Persian Restaurant Startup Costs: $154K CAPEX And $798K Cash Need

Persian Restaurant Startup Costs
Fully Editable
Instant Download
Professional Design
Pre-Built
No Expertise Is Needed
Persian Restaurant Bundle
See included products:
Financial Model iPersian Restaurant Bundle Financial Model template included in this product.
$149 $109
ADD TO YOUR ORDER
Business Plan iPersian Restaurant Bundle Business Plan template included in this product.
$79 $59
Pitch Deck iPersian Restaurant Bundle Pitch Deck template included in this product.
$49 $29
YOU SAVE $0 TODAY
30-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Created by a Former CFO
Updated for 2026
One-Time Purchase
Description

This US planning guide separates $154,000 of launch CAPEX from pre-opening expenses, inventory, working capital, and the model’s $798,000 minimum cash need in Month 2 These ranges are planning assumptions, not vendor quotes, and they tie the opening budget to first-year revenue of $822,000, Month 3 breakeven, and 12-month payback


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Snapshot

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a Persian restaurant launch.

$
$
$
$
$
10%

CAPEX limits Base CAPEX is 154000 before contingency. This calculator covers only capitalized startup assets: buildout, cooking equipment, hood and ventilation, refrigeration, and front-of-house setup. It excludes working capital, payroll runway, rent during buildout, deposits, debt service, ongoing food inventory, Month 2 minimum cash, and other operating costs unless you capitalize them separately.



What should the Persian Restaurant CAPEX tab show?

This CAPEX tab lists Month 1-6 expenses, launch timing, depreciation/amortization, and working capital. Open the Persian Restaurant Financial Model Template and test $154k CAPEX, $822k revenue, and $243k EBITDA.

Key screenshot checks

  • Month 1-6 CAPEX
  • Month 3 breakeven
  • $798k cash need
  • 12-month payback
Persian Restaurant Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and customizable purchase, timing and depreciation assumptions to plan startup and growth investments, fully editable.


What are the biggest Persian restaurant buildout cost drivers?


If you’re sizing a Persian Restaurant, the base $65,000 buildout is only part of the story; the biggest cost drivers are the $25,000 hood and ventilation system, $18,000 for refrigeration and cold storage, and $12,000 for primary cooking equipment. Before you sign a lease, test kebab grilling, rice cooking, skewering, hot holding, prep flow, and dishwashing so you don’t miss gas lines or utility limits. Landlord condition, fire inspection, and code compliance can change the budget fast, so plan those risks into the first budget.

Icon

Top cost drivers

  • Leasehold improvements set the base spend.
  • Hood and ventilation can be $25,000.
  • Refrigeration and cold storage run $18,000.
  • Primary equipment is $12,000.
Icon

Check before lease

  • Validate kebab grilling needs.
  • Validate rice cooking capacity.
  • Check gas, prep, and dish flow.
  • Confirm fire and utility capacity.

How much money do you need to start a Persian restaurant?


You need about $798,000 to start a Persian Restaurant safely, not just the $154,000 identified CAPEX; the model’s minimum cash need peaks in Month 2. For KPI context, pair this funding view with What Are The 5 KPIs For Persian Restaurant Business?; these are US planning assumptions, not vendor quotes.

Icon

Cash Need

  • $154,000 identified CAPEX
  • $798,000 minimum Month 2 cash need
  • Gap driven by buildout and opening losses
  • Format, site, kitchen, dining room matter
Icon

First-Year Model

  • $822,000 Year 1 revenue
  • $243,000 EBITDA, pre-debt operating profit
  • Month 3 breakeven, 12-month payback
  • 80 Tuesday covers, 180 Saturday covers

What hidden costs are missed when opening a Persian restaurant?


The biggest hidden costs are the pre-opening items people forget: permits, inspections, insurance deposits, utility deposits, staff training, recipe testing, opening food inventory, packaging, cleaning supplies, uniforms, soft opening, and launch marketing; see What Does It Cost To Run A Persian Restaurant? for the operating-cost side. Budget $8,000 for initial inventory and specialty tools, plus $1,500 a month for marketing, $450 for insurance, $1,200 for utilities and internet, and $6,500 for rent. Payroll is the real squeeze: $60,000 for a general manager, $48,000 for a lead kitchen role, 20 junior kitchen FTE at $36,000 each, 15 front-of-house FTE at $32,000 each, and 10 kitchen assistants at $28,000 each, so plan for a $798,000 minimum cash reserve in Month 2.

Icon

Pre-open cash

  • Permits and inspections
  • Insurance and utility deposits
  • Training and recipe testing
  • Soft opening and launch marketing
Icon

Fixed monthly load

  • $8,000 inventory and specialty tools
  • $1,500 marketing each month
  • $450 insurance; $1,200 utilities
  • $6,500 rent plus heavy payroll


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table separates startup assets from excluded launch cash for a Persian restaurant, with low, base, and high planning ranges.

