Real Estate Development Startup Costs: $175M First Project Plan

Real Estate Development Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Land is the biggest upfront cost before construction.
  • Due diligence protects capital before site control.
  • Entitlements can delay starts from Month 9 to 27.
  • Soft costs and site prep lift funding needs.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

This estimates capitalized startup assets only, before contingency.

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CAPEX limits Base case reflects the listed startup CAPEX subtotal of $195,000 before contingency. Excludes land purchase, option payments, due diligence, entitlement work, architecture and engineering, permitting, site improvements, utility connections, construction budgets, inventory, payroll runway, debt service, loan interest reserves, working capital, sales commissions, and other operating expenses unless you are modeling total project funding.



What should the CAPEX tab show?

The Real Estate Development Financial Model Template CAPEX tab lists land, startup, launch timing, draws, debt, reserves, depreciation. Review assumptions.

Key screenshot items

  • Month 1-60 timing
  • Funding gap checks
  • Depreciation treatment
Real Estate Development Financial Model capex inputs: customizable capital expenditure schedule for land, construction, permits and soft costs, letting developers model funding timing, depreciation and scenario-ready spend planning


Why do real estate development startup costs vary so widely?


Real Estate Development startup costs vary because land price moves the budget first: in this model, owned sites run from $25 million to $45 million, and construction budgets range from $100 million to $250 million. Timing also drives cost, since acquisitions can happen from Month 3 to Month 21 and construction can last 15 to 22 months, so holding costs and financing terms matter too. Location, zoning complexity, project size, utility access, environmental issues, and design scope can all push the total up fast.

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Big cost drivers

  • Land resets the budget first
  • $25M to $45M site range
  • $100M to $250M build range
  • Zoning adds time and cost
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Timing and risk

  • Acquisitions can start Month 3
  • Acquisitions can slip to Month 21
  • Construction can take 15 to 22 months
  • Financing terms shape carry costs

How do you fund a real estate development startup?


Fund Real Estate Development with a phase-by-phase capital stack: sponsor equity and investor equity for site control and early work, then acquisition debt and construction debt when the project is ready to draw. The timing is the whole game, because land purchases, rented site control, construction starts, and sales do not hit in the same month. Here’s the quick math: the figures point to $140 million in land purchases, $1,140 million in construction budgets, $45,000 in listed rental site-control costs, and a $597 million minimum cash need.

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Capital stack

  • Sponsor equity starts the deal.
  • Investor equity fills early cash gaps.
  • Acquisition debt funds land closing.
  • Construction debt funds draw-based build costs.
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Model checks

  • Match cash to each project month.
  • Build reserves for interest carry.
  • Test funding gaps before closing.
  • Validate project-level returns, not just totals.

How much money do you need to start real estate development?


For Real Estate Development, you don’t need $597 million to form the company, but you may need about $597 million to carry the first owned project through Month 29. Formation-level CAPEX is only $195,000; the real cash need starts when you control a site, fund payroll and overhead, buy land, start construction, and wait for the first sale in Month 30, so check What Is The Current Market Demand For Your Real Estate Development Projects? before tying up capital.

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Company start

  • Forming entity: not enough
  • Company CAPEX: $195,000
  • Year 1 wages: $770,000
  • Fixed expenses: $288,000
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Project cash

  • Land cost: $25 million in Month 3
  • Construction budget: $150 million from Month 9
  • Peak cash need: about $597 million
  • First sale modeled: Month 30


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table breaks out startup CAPEX and the excluded cash reserve needed for land, construction, office setup, and runway.

Highlighted CAPEX$18,320,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$59,685,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$78,005,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Land acquisition $3,200,000 Purchase price across project sites Yes
Construction budget $15,000,000 Hard construction spend by project scope Yes
Office build-out and launch systems $75,000 Office fit-out, furniture, and launch setup Yes
Technology and field equipment $30,000 Software, hardware, and site-visit tools Yes
Legal, website, and branding setup $15,000 Entity setup, website, and brand launch Yes
Operating reserve through Month 29 $59,685,000 Cash runway to break-even and payback No

Planning note: Ranges reflect planning assumptions; excluded cash need covers runway and reserves, not debt financing.


