Restaurant Startup Costs: $228K CAPEX Plan To Open In The US

Restaurant Startup Costs
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Description

This guide covers the restaurant startup cost breakdown across capital expenditures, pre-opening expenses, initial inventory, working capital, and total funding assumptions In this researched opening budget, direct CAPEX is $228,000, fixed operating costs start at $15,950 per month, and the model carries $776,000 of minimum cash in Month 2 These are planning assumptions, not vendor quotes, and they can change with concept, size, lease condition, landlord work, and service model


Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimates restaurant startup CAPEX for capitalized assets only: build-out, equipment, furniture, technology, signage, security, and setup.

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CAPEX only Excludes working capital, payroll runway, deposits, food inventory, debt service, financing costs, and post-launch operating expenses. Contingency is editable and should cover capital overruns only.



Does Restaurant’s CAPEX tab cover the full launch budget?

This Restaurant Financial Model Template tab shows CAPEX, startup costs, expense categories, launch timing, depreciation, amortization, runway, and funding needs. Review assumptions.

Screenshot highlights

  • $228,000 total CAPEX
  • Months 1-7 spend
  • $15,950 fixed costs
  • $23,333 Month 1 payroll
  • 170% Year 1 variable costs
  • Month 3 break-even
  • 17-month payback period
Restaurant Financial Model capex inputs showing startup and ongoing capital expenditures and customization of equipment, leasehold improvements, and timing to model funding needs and depreciation


How to estimate funding needed for a restaurant?


The funding ask is not just the $228,000 build; it also has to cover pre-opening expenses, opening inventory, deposits, contingency, and the cash dip through Month 7. Use an opening balance sheet with assets, deposits, cash, and any debt or owner equity, then test it against 570 weekly covers, $28 midweek checks, $35 weekend checks, 170% variable cost load, $15,950 fixed monthly cost, and $280,000 annual staffing output.

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Funding build

  • $228,000 CAPEX build
  • Month 1–7 spend schedule
  • Add pre-opening expenses
  • Include opening inventory and deposits
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Runway test

  • 570 weekly covers in Year 1
  • $28 midweek average order value
  • $35 weekend average order value
  • $15,950 fixed monthly cost
  • 170% variable cost load
  • $280,000 annual staffing output

How much money do you need to open a restaurant?


For this Restaurant, plan around the model’s $776,000 minimum cash need in Month 2, not just the $228,000 direct CAPEX for build-out and equipment; for context on tracking operating health after opening, see What Is The Most Critical Metric For Your Restaurant's Success?. That cushion covers startup cash items, Month 1 payroll of about $23,333 from $280,000 Year 1 staffing, and fixed costs of $15,950 per month.

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Startup cash stack

  • Start with $228,000 direct CAPEX
  • Add deposits, licenses, and insurance binders
  • Stock initial food and beverage inventory
  • Fund launch marketing and contingency
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Runway checks

  • Cover Month 1 payroll: about $23,333
  • Carry fixed costs: $15,950/month
  • Include working capital, not only build-out
  • Treat Month 3 breakeven and 17-month payback as model outputs

What are the hidden costs of opening a restaurant?


If you’re asking how much the hidden costs of opening a Restaurant can add up to, the answer is: they can hit cash hard before sales start. Keep startup cash separate from CAPEX like $120,000 in leasehold improvements and $45,000 in kitchen equipment. Also plan for $15,950 in monthly fixed costs, $280,000 in Year 1 payroll, and opening inventory at 100% of Year 1 revenue, because delays raise burn before steady sales.

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Hidden launch costs

  • Staff hiring and training
  • Menu testing and soft opening waste
  • Inspections and license timing
  • Insurance binders and deposits
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Cash you need

  • Opening supplies and reservation setup
  • Working capital before steady sales
  • $15,950 monthly fixed costs
  • $280,000 Year 1 payroll


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup cost summary

This table summarizes the main startup CAPEX items and the separate opening cash reserve needed to launch and absorb early losses.

