Physiotherapy Clinic Startup Costs: $75k Build-Out, $50k Equipment

Physiotherapy Startup Costs
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Description

This first-year physiotherapy clinic cost breakdown separates CAPEX, pre-opening expenses, working capital, and early ramp-up cash needs The researched assumptions include $75,000 for clinic build-out, $50,000 for initial therapeutic equipment, and $8,050 in monthly fixed overhead before payroll These are planning assumptions, not vendor quotes or guaranteed prices


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a physiotherapy clinic, so you can see base CAPEX, contingency, and total CAPEX without mixing in run-rate costs.

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What this leaves out This covers capitalized startup assets only. It excludes pre-opening payroll, credentialing delays, deposits, inventory, debt service, working capital, insurance premiums, software subscriptions, marketing, loan fees, and ongoing operating costs.



What does the CAPEX tab show?

Open the Physiotherapy Clinic Financial Model Template: CAPEX lists $75,000 build-out and $50,000 equipment, with depreciation/amortization fields. Test Year 1 revenue at about $38,190 a month against $8,050 fixed overhead and $34,583 salary load.

Key screenshot highlights

  • Licensing, insurance, legal, marketing, supplies
  • Pre-opening payroll, Month 1-4
  • Year 1 providers, treatments, capacity, pricing
Physiotherapy Clinic Financial Model capex inputs allowing customization of startup and ongoing capital expenditures, equipment purchases and schedules to model investment needs; user-friendly, scenario-ready.


How much money do you need to open a physical therapy clinic?


Plan for at least $125,000 in identified startup CAPEX, then add working capital and unpriced launch buckets before you sign a lease. For a Physiotherapy Clinic, this is not an equipment-only budget; if you’re asking What Is The Primary Goal Of The Physiotherapy Clinic?, the funding plan must survive payer enrollment, collections timing, and patient ramp-up.

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Startup cash

  • $75,000 clinic build-out
  • $50,000 therapy equipment
  • Add furniture, IT, signage
  • Add licenses, deposits, professional fees
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Cash runway

  • Fixed overhead: $8,050/month
  • Launch salaries: $34,583/month
  • Modeled revenue: $38,190/month
  • Early gap: about $4,443/month

What affects the cost to open a physical therapy clinic?


A Physiotherapy Clinic usually costs most at build-out and equipment: plan on about $75,000 for leasehold improvements and about $50,000 for equipment, before monthly software and insurance. The price moves with facility size, treatment room count, and an open gym layout, plus ADA access, flooring, plumbing, and electrical work. A landlord improvement allowance can cut the cash you bring, and monthly basics can add another $500 for EHR, $600 for accounting and legal, and $300 for professional liability insurance.

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Build-out drivers

  • More rooms raise tenant finish cost
  • ADA access adds ramp and layout work
  • Plumbing and electrical change the budget fast
  • Landlord allowances reduce upfront cash need
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Equipment and setup

  • Tables, exercise gear, and balance tools
  • Resistance gear, modalities, mirrors, and storage
  • Mobility aids add depth but raise spend
  • Payer credentialing, billing, staffing, and EHR setup

How do you fund a physical therapy clinic startup?


If you’re funding a Physiotherapy Clinic, don’t pitch the rent and equipment first; lead with the startup cost, CAPEX timing, launch month, payer mix, reimbursement lag, visits per provider, utilization, payroll, and cash runway. With a Year 1 team of 1 Clinic Director, 2 Staff Physical Therapists, 1 Physical Therapy Assistant, and 1 Front Desk Administrator, the model should show how the clinic reaches about $38,190 in monthly clinical revenue. That’s the step lenders and investors want after the cost estimate.

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Funding inputs

  • Startup costs set the ask.
  • CAPEX timing shows cash needs.
  • Payer mix drives collections.
  • Reimbursement timing affects runway.
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Year 1 model

  • 60% Lead PT capacity.
  • 65% Staff PT capacity.
  • 70% PTA capacity.
  • $38,190 monthly clinical revenue.


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table covers the clinic's main startup assets and the cash reserve needed to open and reach early break-even.