Real Estate Development Core Five Startup Costs



Land Acquisition and Site Control Startup Expense


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Site Control Cash

Land is the first big cash check before vertical construction. In the source set, owned sites run from $25 million to $45 million, while rental or controlled sites list at $12,000 to $18,000. Add earnest money, closing costs, title, survey, appraisal, and acquisition legal review to the total.


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How to Price It

Estimate this line from the land price or option fee, then add deposit, closing, title, survey, appraisal, and legal review. Site control means the right to buy or use the land. Here’s the quick math: site price + control costs + closing package. This sits ahead of the much larger construction budget, so even a low land price can still need real cash.

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Cut Upfront Cash

Use options or purchase contracts to lower upfront cash, but don’t treat them as risk-free. They can shrink the first check, yet the deposit, legal spend, and diligence work still tie up capital if the deal falls through. Keep enough liquidity to close the site, not just sign it.


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Funding Risk Stays

Land control is a funding test, not a small placeholder. With construction budgets of $100 million to $250 million, a missed closing date can stall the whole project even when the site looks secured. The clean move is to fund the closing package early and keep a buffer for legal and diligence costs.



Due Diligence and Feasibility Startup Expense


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Site Check

Due diligence and feasibility is the pre-opening spend that keeps you from buying the wrong land. For a first owned site with $25 million of land and $150 million of construction exposure, this work pays for environmental reports, geotech, surveys, traffic and market studies, appraisals, title review, utility checks, and feasibility analysis before cash is locked.


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Scope It

Build the scope around acreage, zoning status, contamination risk, utility distance, comparable sales, and required municipal studies. The file should show if the site can support the use, what it will take to serve it, and where the deal can break. One bad assumption here can distort the whole model.

  • Check title before design starts.
  • Match studies to local rules.
  • Test utilities early.
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Trim Risk

Keep the package tight by ordering studies in the right sequence and only for the final site short list. Reuse current survey or market work when it is still valid, but never skip geotech or contamination checks. The goal is a clean go/no-go call, not a thick binder.

  • Stop early if zoning fails.
  • Reuse current work when valid.
  • Ask for lender-ready scopes.

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Protect the Deal

On land, a fast yes is expensive. This spend is tiny beside a $175 million commitment, and it can block a bad buy before closing or before design churn adds months. If utility runs are long or municipal studies expand, the site can turn from feasible to uneconomic fast.



Entitlements, Zoning, and Permits Startup Expense


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What It Covers

Entitlements include rezoning applications, planning board submissions, permit fees, impact fees, public hearing materials, civil plan revisions, and municipal review costs. Pricing changes by jurisdiction, use type, density, and approval risk, so one site can cost far more than another. This sits before construction, but it still raises the total cash needed to start.


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Estimate It

Build the budget from filing counts, consultant hours, fee schedules, and expected review rounds. Here’s the quick math: more submissions and more comments mean more civil plan work and more municipal time. If construction starts in Month 9 but slips to Month 27, sales and cash recovery move out too.

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Cut Delay Risk

Start with a pre-application meeting, then lock use, density, and site plan before filing. That helps reduce repeated hearings and civil plan revisions. The main mistake is underbudgeting public hearing materials and municipal review, then paying for rework after comments. Faster approvals protect schedule and keep funding pressure from building too early.


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Funding Impact

Treat entitlements as a funding bridge, not a small admin fee. They sit outside the $100 million to $250 million construction budget, but they still add to cash needs before ground break. On the first project, construction is about $150 million over 18 months, so overruns here can force earlier equity or push the start.



Professional Services and Soft Costs Startup Expense


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Soft Cost Basics

Soft costs are the non-construction expenses needed to design, approve, finance, and manage a project. In this model, they include the architect, civil engineer, structural engineer, land use attorney, real estate attorney, accountant, tax advisor, project manager, and cost estimator. They sit ahead of vertical construction, and they often rise as the deal gets more complex.