Highlighted CAPEX$210,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$776,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$986,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Leasehold Improvements $120,000 Buildout scope and finish quality Yes
Kitchen Equipment $45,000 Equipment spec and installation needs Yes
Cafe Furniture & Fixtures $20,000 Seating count and fixture quality Yes
Cat Lounge Furniture & Enrichment $18,000 Lounge setup and enrichment scope Yes
POS System & IT Infrastructure $7,000 System hardware, setup, and integration Yes
Working Capital Reserve $776,000 Minimum cash in Month 2 and early operating losses No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched assumptions; excluded cash covers working capital and early operating losses.


Restaurant Core Five Startup Costs



Restaurant Build-Out Startup Expense


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Build-Out Subtotal

The build-out subtotal is $120,000, scheduled from Month 1 to Month 3. This covers demolition, walls, flooring, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, grease trap work, ventilation, restrooms, accessibility, inspections, and the gap between landlord delivery condition and a restaurant-ready space.


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Cost Drivers

The final number moves with square footage, raw versus second-generation space, cuisine type, hood and plumbing needs, and local code rules. A bigger kitchen or more complex menu means more trade work and more inspection fixes. This line item can swing fast, so get contractor quotes early.

  • Measure usable square feet.
  • Check hood and grease trap needs.
  • Confirm code before lease signing.
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Funding Gap

No landlord contribution is stated here, so the tenant-funded balance starts at $120,000 before any allowance. Add contingency for permit changes and inspection fixes, because those costs can push the cash need higher during Month 1 to Month 3. Keep funds ready before opening.


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Contingency Impact

Contingency matters most when the space is raw, the hood run is long, or local code adds extra work. Even a modest overage raises the tenant cash need above $120,000, so build the buffer into the Month 1 to Month 3 spend plan, not after permits land.



Restaurant Kitchen Equipment Startup Expense


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Kitchen Gear

$45,000 covers ovens, ranges, fryers, refrigeration, prep tables, dishwashing, smallwares, dry storage, fire suppression, delivery, installation, and utility hookups. Schedule it for Month 2 to Month 4. The number moves with menu complexity, prep volume, food safety needs, and whether the space already has usable equipment.


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Cost Inputs

Build the equipment subtotal from owned, leased, used, or financed items and line up each piece by install month. A simple menu and light prep can shrink the need; a blank kitchen or tighter food safety setup pushes it up. Use the $45,000 base as the working plan, then separate any financed payments.

  • Price each major item.
  • Include delivery and install.
  • Track monthly debt payments.
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Risk Control

Keep new purchases focused on compliance and core cooking gear, then use used or leased items for lower-risk pieces if they already fit the space. Don’t cut refrigeration, ventilation, or fire suppression to save cash. Used equipment raises replacement risk, so track it separately and keep financing payments out of the equipment subtotal.


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Cash Timing

Month 2 to Month 4 is the spend window, so cash use peaks after the space is ready and before opening. If the kitchen already has usable equipment, trim the subtotal instead of buying duplicates. If items are financed or leased, book the payments separately from the startup buyout so the opening budget stays clean.



Restaurant Furniture And Fixtures Startup Expense


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FF&E Split

The FF&E budget for this bistro is $38,000 for cafe and lounge furniture, plus $16,000 for tech and exterior items. That means tables, chairs, booths, bar fixtures, host stand, lighting, décor, and audio belong in one bucket, while POS hardware, customer-facing security, and signage stay separate.


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Cost Inputs

Use seat count, service style, bar program, and finish level to price the furniture set. The source numbers are $20,000 for cafe furniture and fixtures, $18,000 for lounge furniture and enrichment, $7,000 for POS and IT, $4,000 for security, and $5,000 for signage.

  • More seats need more chairs.
  • Booths and bar add cost.
  • POS and signage stay separate.
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Cost Control

Control this spend by buying for traffic, not for looks alone. Standard tables and chairs, fewer custom booth runs, and phased décor keep cash tight without hurting guest experience. Keep FF&E, technology, and signage on separate quotes so you can see where the money really goes.


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Budget Check

All in, this startup item totals $54,000. If the dining room is small, the biggest swing comes from booth count and lounge finish level; if the concept leans evening-heavy, bar fixtures, audio, and customer-facing security matter more.



Restaurant Permits, Licenses, And Insurance Startup Expense


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Permit stack

A restaurant launch needs one-time setup for registration, permits, inspections, occupancy approval, legal setup, and accounting setup. Then plan for recurring run-rate costs of about $750/month for business insurance and $600/month for professional services, or $1,350/month total after opening.


