Medical Oxygen Plant Startup Costs: $486K Fixed Overhead In Year 1

Medical Oxygen Plant Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Capacity drives equipment cost; no single system price.
  • Leasehold buildout needs separate utility and installation budgets.
  • Cylinder delivery costs vary sharply by route and urgency.
  • Compliance and payroll create large ongoing monthly burn.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimate the capitalized startup assets for a medical oxygen plant only, before operating reserves or runway.

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Scope note This tool covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes inventory, payroll runway, deposits, debt service, working capital, marketing runway, and operating expenses; initial spare parts are not included here.



Does the Medical Oxygen Plant CAPEX tab prove funding needs?

Does the Medical Oxygen Plant Financial Model Template CAPEX tab prove funding needs? It shows startup costs, timing, depreciation, amortization; review assumptions.

Key screenshot highlights

  • Startup cost categories
  • Launch timing
  • Depreciation schedule
Medical Oxygen Plant Financial Model capex inputs showing fixed asset purchases, installation and commissioning costs, and depreciation assumptions to customize capital spending and funding needs.


How should a medical oxygen plant funding plan be built?


Build the funding plan from CAPEX, startup cash, and working capital, then show how the Medical Oxygen Plant ramps into sales and collections. Lenders and investors will want a CAPEX schedule, startup budget, launch timing, product-by-product revenue build, contract assumptions, receivables timing, operating reserve, and a covenant cushion. Use the Year 1 prices of $135 bulk liquid, $90 large cylinder, $38 standard cylinder, $16 rental cylinder, and $275 rush delivery, then tie that to the financial model as the next validation step.

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Funding plan inputs

  • CAPEX schedule by asset
  • Startup budget before launch
  • Ramp-up timing by product
  • Utilization assumptions by month
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Investor and lender checks

  • Contracts and customer mix
  • Receivables timing and cash gap
  • Operating reserve for delays
  • Covenant cushion for downside

How much money do you need to start a medical oxygen plant?


A Medical Oxygen Plant needs funding for the build plus working capital; from the provided model, the visible Year 1 operating floor is $746,600 to $1,097,600 before unpriced CAPEX, installation, compliance, cylinders, vehicles, receivables lag, and contingency. Use What Is The Current Growth Trajectory Of Your Medical Oxygen Plant Business? to test whether the $5,791,750 Year 1 revenue plan can carry that ramp.

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Visible cash need

  • $40,500 monthly fixed overhead
  • $486,000 first-year fixed overhead
  • $351,000 visible core payroll
  • $260,600 Year 1 selling and marketing
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Still to fund

  • CAPEX and plant installation
  • Medical compliance and quality systems
  • Cylinder inventory and delivery readiness
  • Receivables lag and contingency cash

What drives the cost of a medical oxygen plant?


The biggest cost drivers in a Medical Oxygen Plant are not just the machine price; they’re capacity, PSA generator spec, purity monitoring, compressor size, dryers, filtration, redundancy, cylinder filling throughput, bulk storage, backup oxygen supply, electrical capacity, and the delivery model. At Year 1 volume of 40,000 bulk liquid units, 1,200 large cylinders, 4,500 standard cylinders, 5,500 rental cylinders, and 90 rush deliveries, the plant has to be built for output and reliability, not just the cheapest quote. Hospital supply needs documentation and uptime, so a lower equipment price can still mean a higher-risk opening plan.

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Equipment drives cost

  • PSA generator size sets base cost
  • Compressor and dryer capacity matter
  • Filtration and purity checks add spend
  • Redundancy raises cost, but cuts outage risk
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Reliability costs money

  • Bulk storage supports surge demand
  • Backup oxygen supply protects hospital service
  • Electrical capacity must match output
  • Rush deliveries raise logistics complexity


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table shows the main one-time plant build costs plus the excluded cash reserve needed to launch and stabilize operations.

Highlighted CAPEX$7,600,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$5,293,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$12,893,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Air Separation Plant Construction $4,500,000 Oxygen generation equipment and plant buildout Yes
Cryogenic Storage Tanks $1,200,000 Bulk storage capacity and installation Yes
Plant Automation & Control Systems $800,000 Controls, monitoring, and production integration Yes
Initial Delivery Fleet (Trucks) $750,000 Delivery setup and hazmat transport Yes
Medical Oxygen Cylinders (Bulk Purchase) $350,000 Cylinder stock and refill-ready inventory Yes
Opening Cash Buffer $5,293,000 Year 1 overhead, payroll, and launch spend No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched startup assumptions; non-CAPEX excludes land, debt service, and expansion.