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Estimate the Spend

Start with scope, then price each line item from quotes and months of coverage. The company support layer includes a $4,000 monthly legal and accounting retainer plus a $20,000 modeling software license. Add permit support, lender reports, and revision cycles, because soft costs rise with approval iterations, design scope, and reporting needs.

  • Months of retainer coverage
  • Quotes by discipline
  • Software license term
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What Pushes Costs Up

Soft costs climb when the site is harder to approve or the design changes more often. A project with rezoning, repeated plan checks, or lender reporting will need more hours from counsel, engineers, and the project manager. One clean rule: more iterations mean more invoices.

  • More zoning hearings
  • More plan revisions
  • More lender reporting

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Budget Guardrails

Treat soft costs as early cash, not a side note. For a project with a $25 million land basis and $150 million construction exposure, these fees can still swing the funding need if they stack up before closing. Lock scopes early, ask for fixed-fee bids, and keep change orders tight.



Site Preparation and Construction Readiness Startup Expense


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Site Work Scope

Site preparation and construction readiness covers grading, demolition, drainage, roads, sidewalks, utility extensions, erosion control, temporary fencing, mobilization deposits, builder preconstruction fees, and contingency. On a $150 million first project, this is early CAPEX that makes the site build-ready, but most of the spend still sits inside the larger construction budget.


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Estimate the Spend

Build the estimate from civil quotes and site counts: acreage graded, demo volume, linear feet of utilities, road and sidewalk area, stormwater controls, and months of preconstruction fees. The full project context is $100 million to $250 million in construction budgets, with the first project at $150 million over 18 months.

  • Use unit counts and bid rates
  • Price utility distance and access
  • Include precon months and deposits
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Cost Drivers

Costs move with soil conditions, utility access, site access, stormwater rules, and contractor market pricing. Two sites with the same size can price very differently, so use current bids, not rough percentages. What this estimate hides is schedule risk: delays can push site work into a pricier season.

  • Lock bids before budget approval
  • Watch utility and access constraints
  • Keep a real contingency

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Control the Cash

Keep temporary fencing, mobilization deposits, and builder preconstruction fees in early cash outlays, then roll grading, drainage, roads, sidewalks, utility extensions, and erosion control into the full construction budget. Separate those lines in the model so the startup ask shows real timing, not just total project size.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Lean stays at setup and site control, Base funds one owned project, and Full backs a multi-project pipeline. Land, construction, and cash needs rise sharply with scale.

Lean, Base, and Full development budget comparison
Scenario Lean LaunchPre-dev focus Base LaunchFirst project Full LaunchMulti-project
Launch model Start with company setup, site control, and pre-development work before committing to a full build. Launch one owned project with a full land buy, construction budget, and core operating team. Run a multi-project pipeline with large owned land positions and heavy construction funding.
Typical setup Plan for $195,000 CAPEX and limited deposits, with spend concentrated in setup and due diligence. Use $25 million land, $150 million construction, $770,000 Year 1 wages, and $288,000 Year 1 fixed expenses. Plan for $140 million in owned land, $1.14 billion in construction budgets, and a $597 million minimum cash need.
Cost drivers
  • Office build-out
  • legal setup
  • IT gear
  • modeling software
  • site-control deposits
  • Land purchase
  • construction budget
  • Year 1 wages
  • fixed expenses
  • sales and brokerage fees
  • Owned land buys
  • construction budgets
  • higher working capital
  • larger team
  • sales and brokerage fees
Planning rangeCAPEX only $195,000 CAPEXLow cash need $25M land + $150M buildProject funding $597M minimum cashHeavy capital
Best fit Best for early-stage founders testing one site in a single market with limited capital. Best for founders ready to fund one owned project in a core market with moderate capital access. Best for seasoned teams running larger or multi-market projects with strong capital access.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

Land is usually the biggest early project cost In this plan, owned land purchases are $25 million, $38 million, $45 million, and $32 million, or $140 million combined The first owned site alone requires $25 million before the $150 million construction budget starts, so site control is not a minor setup line