How Much Does It Cost To Start A Preschool? $91k CAPEX Guide
Plan around $91,000 of modeled CAPEX, plus startup expenses and working capital sized to a $895,000 opening-month cash need This first operating year model assumes 50 licensed places, 60% occupancy, 20 billable days per month, and fixed overhead of $12,750 per month before payroll Your preschool startup budget will change with state licensing rules, capacity, location, lease condition, and program model
Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator
Startup CAPEX Calculator
Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a preschool buildout, not ongoing operating cash.
What's excluded This calculator covers physical buildout and equipment only. It excludes inventory, payroll runway, rent deposits, licensing and accreditation fees, debt service, working capital, marketing, and other operating costs.
What does the Preschool CAPEX tab show?
This CAPEX tab in the Preschool Financial Model Template maps startup costs, timing, and depreciation. Validate $895,000 cash.
Financial model screenshot highlights
- Startup costs by category
- Month 1-10 timing
- $91,000 CAPEX total
- 60% Year 1 occupancy
- 20 billable days monthly
How should a preschool funding plan connect to the financial model?
For Preschool, the funding plan should sit next to the model and split $91,000 CAPEX, startup expenses, working capital, and reserves, so a lender can see each use of funds. Tie the CAPEX to asset schedules and depreciation or amortization, and set $895,000 minimum cash as launch runway, not extra profit. Use the tuition ramp at 60% Year 1, 70% Year 2, and 80% Year 3, and treat the model’s Month 1 break-even and $357,000 Year 1 EBITDA as outputs that still need enrollment timing and payroll start-date checks.
Funding split
- $91,000 CAPEX for fixed assets
- Startup expenses stay separate
- Working capital covers early cash gaps
- Reserves support the launch runway
Model tie-in
- Link CAPEX to asset schedules
- Match depreciation or amortization
- Use 60%, 70%, 80% occupancy
- Check Month 1 break-even timing
What is the biggest cost to start a preschool?
For a Preschool, the biggest start-up cost is usually facility compliance and leasehold readiness, because classrooms, child-safe finishes, restrooms, fire safety, accessibility, entry security, and inspections all have to be finished before opening. After that, Year 1 payroll is the biggest cash need at $283,000 a year, while classroom setup is modeled at $25,000 and playground and outdoor learning at $30,000. Licensing and insurance are smaller lines, but if they slip, they can still block enrollment.
Opening cost drivers
- Facility compliance comes first.
- Leasehold readiness delays opening.
- $25,000 for classroom setup.
- $30,000 for outdoor learning.
Cash needs to stay open
- $283,000 Year 1 payroll.
- Staffing is the biggest cash need.
- Licensing can block enrollment.
- Insurance can also slow launch.
What hidden costs of starting a preschool should founders budget for?
The hidden costs are the pre-revenue bills: payroll, rent during inspections, deposits, insurance binders, background checks, training, CPR and first aid certification, policy manuals, cleaning setup, software onboarding, and marketing. For Preschool, budget these separately from build-out, because Year 1 can carry about $12,750 in monthly fixed overhead plus roughly $23,583 in monthly payroll before tuition is stable. If licensing or inspection delays stretch startup, Month 1 minimum cash can hit $895,000; if you’re also sizing owner pay, see How Much Does The Owner Of A Preschool Typically Make?
Cash to reserve
- $12,750 fixed overhead monthly
- $23,583 Year 1 payroll monthly
- Rent keeps running during inspections
- Tuition arrives after enrollment starts
Startup bills
- Deposits and insurance binders
- Background checks and staff training
- CPR and first aid certification
- Cleaning, software, and marketing setup
Calculate Fuding Needs
Startup cost summary
This table covers preschool startup assets plus the excluded operating reserve needed before enrollment stabilizes.
