 cash readiness
  • Include buildout, gear, rent, deposits
  • Keep working capital separate from CAPEX
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Monthly Burn

  • $215,000 Year 1 annual wages
  • $17,917/month payroll: 215,000 / 12
  • $8,850/month fixed non-payroll costs
  • Track insurance, software, cleaning, accounting

How to fund a kickboxing studio startup?


For a Kickboxing Fitness Studio, the funding ask should tie $78,000 CAPEX to launch spend, show a $885,000 minimum cash need in Month 2, and prove $1.218 million in Year 1 revenue with breakeven in Month 1. Use Year 1 pricing of $160 Unlimited, $110 Basic, and $30 Drop-in, with 100 Unlimited, 80 Basic, and 40 Drop-in across 26 billable days a month. That gives lenders and investors one view of startup cost, capacity, payroll, rent, variable costs, and runway, but it does not mean financing is approved.

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Funding plan must show

  • $78,000 CAPEX up front
  • $885,000 cash need in Month 2
  • Month 1 breakeven target
  • Startup costs, rent, payroll, runway
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Year 1 operating assumptions

  • $160 Unlimited membership
  • $110 Basic membership
  • $30 Drop-in price
  • 100, 80, and 40 volume assumptions


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table covers the main studio buildout costs and the opening cash buffer needed to fund launch before Month 2.

Highlighted CAPEX$74,500Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$885,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$959,500CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Studio Buildout and Flooring $45,000 Leasehold buildout and floor finish Yes
Heavy Bags and Racks $12,000 Training equipment count and quality Yes
Reception and Locker Setup $8,500 Front desk finish and locker fixtures Yes
Protective Gear Inventory $5,000 Starter gloves, wraps, and pads Yes
Sound System and Tech $4,000 Audio and check-in hardware Yes
Opening Cash Buffer $885,000 Rent, payroll, and startup runway before Month 2 No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched launch costs; the excluded cash row covers rent, payroll, and startup runway.


Kickboxing Fitness Studio Core Five Startup Costs



Facility And Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense


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Space Prep

Leased space for group kickboxing usually covers front desk flow, changing areas, storage, ventilation, flooring base, and member circulation. The base figure is $45,000 for studio buildout and flooring over Month 1 to Month 2. That cost shifts with landlord condition, square footage, code scope, HVAC, electrical, restroom or locker work, soundproofing, and whether the site was already a fitness space.


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Cost Stack

Estimate with contractor quotes, square footage, and scope by trade. The $45,000 buildout sits in CAPEX; $6,500 per month rent is separate operating cost, not startup asset spend. Watch HVAC and electrical if class volume is high, plus locker, restroom, and acoustic work. A former gym site usually lands cleaner than a raw shell.

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Cost Control

Use existing fitness infrastructure, keep the layout simple, and get fixed quotes before signing. The biggest savings usually come from a site that already has flooring, showers, ventilation, and code-ready bathrooms. Don’t cheap out on impact flooring or circulation paths; fixing those later is expensive. Ask for bids on only the needed trades, so you can compare landlord-provided work against tenant-paid work.


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Rent Split

If the space needs new HVAC, electrical, or locker work, this item can move fast and eat the budget. The clean way to track it is one line for buildout and flooring at $45,000, then keep $6,500 monthly rent out of CAPEX so the launch budget does not blur into operating burn.



Training Floor And Equipment Startup Expense


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Launch Stack

A safe kickboxing floor starts with $12,000 in heavy bags and racks, $5,000 in protective gear, and $4,000 in sound and tech, plus the floor and mat work inside the $45,000 buildout. This is the core launch stack for cardio and self-defense classes, while wraps, gloves, cleaning items, and retail gear stay separate.


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Sizing Rules

Estimate it with bag count, rack type, mat area, impact rating, mirrors, audio quality, and class capacity. Use quotes for each line item, then separate durable gear from consumables and loaner stock. If you plan class sharing, size the protective inventory to peak attendance, not average attendance.

  • Count peak class spots.
  • Quote racks and mats.
  • Keep consumables off capex.
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Spend Smarter

The best savings come from scope control, not cheap gear. Buy only the rack and bag count you need for launch, limit loaner gear, and avoid oversized mirrors or audio until demand is proven. The main watch-out is underbuying safety items, because that hurts class flow and member trust.

  • Buy for launch, not max scale.
  • Limit loaner gear depth.
  • Protect safety first.

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Upkeep

Plan on $300 per month for equipment maintenance after opening. That covers checks, tightening, patching, and replacement planning, which protects class safety and reduces surprise downtime. If upkeep is skipped, bag wear, floor damage, and weak sound can hit the member experience fast.



Insurance, Permits, And Compliance Startup Expense


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Coverage first

Before public classes start, lock down insurance, the local license, certificate of occupancy, waivers, and any required workers compensation. In this model, insurance runs $500 per month, or $6,000 a year if coverage stays in force for 12 months. Keep it as a pre-opening operating cost unless a fee is clearly billed as setup.