Highlighted CAPEX$129,500Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$798,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$927,500CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Interior Design and Chic Buildout $65,000 Leasehold work, finishes, and guest-facing buildout scope Yes
Kitchen Ventilation and Hood System $25,000 Kitchen exhaust, hood size, and install complexity Yes
Refrigeration and Cold Storage $18,000 Equipment grade, storage capacity, and delivery setup Yes
Dining Furniture and Decor $15,000 Seat count, finish quality, and decor package Yes
POS Hardware and Digital Menu Boards $6,500 Terminals, tablets, displays, and install scope Yes
Opening Cash Buffer $798,000 Month 2 rent, payroll, utilities, marketing, and other operating runway No

Planning note: Ranges are planning assumptions; excluded cash need covers working capital and opening runway.


Persian Restaurant Core Five Startup Costs



Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense


Icon

Buildout Budget

Treat leasehold improvements as CAPEX, not rent or payroll. The base buildout budget is $65,000 across Month 1 to Month 4 for interior design, flooring, walls, restrooms, plumbing, electrical, gas, ADA access, dining layout, kitchen prep space, and inspection readiness. Add a contingency, then subtract any landlord allowance.


Icon

Scope Drivers

Cost depends on what the space already has. The biggest checks are whether it was already a restaurant, whether hood infrastructure exists, whether gas service is enough, and whether restrooms meet code. If those are missing, the same $65,000 can move fast. If they are in place, more of the budget goes to finish work.

  • Confirm prior restaurant use
  • Verify hood and fire systems
  • Test gas and restroom code
Icon

Control Overruns

Use 2 quotes per trade and keep changes tight. Save money by reusing compliant walls, plumbing, and layout where the site already fits a restaurant shell. Don’t overspend on décor before inspections pass. A clean rule: fund the base buildout first, then hold a contingency for hidden electrical, gas, or restroom fixes.

  • Price trades before signing
  • Reuse compliant existing work
  • Hold cash for surprises

Icon

Allowance Offset

If the landlord offers a tenant improvement allowance, treat it as an offset against the $65,000 base, not extra spending money. That matters because buildout cash leaves before first revenue. Keep rent, payroll, and permit timing in view so you don’t fund improvements with money needed for opening month operating costs.



Kitchen Equipment And Installation Startup Expense


Icon

Core Kitchen

For a Persian restaurant, start with $12,000 for primary cooking equipment. That line should cover the commercial kebab grill, rice cookers, ranges, ovens, prep tables, skewering stations, dishwashing, smallwares, and installation quotes. The real question is capacity: how many covers the line can handle without slowing service.


Icon

Hood System

$25,000 is the hood and ventilation line. Budget it as a code item, not just a metal box. It has to clear grease capture, make-up air, gas tie-ins, and fire suppression so the inspector signs off. Validate whether the space already has usable hood infrastructure; if not, this becomes the cost spike.

Icon

Cold Storage

$18,000 covers refrigeration and cold storage. Use it for walk-in or reach-in units, freezers, and related install, sized to menu volume and delivery timing. Do not underbuy here; warm storage kills product quality and raises waste. Get quotes that include wiring, drainage, and startup service, not just the cabinet price.


Icon

Inspection Gate

The core kitchen package totals $55,000 before contingency. The hidden driver is not the equipment list alone; it is whether hood, gas, electrical, drainage, and fire systems pass inspection. If any system needs rework, opening delays and the budget climbs while rent and payroll keep running.



Furniture, Décor, POS, And Signage Startup Expense


Icon

Dining Room Setup

$26,000 covers the front-of-house launch: $15,000 for furniture and décor, $6,500 for POS hardware and digital menu boards, and $4,500 for exterior signage. It funds tables, chairs, booths, lighting, a host stand, menus, serviceware, payment terminals, kitchen printers, and permitted signage tied to the dining room scope.


Icon

Budget Inputs

Estimate this cost from vendor quotes, seat count, and the final dining room layout. Here’s the quick math: $15,000 + $6,500 + $4,500 = $26,000. Tie the spend to Year 1 cover assumptions, including 180 Saturday covers and 160 Sunday covers, so the room matches real traffic, not wishful thinking.

Icon

Spend Control

Keep décor practical. Buy durable pieces that handle daily service, and avoid overspending on design that won’t lift weekday demand. The smartest savings come from choosing restaurant-grade furniture, limiting custom work, and staging POS and signage for opening needs first. Extra polish is nice, but it does not fix slow midweek traffic.