Highlighted CAPEX$155,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$525,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$680,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Clinic Build-out and Renovation $75,000 Leasehold improvements and exam-room fit-out Yes
Initial Therapeutic Equipment $50,000 Treatment tables, rehab gear, and devices Yes
Office Furniture and Fixtures $15,000 Reception desks, chairs, and storage Yes
IT Hardware and Software Licenses $10,000 Computers, software setup, and licenses Yes
Waiting Room Furnishings $5,000 Lobby seating and front-desk setup Yes
Opening Cash Reserve $525,000 Cash runway through Month 25 No

Planning note: Ranges reflect research; non-CAPEX cash excludes real estate, debt, owner pay, and benefits.


Physiotherapy Clinic Core Five Startup Costs



Facility Build-out and Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense


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Build-Out Scope

Treat facility build-out as location-dependent CAPEX, not rent. Use $75,000 across Month 1 to Month 3 for treatment room layout, open gym space, ADA access, flooring, plumbing, electrical, reception, restrooms, signage, and permits. First ask whether the site is a second-generation medical office or raw retail.


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Budget Inputs

Start with the $75,000 base build-out, then subtract any landlord improvement allowance in the lease. The founder-funded balance is the remainder, plus a separate contingency line for quote overruns. Keep this away from the $5,000 monthly clinic rent and working capital so cash planning stays clean.

  • Base build-out: $75,000
  • Allowance: lease-specific
  • Contingency: separate line
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Spend Control

Cut waste by reusing walls, plumbing, and electrical when the layout already fits therapy use. A second-generation medical office usually needs less work than raw retail. Get at least two contractor quotes and one landlord scope review before signing. Don’t fold rent concessions into build-out; that hides the real project cost.


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Cash Timing

Link the spend to milestones: design, permit, rough-in, then finish work. If permits slip, cash goes out before patients come in, so keep the build-out reserve separate from operating cash. The clean handoff is base build-out, landlord allowance, founder-funded gap, and contingency as its own line.



Clinical Equipment and Treatment Assets Startup Expense


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Opening Kit

Treat this as CAPEX, not rent. The opening therapeutic equipment package is $50,000 across Months 2-4, and it should cover the core room set: tables, exercise and resistance tools, balance gear, mirrors, storage, mobility aids, and basic rehab tools. Keep disposable supplies separate; they hit the income statement, not the asset list.


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Quote It Right

Build the opening package from quotes, not guesswork. Use counts and unit prices for each asset, then confirm whether the clinic is a second-generation medical office or needs more setup. The core budget should show required opening assets first, then any optional upgrades like advanced modalities as separate line items.

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Keep It Lean

Keep the room lean at launch. Don’t buy advanced modalities on day one unless patient mix justifies them. In Year 1, track disposables separately at $100 per treatment for medical supplies and $0.50 per treatment for therapeutic consumables, so equipment cost doesn’t get mixed with visit-level costs.


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Upgrade Later

The simple test is whether the asset helps the clinic open and treat on day one. If it does, fund it in the $50,000 opening package; if it mainly adds comfort or niche capability, hold it for a later upgrade after volume and payer mix are clear.



Technology, EHR, Billing, and Administrative Systems Startup Expense


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Upfront Setup

Set up tech as one-time startup spend, not monthly overhead. Include EHR setup, phones, computers, tablets, network setup, cybersecurity basics, and patient intake tools. Hardware and implementation fees are not provided, so enter them separately. Keep this line distinct from rent and software.


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Monthly Software

The recurring tech base is $500 for EHR Software Subscription plus $200 for Website & Digital Tools, or $700 per month. That covers scheduling, documentation, billing, and patient intake tools. One-line math: fixed software is the easy part; the variable fees come next.

  • $500 EHR subscription
  • $200 digital tools
  • $700 monthly base
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Variable Fees

Add 2% of revenue for payment processing and 3% for billing service fees in Year 1. That is a 5% revenue drag before payroll and rent. Model it on collections, not on patient count, so the cost scales with actual cash coming in.


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Budget Line

Put hardware, implementation, $700 monthly software, and 5% of revenue into separate lines. That keeps the opening cash plan honest and stops one-time tech spend from getting mixed into operating burn.



Licensing, Credentialing, Compliance, Insurance, and Professional Setup Startup Expense


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Setup checks

Price this as a state-by-state setup check, not legal advice. Confirm business registration, National Provider Identifier (NPI) enrollment, payer enrollment support, Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) policies, legal review, accounting setup, and medical billing compliance. Add quotes for professional liability, general liability, and workers’ compensation. One clean rule: verify requirements before you sign leases or hire.

