How Much It Costs To Start A Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Business: $726K Base Plan

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Description

You’re budgeting a commercial kitchen exhaust cleaning launch before taking restaurant clients, so the real number is bigger than equipment alone The base planning case uses $450,000 in CAPEX, $276,000 in minimum cash, and a first-year EBITDA loss of $183,000 before breakeven in Month 9 These are US planning assumptions, not vendor quotes, and they can change by city, service scope, equipment choice, staffing, and customer mix


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

This estimates capitalized startup assets only for a kitchen exhaust cleaning business.

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What's excluded This covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes insurance premiums, payroll, fuel, permits, recurring chemicals, deposits, debt service, working capital, inventory runway, and ongoing marketing spend unless the marketing is capitalized startup material.



What does the CAPEX screenshot show?

CAPEX tab shows startup expenses, Month 1-6 costs, and depreciation/amortization fields. Open Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Financial Model Template; adjust assumptions.

Key model highlights

  • $450k CAPEX, $276k cash
  • Month 9 break-even
  • 44-month payback
  • EBITDA: -$183k to $1.26m
  • Prices: $95/$125/$180/$350/$450
Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Financial Model capex inputs showing equipment, installation, and facility investment fields that let users customize capital spending, schedules and depreciation for funding and cash planning.


What hidden costs come with starting a kitchen exhaust cleaning business?


If you're sizing up Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning, the biggest hidden costs hit before you open and then keep draining cash each month; for margin context, see How Much Does The Owner Of Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Business Typically Make? Pre-opening costs can include $2,800 insurance, $600 training and certification, $1,500 professional services, $1,200 software, $4,500 rent, and $800 utilities.

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Pre-opening costs

  • $2,800 monthly insurance premium
  • $600 training and certification
  • $1,500 professional services
  • $1,200 software subscriptions
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Working capital

  • 8% of revenue for fuel and maintenance
  • 18% of revenue for cleaning supplies
  • Cash for chemicals, disposal, and parts
  • $400 CAC in Year 1, plus slow receivables

That working capital also covers night-shift labor and customer acquisition, so this is cash you need on hand, not CAPEX (equipment spend). If receivables run late, the gap gets bigger fast.

How much money do I need to start a kitchen exhaust cleaning business?


You need about $726,000 to start a Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning business, not just the equipment budget. The base plan is $450,000 in CAPEX, meaning long-term startup assets, plus $276,000 in minimum cash; for market context, see What Is The Current Growth Rate Of Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Business?. Break-even is Month 9, and payback is 44 months, so you need runway beyond opening day.

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Startup Funding

  • $726,000 total funding need
  • $450,000 CAPEX for launch assets
  • $276,000 minimum cash reserve
  • Month 9 operating break-even target
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Cash Pressure

  • CAPEX covers vehicles, equipment, office, IT
  • Also safety tools, warehouse gear, training equipment
  • Year 1 EBITDA loss: $183,000
  • Year 1 salaries: $430,000

How do I fund a kitchen exhaust cleaning business?


For a Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning startup, the base funding need is $726,000: $450,000 for CAPEX and $276,000 for minimum cash. Put that money into vehicles, cleaning equipment, safety tools, training setup, launch marketing, and the early operating runway. Here’s the quick math: Year 1 EBITDA is -$183,000, then $148,000 in Year 2, $489,000 in Year 3, $833,000 in Year 4, and $1,260,000 in Year 5, with breakeven in Month 9 and a 44-month payback.

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Use of funds

  • $450,000 CAPEX starts the build.
  • Buy vehicles and cleaning equipment first.
  • Cover safety tools and training setup.
  • Keep cash for launch marketing and runway.
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Revenue anchors

  • Price basic cleanings at $180.
  • Use $350 full system cleanings.
  • Add $95 inspections and $125 grease containment.
  • Keep $450 emergency response for urgent calls.


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table breaks out the main startup assets and the cash reserve needed to launch a kitchen exhaust cleaning service.

Highlighted CAPEX$450,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$276,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$726,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Service Vehicles $180,000 Commercial service vehicles for field routes Yes
Professional Cleaning Equipment $95,000 Grease-removal gear and cleaning rigs Yes
Software Development Platform $75,000 Platform build for scheduling, routing, and billing Yes
Office Setup and Furniture $25,000 Front-office setup for dispatch and admin Yes
Other Startup Assets $75,000 IT hardware, safety tools, warehouse gear, branding, and certification Yes
Working Capital Reserve $276,000 Minimum cash and ramp-up reserve through Month 17 No

Planning note: Ranges are researched assumptions; row 6 is non-CAPEX launch cash, excluding post-launch payroll runway.


