Restaurant Hood Cleaning Startup Costs: $1355K CAPEX To Plan

Restaurant Hood Cleaning Service Startup Costs
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Description
Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

  • Vehicles are separate CAPEX; two vans cost $80,000.
  • Equipment covers pressure washers, hoses, tools, and backup parts.
  • Starter inventory includes chemicals, PPE, and containment supplies.
  • Compliance and marketing spend must come before route density.


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates capitalized startup assets only for a restaurant hood cleaning launch.

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CAPEX only This calculator covers startup CAPEX only. It includes vans, pressure washers, tools, PPE, office and IT, branding, and initial chemical stock. It excludes payroll runway, monthly overhead, deposits, debt service, working capital, inventory runway, sales tax, receivables delay, and other operating funding needs.



What does the CAPEX tab show?

This Restaurant Hood Cleaning Financial Model Template screenshot's CAPEX tab lists startup costs, timing, amounts, and depreciation/amortization—review assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • Launch month by asset
  • Cost by category
  • Depreciation and amortization
Restaurant Hood Cleaning Financial Model capex inputs showing equipment, installation, and facility investment fields that let users customize capital spending, timing, and depreciation for scenario-ready projections


How much money do you need to start a restaurant hood cleaning business?


You need $135,500 for base CAPEX, but a safer total launch funding plan for Restaurant Hood Cleaning is $409,000 by Month 30; use What Is The Current Customer Satisfaction Level For Restaurant Hood Cleaning? to pressure-test retention before spending. The gap exists because modeled EBITDA is -$226,000 in Year 1 and -$74,000 in Year 2, with breakeven not arriving until Month 29.

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Startup Cash

  • Base CAPEX: $135,500
  • Total cash need: $409,000
  • Breakeven point: Month 29
  • Payback period: 50 months
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Cost Drivers

  • Fixed overhead: $5,050/month before wages
  • Year 1 wages: $305,000 run rate
  • Year 1 marketing: $15,000
  • CAC assumption: $300, not guaranteed quotes

What drives restaurant hood cleaning equipment startup cost?


Restaurant Hood Cleaning startup cost depends on how mobile and crew-heavy you launch: a lean owner-operator setup costs less, while the researched base mobile plan totals $114,000 ($80,000 vans + $15,000 washers + $10,000 tools and hoses + $5,000 PPE + $4,000 chemicals). Night kitchen work adds transport, backup tools, lighting, containment, and safety gear, but no single setup is mandatory; size it to route density, technician count, job size, and whether Year 1 sales lean on Basic Service $250, Plus Service $400, Premium Service $650, or One-Time Deep Clean $800.

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Lean Launch

  • Fewer vehicles cut upfront cash.
  • One-tech routes lower payroll load.
  • Short zip zones save drive time.
  • Best fit for smaller jobs.
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Base Mobile Plan

  • Two vans cost $80,000 total.
  • Three washers cost $15,000 total.
  • $19,000 covers tools, PPE, chemicals.
  • Night work needs backup gear and lighting.

How do you fund a restaurant hood cleaning business after estimating startup costs?


To fund Restaurant Hood Cleaning, treat the $135,500 CAPEX as only the start; the modeled minimum cash need is $409,000 by Month 30 because Year 1 EBITDA is -$226,000, Year 2 is -$74,000, and breakeven lands in Month 29. The business does not turn positive until Year 3, when EBITDA reaches $91,000, so the funding plan has to cover the cash trough, not just the equipment bill.

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Funding plan

  • Start with $135,500 CAPEX
  • Add $15,000 Year 1 marketing
  • Cover payroll runway and insurance
  • Fund working capital to Month 30
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Model drivers

  • Use $300 CAC
  • Price services from $75
  • Charge deep cleans up to $800
  • Build monthly cash flow and financing


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table separates startup assets from the modeled Month 30 cash reserve for a restaurant hood cleaning business.

Highlighted CAPEX$135,500Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$409,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$544,500CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Service Vans (2 units) $80,000 Vehicle purchase and setup for service routes Yes
Commercial Pressure Washers (3 units) $15,000 Core cleaning equipment for hood and exhaust work Yes
Specialized Cleaning Tools, Hoses, PPE, and Initial Chemicals $19,000 Tools, hoses, safety gear, and first chemical stock Yes
Office Furniture and IT Equipment $14,000 Back-office setup, laptops, and workstations Yes
Website Development and Branding $7,500 Launch site, brand setup, and intake tools Yes
Modeled Cash Reserve Through Month 30 $409,000 Wages, fixed overhead, and marketing runway before breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched startup costs; cash need excludes debt service, taxes, owner draws, and permit gaps.