Icon

Weekend Fit

This setup should support a room that can actually serve the model: 180 covers on Saturday and 160 on Sunday. If the layout, menu boards, and signage are not clean and easy to use, service slows down fast. Focus on flow, not flash, because front-of-house spending only works when guests can be seated, ordered, and turned efficiently.



Permits, Licenses, Insurance, And Professional Fees Startup Expense


Icon

What It Covers

For a Persian restaurant, this line item covers business registration, food service and health permits, health and fire inspections, building permits, liquor license if needed, insurance, legal, accounting, architect, engineering, and plan review. Treat it as pre-opening spend unless a cost is part of buildout. Timing matters: failed inspections can push opening back while rent and payroll keep running.


Icon

How To Budget

Build the budget from quotes and fee schedules, not guesses. Use city and state permit fees, liquor rules, and architect or engineer scope, then add any needed hood, plumbing, electrical, or fire upgrades. Source operating costs include $450 monthly insurance and $350 maintenance, so carry those into opening-month cash planning.

Icon

What Drives Cost

Costs move with site condition and alcohol service. A former restaurant with code-ready restrooms and utilities is cheaper; a raw space with hood, gas, or fire work is not. One clean rule: if the inspector won’t sign off, revenue waits. Keep a contingency, because rent and payroll do not pause.


Icon

Timing Risk

Book permit, inspection, and professional fees before launch, and separate any capitalized buildout work from current expenses. If plan review or a failed health inspection adds weeks, the cash hit shows up fast. For a full-service Persian restaurant, the real risk is not the fee itself; it’s lost opening weeks.



Opening Inventory, Training, And Soft Opening Startup Expense


Icon

Soft-Open Cash

This is pre-revenue spend, so keep it separate from CAPEX. The source budget is $8,000 for initial inventory and specialty tools, plus Month 5 to Month 6 costs for rice, saffron, spices, lamb, chicken, beef, produce, pantry goods, beverages, packaging, cleaning supplies, uniforms, staff meals, recipe testing, menu costing, training shifts, and soft-opening comps.


Icon

Cost Inputs

Price it from three inputs: item list, units, and supplier quotes. Count training shifts, staff meals, and comps by expected covers and days open. Then add the payroll ramp before the first full revenue month. Tie the model to Year 1 sales with 100% for food ingredients and consumables, 40% for beverage supplies, 30% for delivery commissions, and 25% for payment processing.

  • Use quotes, not guesses.
  • Map costs to cover count.
  • Include payroll before launch.
Icon

Control The Ramp

Order to the soft-opening headcount, not the full menu fantasy. Hold back on extras until the first service week shows real usage. The risk is overbuying perishables and missing labor cost. Track waste daily, reset par levels, and watch specialty items like saffron and lamb closely so the opening cash stays inside plan.


Icon

Soft-Opening Controls

Use a short test run with tight menu costing, small training shifts, and counted comps. Keep consumables and payroll in the operating budget, not the buildout line. That makes the startup budget cleaner and gives a true read on first-month margins before the restaurant opens at full pace.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario Table

Startup cost moves fast with dining room size, kitchen buildout, and staffing. Lean trims seating and finish work; Base matches the model; Full adds a bigger room and heavier equipment.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchLower buildout Base LaunchModel case Full LaunchUpscale build
Launch model Counter-service or limited-table dining keeps the opening simple and lowers upfront spend. This is the model case: a sit-down restaurant built to the source assumptions, with $154,000 of CAPEX and a $798,000 minimum cash need. Upscale full-service dining adds a larger room, more back-of-house capacity, liquor licensing if pursued, and higher staffing.
Typical setup Smaller dining room, simpler hood and refrigeration, and fewer front-of-house seats. Mid-sized dining room, full kitchen setup, standard décor, and the staffing plan in the model. Bigger leasehold work, expanded hood and refrigeration, fuller décor, and more floor staff.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller buildout
  • fewer seats
  • lighter hood work
  • basic décor
  • lower opening inventory
  • Leasehold buildout
  • kitchen equipment
  • initial inventory
  • rent deposit
  • opening cash buffer
  • Larger leasehold improvements
  • extra refrigeration
  • hood expansion
  • liquor license if pursued
  • higher payroll
Planning rangeCAPEX only $110,000 - $180,000Lowest cash need $154,000 CAPEXSource case $220,000 - $350,000Highest cash need
Best fit Founders testing demand with a lower-risk opening. Operators who want the modeled Month 3 breakeven and 12-month payback as the base plan. Teams targeting a more polished dine-in format and ready for heavier funding needs.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Square footage changes rent, buildout, furniture, and kitchen flow, but the source model does not give a square-foot assumption Use the known anchors first: $6,500 monthly rent, $65,000 buildout, $15,000 dining furniture and décor, and $154,000 total identified CAPEX Then test each site by seat count, kitchen condition, and inspection work