Kitchen Exhaust Cleaning Core Five Startup Costs



Service Vehicle And Mobile Outfitting Startup Expense


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Vehicle CAPEX

$180,000 base CAPEX covers bought or outfitted vans and trailer options, plus shelving, secure tool mounting, hose storage, water storage, signage, tool locks, roof-access transport, and crew dispatch readiness. Treat vehicle purchases and outfitting as asset cost. Keep leases, fuel, maintenance, registration, insurance, and repairs out unless capitalized.


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Cost Inputs

Build the estimate from crew count, used versus new units, service radius, and night work needs. More crews mean more vehicles, more storage, and more secure mounting. Variable fuel and maintenance should sit at 8% of Year 1 revenue, separate from the asset base.

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Keep It Lean

Used units and trailer setups can cut upfront cash, but only if they still support safe hose storage, roof access, and lockable tools. Don’t trim the parts that protect crew speed or compliance. Night work usually needs better lighting and tighter dispatch setup, so price those needs before you buy.

  • Price used and new separately
  • Match units to launch crews
  • Add night-work gear if needed

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Launch Checks

The real budget driver is how many crews you launch on day one. One ready unit can serve a single crew, but wider service radius or after-hours work can force extra outfitting and redundancy. This estimate hides operating costs, so keep fuel, maintenance, and insurance outside the asset total.



Professional Cleaning Equipment Startup Expense


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Base Kit

The launch kit starts at $95,000 in CAPEX. That covers the durable gear: hot-water pressure washer or steam cleaner, hoses, reels, nozzles, extension wands, degreasing tools, scrapers, wet/dry vac, pumps, lighting, access tools, and photo tools. Use quotes by unit count, then add backup gear for the crew size you plan to run.


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Cost Build

Separate durable tools from chemicals and disposables. The estimate should use units × unit price, plus any quotes for higher-output cleaners, access gear, or photo setup. Chemicals, tarps, filters, and other short-life items belong in COGS or startup inventory, not CAPEX. If you service full systems, the kit needs more redundancy.

  • Crew count drives tool count.
  • Roof access adds gear.
  • Full-system scope raises spend.
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Keep It Lean

Buy for the first route set, not for the biggest job you hope to win. The main mistake is paying for duplicate tools too early. Start with the equipment needed for the launch crew, then add redundancy only when the schedule proves it’s needed. Keep the quote set tight so capital stays inside the $95,000 base.

  • Match gear to launch crew size.
  • Delay duplicate tools.
  • Review access needs first.

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Year 1 Mix

Plan cleaning supplies and equipment at 18% of Year 1 revenue, then 13% by Year 5. That slide only happens if jobs are cleanly scoped and the crew avoids waste, rework, and lost tools. Use the Year 1 number for startup inventory and monthly buying, not the equipment CAPEX bucket.



Compliance, Training, Insurance, And Professional Setup Startup Expense


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Launch Setup Cost

This line item runs $4,900/month for insurance, training, and professional help, plus $34,000 in upfront gear. It covers general liability, commercial auto, workers’ compensation if hiring, business formation, local licenses, safety training, NFPA 96 awareness, and optional industry certification. One national license is not always required; rules vary by state, city, insurer, and contract.


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Build The Budget

Here’s the quick math: $2,800 insurance + $600 training + $1,500 professional services = $4,900/month, or $58,800/year. Add $22,000 for certification and training equipment and $12,000 for safety equipment and tools. Treat the monthly items as overhead and the two equipment lines as startup CAPEX.

  • Quote coverage by state.
  • Check city license rules.
  • Match training to contracts.
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Cut Waste

Keep the spend tight by getting 3 insurance quotes, using one compliance advisor, and buying durable training gear once. Don’t trim coverage or skip training to save a few hundred dollars; one failed inspection or claim can cost far more. The safest savings come from right-sizing the first crew, not overbuying for a future team.


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Local Rule Check

Do not assume one national license applies everywhere. Build a launch checklist for each state and municipality, then confirm what your insurer and customer contracts require. For this service, the usual proof set is training records, safety gear, local permits, and NFPA 96 awareness. Update the file before you add hiring or expand into a new service area.