Restaurant Hood Cleaning Core Five Startup Costs



Service Vehicle Startup Expense


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Service Van Budget

Treat vans as a separate startup line, not as cleaning gear. The base plan uses 2 service vans at $80,000 total, or $40,000 per van. That covers the vehicle and route-ready setup, while excluding fuel, maintenance, and vehicle insurance because those sit in monthly costs, including fleet base insurance at $1,000 per month.


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Buy or Lease

The main choice is purchase versus lease. Buying uses more cash up front but gives full control and longer life. Leasing can reduce early cash strain if route volume is still thin. The real test is crew count, service radius, and how many months it takes one van to stay busy.

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Fit-Out Costs

The van is also a workspace. Budget for cargo layout, shelving, secure storage, branding, and room for pressure washers plus containment supplies. Weight and floor space matter, so check the load before you buy. A cramped build slows night calls and can limit how far one crew can cover after hours.


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Early Route Fit

Ask three things before you lock the fleet size: parking, equipment weight, and whether one truck can cover early demand. If the service area is tight and jobs cluster well, one van may work at first. If crews split or routes spread out, the second van protects speed and response time.



Cleaning Equipment Startup Expense


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Core gear

Launch with $25,000 in durable cleaning gear: three commercial pressure washers at $15,000 total plus $10,000 for hoses, reels, pumps, ladders, scrapers, degreaser applicators, wet vacs, lighting, fan access tools, and backup parts. Treat this as startup CAPEX, not monthly COGS. Chemicals and disposable supplies belong in starter inventory or ongoing supply spend.


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Cost build

Use quotes and unit counts to build the budget: 3 washers plus the support gear list above. The gear must match Year 1 service mix, where jobs are priced at $250 for Basic Service, $400 for Plus Service, $650 for Premium Service, and $800 for a One-Time Deep Clean.

  • Count every durable tool once.
  • Keep chemicals out of CAPEX.
  • Match gear to job type.
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Save smart

Don’t overbuy redundancy on day one. Extra equipment can cut missed jobs and breakdown risk, but it also raises startup cash needs and future depreciation. A lean setup is fine if service volume is small; just keep backup parts on hand so one failed hose or pump does not cancel a job.


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Service fit

The right equipment load depends on how many Basic, Plus, Premium, and Deep Clean jobs you expect. More complex work needs more hoses, access tools, lighting, and spares. Simpler routes can run with less gear, but less redundancy means more downtime if a washer or pump fails.



Supplies And Grease Containment Startup Expense


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Starter Stock

Here’s the quick math: this launch cost covers degreasers, plastic sheeting, filters, towels, buckets, floor protection, gloves, respirators, eye protection, disposal materials, and grease containment supplies. The base plan sets $4,000 for bulk cleaning chemicals and $5,000 for safety gear and PPE, separate from monthly replenishment.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate this with units × unit price, plus quotes for each item and the months of coverage you want on hand. The key split is one-time starter inventory versus monthly consumables, since Cleaning Chemicals and Consumables run at 80% of revenue in Year 1. One clean job can burn through more stock than people expect.

  • Price each consumable by quote
  • Set van stock per crew
  • Match stock to job volume
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Containment Control

Poor containment creates rework, customer disputes, and job delays, so the goal is not cheap stock but reliable setup. Save money by standardizing kits, buying only what each van needs, and tracking waste by crew. Don’t cut PPE first; that usually shifts cost into labor waste and complaint handling.

  • Standardize each van kit
  • Track waste by crew
  • Keep PPE fully stocked

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Sizing Questions

Before you buy, pin down average job size, number of active crews, waste handling process, customer reporting standards, and how much stock each van must carry. Those answers tell you whether the $9,000 base stock is enough or if you need a bigger launch buffer to avoid shortages mid-route.



Compliance, Insurance, And Training Startup Expense


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Coverage Basics

This bucket covers general liability, commercial auto, workers’ compensation if you hire employees, bonding if a contract requires it, business registration, local permits, and training tied to NFPA 96. Base monthly assumptions are $800 for liability, $1,000 for vehicle insurance, and $250 for certifications and licenses. One line item can block the first job.