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Permit stack

Estimate this cost from city, state, lease terms, staffing, and class format. Ask for quotes on business registration, local permits, waiver setup, instructor documents, music licensing, and payment compliance. If the lease requires extra coverage or sparring and contact drills are offered, the price can move fast. Use required documents and months of coverage, not guesses.

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Control the quote

Keep the policy broad enough to meet lease and local rules, but don’t pay for extras you don’t need. A solo-instructor setup usually needs less than a multi-instructor staff, and non-contact classes are easier to underwrite than sparring. The goal is simple: stay compliant first, then compare quotes with the same coverage limits and deductible.


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Keep it off CAPEX

Treat permits, insurance, waivers, and other compliance setup as startup operating costs, not CAPEX, unless a fee is clearly paid to open the site. That matters because the studio already has separate fixed items like $45,000 for buildout and $6,500 monthly rent. Have the risk file ready before the first class.



Staffing And Instructor Onboarding Startup Expense


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Launch payroll

Payroll starts before revenue is proven, so this line covers hiring, training, scheduling, trial classes, sales coverage, and launch prep. Year 1 wages total $215,000, or about $17,917 per month. Keep this separate from ongoing monthly payroll forecasts so the startup budget shows the real pre-opening cash need.


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Cost inputs

Estimate this cost from role counts, salary rates, and months covered. The Year 1 wage plan uses a Gym Manager at $65,000, Lead Instructor at $55,000, Part Time Instructors at $42,000 annual salary at 15 FTE, and Front Desk Staff at $32,000 at 10 FTE. Add onboarding, background checks, certifications, and training separately if billed.

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Control spend

The cleanest way to control launch labor is to phase hires and keep prep work tight. Don't cut the manager, instructor training, or sales coverage that protects opening quality. Watch for a common mistake: mixing pre-opening payroll with steady-state payroll. A short launch schedule can lower cash burn, but only if class coverage and compliance stay intact.


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Refinement checks

Refinement questions: how many hires start before opening, how long is training, and what do background checks and certifications cost? If the studio needs extra staff for trial classes or sales, model those weeks as startup cash, not monthly operating payroll. That keeps the first budget honest.



Technology, Signage, And Launch Marketing Startup Expense


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Launch tech stack

The studio needs a website, booking flow, POS, and exterior visibility before opening. The hard startup items here are $4,000 for sound and tech plus $3,500 for signage, or $7,500 total, with software at $350 per month. Treat setup and launch ads as pre-opening or early operating costs unless capitalized.


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What it buys

This budget covers the tools that sell founding memberships: website, booking software, POS setup, lead capture, referral tracking, local ads, trial class funnels, and the grand opening campaign. The recurring software load is $350 per month, so plan cash for launch setup plus the first operating month, not just install day.

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Keep it lean

Use one system for booking and payments, then tie ad spend to trial-class leads and memberships sold. The mistake is buying broad awareness before the funnel works. Here, the big variables are setup scope, ad creative, and how much you spend before opening on lead capture and member tracking.


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Launch economics

On paper, the launch stack is small next to buildout, but the operating drag is heavy. Digital marketing is modeled at 80% of revenue and payment processing fees at 30%, so those two lines total 110% of revenue before software, labor, or rent. That makes pre-sold memberships and weekly tracking nonnegotiable.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario Table

Bigger spaces, more bag stations, and more instructor coverage push startup cash up fast. Lean, Base, and Full show how launch scope changes buildout, staffing, and working capital.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchLean cash plan Base LaunchCore plan Full LaunchLargest build
Launch model Phased buildout trims tenant improvements, bag stations, and pre-open staffing so the launch stays cash-light. Standard launch uses the model's full equipment set and opening spend, with $78,000 CAPEX and $885,000 minimum cash need in Month 2. Heavier tenant improvements and a larger class floor drive a fuller opening with more staff and deeper working capital.
Typical setup Smaller square footage, fewer bag stations, lean front desk coverage, light launch marketing, and a short rent runway. Mid-size square footage, full bag setup, standard staffing, moderate launch marketing, and a rent runway sized for Month 2 cash pressure. Larger square footage, more bag stations, expanded locker setup, stronger signage, more instructor coverage, and a longer rent runway.
Cost drivers
  • Phased buildout
  • fewer bag stations
  • lower pre-open staffing
  • tighter marketing
  • shorter runway
  • Studio buildout
  • heavy bags and racks
  • pre-open payroll
  • marketing push
  • working capital runway
  • Heavier tenant improvements
  • larger bag count
  • expanded locker setup
  • more instructor coverage
  • stronger signage
Planning rangeCAPEX only Lower six figuresLowest cash load $885,000Core funding need Above $1MHighest funding need
Best fit Fits a hands-on founder testing demand before scaling the space and staff. Fits a founder who wants a balanced opening with enough cash to absorb Month 2. Fits a well-funded operator opening a larger site and pushing hard from day one.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not exact quotes or vendor bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

The model’s minimum cash requirement is $885,000 in Month 2, which is far above the $78,000 CAPEX budget That gap reflects operating runway, payroll, rent, and early ramp-up risk At a minimum, plan around the known monthly fixed load: $6,500 rent, about $17,917 payroll, and $8,850 non-payroll fixed costs