| Cost Category | Base Estimate | Main Cost Driver | CAPEX Calculator |
|---|---|---|---|
| Classroom furniture & fixtures | $25,000 | Desks, chairs, storage, and room setup | Yes |
| Playground and outdoor learning area | $30,000 | Play equipment and outdoor area buildout | Yes |
| STEAM equipment and technology infrastructure | $16,000 | Hands-on learning tools and tech setup | Yes |
| Kitchen appliances and security system | $12,000 | Meal prep gear and site safety install | Yes |
| Curriculum and library setup | $8,000 | Books, curriculum, and classroom materials | Yes |
| Opening operating reserve | $895,000 | Year 1 payroll and fixed overhead before cash flow stabilizes | No |
Preschool Core Five Startup Costs
Facility Buildout And Compliance Startup Expense
Buildout
A preschool site needs classroom layout, restrooms, child-safe finishes, fire safety, accessibility, entry security, and inspection-ready work. Even when renovation dollars are not listed separately, treat facility work as a major CAPEX item and a pre-opening driver.
Estimate
Price it from the lease condition and local code gap. Ask whether the space was previously approved for child care, because that can cut rework. Build the quote from square feet, rooms, required fixes, and contractor bids. Add the modeled $5,000 security system, then carry cleaning, maintenance, insurance, and lease costs from Month 1.
- Check prior child-care approval.
- Use contractor bids.
- Carry Month 1 costs.
Control
The cheapest compliant site is usually one that already fits child care use. Get a code walk-through before you sign, compare 2 to 3 contractor bids, and phase nonessential cosmetic work after opening. Don’t trade away fire safety, accessibility, or entry control just to save upfront cash.
- Choose code-ready space.
- Phase cosmetic work later.
- Protect safety items first.
Site check
If the site was already approved for child care, your opening path is usually cleaner. If not, expect more buildout, more inspection steps, and more delay before tuition starts. That delay matters because lease, insurance, cleaning, and maintenance start in Month 1 even before enrollment stabilizes.
Classroom Equipment And Learning Materials Startup Expense
Room setup
For a preschool, classroom gear is sized by licensed capacity, age mix, and classroom count. The modeled upfront set is $43,000: $25,000 for furniture and fixtures, $10,000 for STEAM equipment, and $8,000 for curriculum and library. That covers tables, chairs, cubbies, nap mats, books, manipulatives, art, sensory items, and learning centers.
Size it right
Build the budget by room and child seat. Use units × unit price for each classroom, then add quotes for age-specific items. Infant, toddler, and preschool rooms need different nap and play items, and more seats mean more cubbies, mats, and centers. One line item can hide a big gap if classroom count changes.
- Count seats by age group.
- Price durable items separately.
- Add one set per classroom.
Trim waste
Cut spend by separating durable CAPEX from consumables. Buy sturdy tables, chairs, and cubbies once, then stock books, art, and sensory items on a replacement cycle. Order in bulk only after room counts are set. The key mistake is buying for max capacity before licensing and enrollment are locked; that ties up cash fast.
- Delay nonessential extras.
- Standardize room layouts.
- Reuse approved furniture.
Recurring load
Recurring materials can be large: budget 50% of Year 1 revenue for educational materials and 30% for classroom supplies. That means ongoing school materials may equal 80% of Year 1 revenue, so this is not just a startup buy. Track it separately from the $43,000 CAPEX so tuition pricing covers both new purchases and replacements.
Playground And Outdoor Learning Startup Expense
Outdoor CAPEX
Preschool outdoor space is not a nice-to-have. Modeled cost is $18,000 for playground equipment plus $12,000 for the outdoor learning area, or $30,000 total. That should cover fencing, safety surfacing, shade, storage, and inspection-related work, but the final number still depends on state rules, site layout, and lease terms.
Cost Inputs
Use quotes for each line item: equipment units, surfacing area, fence length, shade coverage, storage, and inspection prep. A shared yard, leased yard, or new build can change the math fast. Ask whether the lease gives exclusive use of the play area, since that affects both cost and approval risk.
- Measure fence in linear feet.
- Price surfacing by square foot.
- Confirm inspection scope early.
Spend Control
Keep the spend tight by reusing a site that already fits child care use, getting three vendor quotes, and sizing equipment to licensed capacity instead of extras. Don’t skimp on surfacing or shade; failed inspection work costs more later. If outdoor readiness slips, license approval and enrollment timing can slip too.