Consumables, Chemicals, And PPE Startup Expense


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Inventory, Not CAPEX

Treat degreasers, plastic sheeting, tarps, filters, absorbents, buckets, brushes, gloves, goggles, respirators, boots, uniforms, first-aid supplies, and disposal materials as startup inventory or working capital. They get used up on jobs, so they do not belong in long-term CAPEX. Plan them at 18% of Year 1 revenue.


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Budget Formula

Use 0.18 × Year 1 revenue as the planning input for cleaning supplies and equipment. Keep only durable safety assets in the $12,000 CAPEX bucket. That keeps consumables separate from tools that last across many jobs and makes the launch budget easier to audit.

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Keep It Tight

Order stock against booked jobs, not guesses. Match PPE and disposables to crew count, then top up from actual use. The usual mistake is buying durable gear twice or loading CAPEX with items that wear out fast. Better containment also cuts rework and wasted materials.


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Cost Drivers

Job volume, full-system cleaning mix, grease load, customer kitchen size, local disposal rules, and rework from poor containment drive this line. Bigger hoods and heavier grease use more degreaser, absorbents, PPE, and disposal material, so stock levels should track route mix and site type.



Marketing, Software, And Launch Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch Spend

Your first-year launch budget needs to separate demand gen from software and assets. Plan $120,000 in Year 1 marketing, or $10,000 per month, plus $8,000 for branding materials. At a $400 CAC, that marketing spend buys about 300 customers if all dollars go to acquisition.


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What It Covers

Use the marketing line for the website, local search setup, business profile setup, proposal templates, and outreach to restaurants, cafeterias, hotels, and facilities. Add uniforms and business cards here too. Keep this separate from cleaning equipment CAPEX so launch spend stays clean for lender and investor review.

  • Website and local search
  • Business profiles and proposals
  • Uniforms and business cards
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Software Stack

Budget $1,200 per month for software subscriptions, or $14,400 in Year 1. If you build internal systems, add $75,000 in platform CAPEX. That covers scheduling or CRM software and inspection photo documentation, not vehicles or tools.

  • Scheduling or CRM software
  • Photo documentation re cords
  • Build only if needed

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Keep It Separate

Do not mix acquisition and software with cleaning equipment CAPEX. The clean split is $120,000 marketing, $8,000 branding CAPEX, $14,400 software subscriptions, and up to $75,000 for a build. That makes cash planning easier and keeps service-asset spending from hiding customer growth costs.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Launch cost scenarios

Kitchen exhaust cleaning costs move with vehicle count, labor, software, and working capital. Lean, Base, and Full show how the launch budget shifts from an owner-led start to a multi-crew build.

Lean, Base, and Full launch capital compare
Scenario Lean LaunchOwner-operator Base LaunchBase mobile team Full LaunchMulti-crew launch
Launch model Founder-led sales with fewer vehicles, used equipment, and a lighter software build. Use the model's $450,000 CAPEX plus $276,000 minimum cash to support a standard mobile team. Build for bigger route density with upgraded vehicle capacity, more labor readiness, and a larger marketing reserve.
Typical setup Use a bare-bones office setup, a smaller marketing reserve, and only the core tools needed to start. Buy the planned vehicles and equipment, fund core software, and keep working cash for Month 17 pressure. Add stronger documentation systems, extra working capital, and enough capacity to cover multiple crews.
Cost drivers
  • Used vehicles
  • lighter equipment
  • owner sales
  • smaller software build
  • lower marketing reserve
  • Standard vehicles
  • full equipment set
  • core labor
  • model marketing budget
  • working capital
  • Upgraded vehicle capacity
  • added labor readiness
  • larger marketing budget
  • more working capital
  • documentation systems
Planning rangeCAPEX only $450,000 - $650,000Lower cash need $726,000Model anchor $850,000 - $1,100,000Higher funding need
Best fit Best for a founder with hands-on sales skills, limited funding, and a narrow service area. Best for a founder funding the modeled launch and serving a moderate local route base. Best for an operator with strong funding access and dense demand that can keep multiple crews busy.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

The base plan assigns $95,000 to professional cleaning equipment and another $12,000 to safety equipment and tools That does not include the $180,000 service vehicle budget Keep durable items in CAPEX, but treat degreasers, plastic sheeting, filters, and other disposables as supplies or working capital