Medical Oxygen Plant Core Five Startup Costs



Oxygen Generation Equipment Startup Expense


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Equipment Scope

This cost covers the pressure swing adsorption (PSA) oxygen production system, air compressors, dryers, filtration, oxygen analyzers, purity monitoring, control panels, alarms, backup systems, and redundancy. Price changes with capacity, uptime target, service model, and hospital contract requirements, so there is no safe one-price estimate.


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Size It To Demand

Build the model around Year 1 demand: 40,000 bulk liquid units, 1,200 large cylinders, and 4,500 standard cylinders. That volume drives generator size, compressor load, storage, and backup scope. If you underbuild, you buy downtime; if you overbuild, you lock cash into idle equipment.

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Ask For Full Bids

Ask vendors to price the full package: production system, compressors, dryers, filtration, analyzers, alarms, controls, and spare parts. Require quotes for the uptime target and redundancy level your contracts need. Then compare installed CAPEX, lead times, and service support side by side.


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No Generic Price

Do not lock the budget until you have at least two bids and clear specs for capacity, uptime target, purity monitoring, and backup power. A generic plant price misses redundancy and backup systems, which can shift the final CAPEX fast.



Facility Buildout And Installation Startup Expense


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Buildout Scope

A medical oxygen plant buildout is not just walls and paint. The budget has to cover electrical capacity, ventilation, foundations, piping, equipment pads, fire safety, hazardous-material handling areas, loading zones, contractor labor, commissioning support, and utility upgrades. If you lease, the anchor is $28,000 monthly for the plant and $3,500 for admin office rent.


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Estimate Inputs

Split this startup cost into landlord improvements, tenant improvements, installation labor, and utility deposits. Get bids for electrical, HVAC, fire systems, and utility tie-ins, then map them to the lease term and site layout. One clean rule: if the site is not ready for power, air, and safe loading, the plant is not ready.

  • Get written landlord scope.
  • Quote utility deposits early.
  • Separate one-time from rent.
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Lease Control

Leased space is usually faster than ground-up construction or land purchase, but only if the landlord will carry shell work. Push for clear owner responsibility on power upgrades, pads, and fire systems. That keeps startup cash focused on install and commissioning, not on paying twice for the same building work.

  • Ask who owns each upgrade.
  • Lock scope before work starts.
  • Avoid double-paying for shells.

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Cash Timing

The lease anchor means buildout cash still lands before oxygen sales start. Plan for the gap between signing, installation, and first shipment, because contractor retainers and utility deposits can hit early. Here’s the simple test: if the site cannot support power, ventilation, and loading, it is not ready to earn.



Storage, Filling, And Delivery Startup Expense


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What It Covers

This budget covers cylinders, racks, filling manifolds, labels, caps, valves, handling gear, and any bulk tank setup. For Year 1, anchor the model to 5,500 rental cylinders and 90 rush deliveries, then add quote-based costs for storage space, dock access, and tracking tied to exchange, bulk, or backup supply service.


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How To Size It

Estimate this expense as units × unit price, plus months of storage coverage and delivery prep. Here’s the quick math: large-cylinder delivery fuel can run $350 per drop, standard-cylinder delivery fuel $200, and direct rush delivery cost components $85. The right size depends on customer mix, not one flat facility number.

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How To Trim It

Keep cost down by matching the setup to the service model. Exchange programs need more cylinders and tracking; bulk supply needs more tank and dock support; backup supply needs spare inventory. One clean rule: don’t buy excess cylinders before route demand is clear. Ask for quotes on racks, manifolds, and handling gear before locking the fill line.

  • Buy to the service mix.
  • Price tracking early.
  • Test dock flow first.

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Delivery Setup

Delivery setup includes loading dock needs, vehicles or third-party logistics, and cylinder traceability from fill to drop-off. If you serve hospitals and clinics in one network, tracking matters as much as transport. Use the 90 rush deliveries anchor to size fast-response capacity, then separate standard routes from emergency calls so the rush lane does not drain the core fleet.