  • Start with state rules
  • Match payer mix early
  • Price each quote separately

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Monthly carry

Recurring costs are the steady cash drag. Use $300 monthly for professional liability insurance and $600 monthly for an accounting and legal retainer, then add quoted general liability, workers’ compensation, and billing compliance support. If you underbudget these fees, the gap shows up after launch, not at signing.

  • Keep insurance on autopay
  • Renew contracts before expiry
  • Track each quote by carrier
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Cash reserve

Credentialing can lag collections, so payroll and rent can start before payer cash arrives. Build a credentialing-related cash reserve for the gap between credentialing start, NPI enrollment, and first reimbursement. Here’s the quick math: reserve should cover the clinic’s fixed burn until claims begin to pay, not just the paperwork fees.


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Budget split

Keep the budget in three buckets: one-time setup, recurring monthly costs, and credentialing-related cash reserve. That makes it easy to see what gets paid once versus what hits cash every month. What this estimate hides is local timing; state rules and payer mix change the pace, so verify each quote before launch.

  • One-time: filings and setup
  • Monthly: insurance and retainer
  • Reserve: payroll and rent gap

Staffing Readiness and Pre-Opening Payroll Startup Expense


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Payroll runway

Staffing readiness is a pre-opening expense or working capital, not CAPEX. Here’s the quick math: 1 Clinic Director at $130,000, 2 Staff Physical Therapists at $90,000 each, 1 Physical Therapy Assistant at $65,000, and 1 Front Desk Administrator at $40,000 equals $415,000 a year, or about $34,583 monthly before payroll taxes and benefits.


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Coverage need

This cash covers recruiting, onboarding, training, uniforms, schedules, and payroll before patient volume pays for labor. Size it with headcount × salary, then add the months of coverage you need before collections start. This sits beside rent and other startup spend, not in equipment.

  • Use salary rates by role
  • Count pre-open payroll months
  • Add taxes and benefits separately
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Launch timing

The key timing risk is launch delay. If payer enrollment slips, payroll starts before cash collections do, so the clinic needs enough runway to bridge that gap. What this estimate hides: payroll taxes, benefits, and any hiring lag from open roles.


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Cash control

Keep start dates tied to the opening schedule and verified payer enrollment. Fund the first payroll cycle with working capital, then review labor coverage against booked visits so you do not carry more staff than the schedule can use.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Smaller launches cut rent, equipment, and payroll, while full builds add rooms, specialty care, and extra cash. The gap matters because staffing and facility costs drive most of the startup load.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost comparison for a physiotherapy clinic.
Scenario Lean LaunchLowest cash risk Base LaunchBalanced launch Full LaunchHighest capacity
Launch model Starts with one provider, fewer rooms, lighter equipment, and a shorter runway. Uses the source model mix: $75,000 build-out, $50,000 equipment, and the stated staff stack, with about $38,190 monthly Year 1 revenue. Adds more square footage, expanded equipment, specialty services, and extra cash for credentialing delays.
Typical setup Best for a small outpatient space with basic rehab gear and tight payroll control. One clinic director, two staff physical therapists, one assistant, one front desk administrator, and $8,050 monthly fixed overhead. Larger treatment space, more staff, specialty physical therapy, wellness support, and a stronger working capital reserve.
Cost drivers
  • Smaller build-out
  • basic equipment
  • lower payroll
  • lean rent
  • limited working capital
  • Build-out
  • equipment
  • payroll
  • insurance
  • billing tools
  • Larger leasehold build-out
  • expanded equipment
  • specialty staffing
  • working capital
  • credentialing delays
Planning rangeCAPEX only $325,000 - $450,000Tighter spend $525,000 - $650,000Model-based funding $700,000 - $900,000Broad capital need
Best fit Fits owners testing demand with one lead physical therapist and a simple service mix. Fits teams that want the modeled setup and a clear path to Year 1 scale. Fits operators aiming for more rooms, specialty care, and a larger patient mix from day one.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

A practical reserve should cover fixed overhead, payroll, and billing delays In this model, fixed overhead is $8,050 per month and Year 1 launch salaries are about $34,583 per month before taxes and benefits That means one month of basic cash burn is about $42,633 before supplies, claims friction, debt service, and owner draws