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How To Price It

Estimate it from headcount, vehicle count, coverage months, city permits, and contract terms. There is no single national hood cleaning license; rules vary by state, city, insurer, property manager, and restaurant contract. Ask whether the certificate of insurance must be issued before the first site visit, and whether NFPA 96 training is needed before revenue starts.

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How To Avoid Delays

Don’t cut coverage to save a few hundred dollars. Match the policy to the property manager’s rules, keep safety docs ready for inspections, and confirm if workers’ comp is required once staff are employees. The clean way to save is to avoid rushed reissues and delayed COIs, because those can stall launch and first invoices.


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Launch Cash Hit

Using only the stated monthly assumptions, the floor is $2,050 a month before workers’ comp, bonding, permits, and training fees. That means timing matters: if the client wants the certificate of insurance and safety packet upfront, these costs can hit before the first revenue.



Marketing, Software, And Sales Readiness Startup Expense


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Launch Budget

Treat launch marketing and software as a separate startup bucket, not ongoing ad spend. Base CAPEX includes $7,500 for website development and branding, plus $15,000 for Year 1 marketing and a $300 CAC. Plan it before route density exists, because cash goes out before recurring hood cleaning accounts settle into a monthly book.


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Cost Inputs

Estimate this line from the exact work it funds: local search setup, sales materials, quote templates, restaurant outreach lists, route scheduling, CRM, uniforms, before-and-after photo process, and customer reporting workflow. Monthly software starts at $300 for CRM and scheduling, plus client reporting software at 20% of revenue in Year 1. The main inputs are months of coverage and revenue.

  • Match outreach lists to your route area.
  • Price reporting on revenue, not guesses.
  • Keep one clean photo workflow.
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Keep It Lean

Keep the spend lean by launching local search and direct outreach first, then tightening once route density improves. Use one CRM, one scheduling flow, and one reporting process so you do not pay twice. The biggest mistake is buying broad ads too early; the safer move is targeted work that protects the $300 CAC goal.


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Cash Timing

Cash timing is the real risk here: marketing hits before the monthly book of recurring hood cleaning accounts stabilizes. That means the startup budget needs room for the gap between launch spend and steady route volume. If route density stays thin, every extra lead costs more to serve, so watch burn closely.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Lighter launches use one van and fewer washers, while the base plan uses the researched full setup. The full build adds crews, inventory, insurance capacity, and launch marketing, so cash needs rise fast.

Lean, base, and full launch costs for restaurant hood cleaning.
Scenario Lean LaunchLowest cash burn Base LaunchLender-ready base case Full LaunchMulti-crew launch
Launch model Run a single-van owner-operator launch with fewer washers and the smallest workable equipment set. Use the researched two-van, three-washer setup with a standard crew and full launch stack. Scale beyond the base with more vehicles, more technicians, and heavier launch spend.
Typical setup Keep the crew tight, start with core cleaning gear, and limit launch spend to the essentials. Run two service vans, three pressure washers, core tools, PPE, chemicals, office gear, and branding. Add vehicles, staff, inventory, insurance capacity, and marketing to support multi-crew coverage.
Cost drivers
  • 1 van
  • fewer washers
  • core tools
  • basic PPE
  • lean launch marketing
  • 2 vans
  • 3 washers
  • tools and hoses
  • PPE and chemicals
  • branding
  • More vans
  • more technicians
  • higher inventory
  • larger insurance limits
  • launch marketing
Planning rangeCAPEX only $50,000 - $75,000Lower asset budget $135,500Base CAPEX plan $409,000+Working capital needed
Best fit Owners testing demand in one route or one small market before adding a second crew. Founders who want a lender-ready base case with a modeled full setup and room to finance growth. Teams planning multi-crew coverage and willing to fund the Month 30 cash trough.

Planning note: These ranges are planning assumptions built from the model's researched costs, not vendor quotes or exact bids.

Frequently Asked Questions

The researched base case uses $135,500 in startup CAPEX, led by $80,000 for two vans and $15,000 for three pressure washers That number does not cover the full cash runway The model shows a $409,000 cash need by Month 30 because Year 1 EBITDA is -$226,000 and breakeven comes in Month 29