Compliance, Testing, And Insurance Startup Expense


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Launch setup

One-time compliance setup covers FDA medical gas requirements, state and local permits, quality system setup, validation, oxygen purity testing, batch documentation, safety documentation, legal review, and regulatory audit planning. Price it with quotes, because medical oxygen plant licensing cost changes with plant size, product mix, and the scope of consultant and lab work.


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Monthly load

The ongoing bill is easier to model: $2,800 a month for general business insurance and $2,200 a month for legal and accounting support, plus regulatory audit fees at 0.5% of revenue. At $1 million in annual revenue, that audit line is $5,000 a year.

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Trim spend

Keep one-time work and recurring work separate so you don’t pay monthly for launch tasks. Bundle permit, validation, and testing quotes up front, then renew insurance and retainer terms only after go-live. The common mistake is underbudgeting document control, which turns into rework and delayed audit readiness.


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Audit file

Build one clean file for approvals, test results, batch logs, and safety records before first shipment. That cuts scramble time, speeds responses, and helps the team handle audit requests without chasing paper across vendors, labs, and offices.



Staffing Readiness And Launch Startup Expense


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Payroll base

The visible Year 1 payroll floor is $351,000: one plant manager at $125,000, two senior plant operators at $78,000 each, and one quality control technician at $70,000. That excludes any driver roles. Keep pre-opening payroll separate from ongoing payroll so launch burn stays clear.


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Launch setup

Pre-opening spend should cover safety training, onboarding, PPE, spare parts, cylinder labels, office setup, sales outreach to healthcare providers, and launch marketing. Build it from headcount, supplier quotes, and the number of labels or starter supplies needed before first shipment. This is separate from monthly payroll.

  • Train staff before first delivery
  • Buy launch PPE and spare parts
  • Order labels and office items
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Sales spend

Sales commissions are 30% of Year 1 revenue, and general marketing is 15%. Together, that is 45% of revenue before payroll. Here’s the quick math: at $100,000 of Year 1 revenue, those two lines cost $45,000.

  • Use facility-targeted outreach
  • Track commissions by contract
  • Separate ad spend from payroll

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Cost control

Keep launch costs tight by buying only the staff, PPE, labels, and office items needed for first production. The common mistake is mixing one-time setup costs with ongoing payroll and commissions; that hides cash needs and makes the launch plan look safer than it is.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Startup cost changes fast here because storage, delivery, redundancy, and staffing all scale with service level. Lean uses a leased setup; Full adds backup systems and larger working capital.

Lean, Base, and Full startup bands for a medical oxygen plant.
Scenario Lean LaunchLower build Base LaunchModeled build Full LaunchHigher capex
Launch model Use a leased facility, a tighter product mix, and smaller storage to keep the first build lean. Use the full mixed-volume Year 1 plan with the core plant, storage, fleet, and operating team. Build for higher redundancy, more cylinders, bigger storage, expanded delivery, and a larger support team.
Typical setup A leased site with limited delivery, lower cylinder counts, and quote-driven capex sized for the minimum viable plant. A purpose-built facility with standard storage, normal delivery coverage, and the staffed setup needed for the modeled mix. A larger plant with backup systems, bulk storage, an expanded fleet, and a larger working capital reserve.
Cost drivers
  • Leasehold fit-out
  • smaller storage
  • narrower product mix
  • limited delivery
  • lower staffing
  • Air separation plant
  • cryogenic storage
  • delivery fleet
  • quality control lab
  • core staff
  • Redundant systems
  • larger storage
  • bigger fleet
  • more cylinders
  • more staff
Planning rangeCAPEX only $4.0M - $6.0MLean budget $8.3M - $10.0MBase budget $10.0M - $14.0MFull build
Best fit Best for founders testing hospital demand, smaller service areas, or a phased launch. Best for operators ready to serve the full Year 1 product mix at planned scale. Best for dense hospital markets that need higher uptime, more route coverage, and room to scale.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Reserve enough to cover the early ramp-up period, not just the opening month The provided model already carries $40,500 in monthly fixed overhead, at least $351,000 in visible first-year plant and quality payroll, and 45% of revenue for sales and marketing Add receivables lag, cylinder inventory, delivery costs, compliance costs, and a contingency before setting the final reserve