Approval Timing
Outdoor readiness can gate the opening date. If the yard is not inspection-ready, you can keep paying rent, payroll, insurance, and cleaning before tuition starts. That is why site history, lease rights, and prior child care approval matter before you commit to the space.
Licensing, Permits, And Professional Fees Startup Expense
Pre-Opening Fees
Licensing, permits, and professional fees are pre-opening costs, not CAPEX. For a preschool, this bucket covers state childcare licensing, local permits, inspections, background checks, legal setup, accounting, policies, staff files, emergency plans, and required documents. Fees vary by state and city, so use local quotes, not national assumptions.
Cost Inputs
Here’s the quick math: model $250 per month for licensing and accreditation plus $500 per month for professional services. Add one-time items like permits, filings, and policy prep based on quotes. These costs sit in pre-opening cash needs and should be funded before tuition starts.
- Quote state license fees first
- Price legal and accounting setup
- Track monthly renewal fees
Delay Risk
Licensing delays can burn cash fast. If approval slips, rent, payroll, insurance, and cleaning keep running before tuition starts. The fix is simple: start filings early, keep documents ready, and confirm every inspection step with the local regulator. One missed form can push opening by weeks.
Compliance File
Build the compliance folder before launch: licenses, permits, inspection reports, staff background checks, emergency plans, staff files, and written policies. Keep state rules separate from local rules, because childcare approval is not uniform across the U.S. Good paperwork cuts rework, speed bumps, and paid downtime.
Staffing Readiness And Pre-Opening Payroll Startup Expense
Pre-Open Labor
Staffing readiness is separate from ongoing payroll. Before enrollment stabilizes, the preschool still pays for director prep, teacher recruiting, onboarding, required training, CPR and first aid certification, background checks, and staff meetings. The modeled Year 1 payroll is $283,000, or about $23,583 per month.
What It Covers
This cost covers the people side of opening day, not classroom furniture or buildout. Use the payroll total as the base, then add the cash needed for hiring lead time, training time, and the gap before tuition starts coming in. Working capital reserve means cash held for bills during that ramp.
How To Pace It
Keep hiring tied to licensing and enrollment dates so wages do not start too early. Hire in waves, finish background checks before start dates, and schedule training close to opening. The big mistake is treating payroll like a one-time launch fee; it becomes a monthly cash need the minute staff are on the clock.
Cash Buffer
For a preschool, this line item should be funded with startup cash, not hoped-for tuition. The $23,583 monthly payroll run rate can hit before enrollment is full, so the reserve needs to cover wages plus the early hiring and training window. That buffer protects service quality while the classroom fills.
Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios
Scenario table
Startup cost shifts with classroom count, playground size, and how much staff you carry before enrollment fills. Bigger launches need more buildout cash and a larger reserve cushion.
| Scenario | Lean LaunchLowest Cash Need | Base LaunchStandard Licensed Center | Full LaunchFull-Service Buildout |
|---|---|---|---|
| Launch model | A smaller leased or home-based setup with fewer classrooms and limited outdoor build. | This matches the modeled center with 50 places, 60% Year 1 occupancy, and about $91,000 of CAPEX. | A larger multi-classroom center with a deeper staff bench, bigger playground, and higher reserves. |
| Typical setup | One or two rooms, basic furniture, light playground spend, and thin staff coverage. | Three age programs, standard licensing, normal playground setup, and staffing sized to the modeled seats. | More rooms, a fuller outdoor area, and heavier upfront spend before enrollment ramps. |
| Cost drivers |
|
|
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| Planning rangeCAPEX only | Lower funding bandLeanest cash need | $895,000Modeled base | Higher funding bandLargest cash need |
| Best fit | Best for founders testing demand with the smallest practical footprint. | Best for operators targeting a standard licensed center with the model's seat count. | Best for teams ready to fund a fuller build and larger reserve. |
Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions for budgeting, not exact vendor quotes or guaranteed prices.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Hold enough cash for CAPEX, pre-opening costs, and the early ramp-up period In this model, CAPEX is $91,000 and minimum cash is $895,000 in Month 1 That reserve matters because fixed overhead starts at $12,750 per month before payroll, and Year 1 payroll adds about $23,583 per month