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Cost drivers

Estimate this line by counting each required filing: business registration, food service permit, health inspection, occupancy approval, and insurance binders. Add any liquor license as a separate cost driver. The final number changes with state, city, alcohol service, food handling scope, and occupancy size.

  • Track one-time fees separately
  • Keep monthly coverage in run-rate
  • Flag liquor as a separate line
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Save on setup

Cut cost by lining up permits early, using one clean application packet, and asking for quotes before you finalize the floor plan. Don’t blur startup fees with recurring insurance or bookkeeping; that hides cash needs. Insurance binders should be ready before landlord and city reviews stall opening.


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Alcohol adds time

If you plan to serve alcohol, treat it as a separate budget and timeline item. It can add another approval layer and change insurance needs, while a no-alcohol format stays simpler. Keep the setup bill and the monthly run-rate in different buckets so Month 1 cash is clear.



Restaurant Pre-Opening Expenses Startup Expense


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Launch Spend

This launch spend covers initial food and beverage inventory, disposables, uniforms, hiring, training, menu testing, the soft opening, photography, the website, reservation setup, local marketing, and opening supplies. Price it from opening-menu volume, headcount, vendor quotes, and launch weeks. The website and reservation setup anchor is $6,000.


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What It Covers

Split one-time setup from run-rate costs. The launch budget should include setup work, then keep Month 1 payroll at about $23,333 outside startup capex. Use staffing plan, training days, and the number of pre-open events to size this line. Year 1 food and beverage inventory is an operating ratio, not capex.

  • Price uniforms by headcount.
  • Quote print and opening supplies.
  • Budget soft-open meals and drinks.
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Keep It Lean

Buy only menu-critical stock, limit one-time print runs, and use a short soft opening to catch waste before day one. Don’t bury recurring marketing in startup spend. For Year 1, model marketing and reservation fees at 20% of revenue, and treat merchandise cost at 20% as operating cost.

  • Negotiate lower opening-supply minimums.
  • Trim training days if turnover is low.
  • Use digital files over reprints.

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Model the Ratios

Use Year 1 food and beverage inventory at 100% of revenue when you model operating cost, not launch cash. That keeps the opening budget clean and stops double-counting stock, marketing, or payroll. If the restaurant sells merchandise, use 20% of revenue there too.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Scenario table

Startup costs jump as the build-out gets bigger, the kitchen gets more complex, and working capital needs rise. Lean, base, and full help you plan how much cash the opening really needs.

Lean vs. base vs. full opening cost bands
Scenario Lean LaunchBest for second-generation space Base LaunchBalanced opening plan Full LaunchComplex full-service build-out
Launch model A simpler opening in an existing space with fewer seats and limited build-out. A full core opening with the modeled CAPEX base and a cushion sized for Month 2 cash needs. A larger opening with more seating, a more complex kitchen, and heavier guest-facing build-out.
Typical setup Use minimal equipment changes, a tighter front-of-house, and lean working capital. Use the source build-out mix: leasehold improvements, kitchen equipment, fixtures, POS, security, signage, and setup costs. Use higher décor spend, more fixtures, bar-style service, and a larger working capital cushion.
Cost drivers
  • Second-generation space
  • fewer seats
  • limited kitchen changes
  • tighter working capital
  • Leasehold improvements
  • kitchen equipment
  • fixtures and furniture
  • POS and security
  • working capital cushion
  • Larger build-out
  • more seating
  • complex kitchen
  • bar service
  • higher working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only Tight startup bandLean capital $228,000Modeled base case Higher-build funding bandCapital intensive
Best fit Best for founders who want a smaller opening and lower upfront risk. Best for operators who want a balanced opening plan backed by the model's base case. Best for founders planning a larger footprint and a more premium guest experience.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or fixed bids. Base uses the modeled $228,000 CAPEX and a $776,000 cash cushion in Month 2.

Frequently Asked Questions

Hold enough working capital to survive the cash low point, not just the grand opening In this plan, the model carries $776,000 of minimum cash in Month 2 while fixed costs run $15,950 per month and Year 1 payroll equals $280,000 If inspections or hiring slip, that reserve protects payroll, rent, inventory, and launch spend