Speech Therapy Clinic Startup Cost: Plan From $183K CAPEX

Speech Therapy Clinic Startup Costs
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Description

The cost to start a speech therapy clinic in this model begins with at least $183,000 in listed CAPEX, led by a $75,000 clinic buildout, $40,000 of therapy equipment, $25,000 of diagnostic kits, $18,000 of IT infrastructure, $15,000 of furniture, and $10,000 of initial marketing and signage That is not the full cash need The first-year staffing plan carries about $57,500 per month in payroll, and fixed overhead adds $9,900 per month, so a 3-6 month runway adds about $202,000-$404,000 before deposits, payroll taxes, benefits, debt service, owner draws, or any EHR setup amount not shown in the supplied data A practical opening funding target from these researched assumptions starts around $385,000-$587,000+, depending on room count, payer credentialing timing, launch staffing, and collections lag



Estimate Startup Costs with Calculator

Startup CAPEX Calculator

Estimate capitalized startup assets only for a speech therapy clinic, including build-out, equipment, and a contingency reserve.

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CAPEX only This calculator covers capitalized startup assets only: build-out, therapy equipment, diagnostic kits, IT, furniture, and contingency. It excludes payroll runway, rent deposits, insurance premiums, debt service, working capital, inventory, EHR subscriptions, marketing campaigns, and other ongoing operating costs.



What does the CAPEX tab show?

The Speech Therapy Clinic Financial Model Template CAPEX tab shows buildout categories, timing, amounts, and depreciation or amortization. Open it and review assumptions.

Key screenshot highlights

  • Buildout and equipment
  • Timing and vendor quotes
  • Depreciation and amortization
Speech Therapy Clinic Financial Model capex inputs showing capital expenditure categories and customizable timing/amount fields to model equipment, lease fit-out and startup investments for funding plans


What drives the cost of opening a speech therapy clinic?


For a Speech Therapy Clinic, the biggest cost swing is the facility layout: more treatment rooms means more buildout, furniture, therapy materials, IT devices, and sound control. A base source points to $75,000 for clinic buildout and renovation, $15,000 for office furniture and decor, and $18,000 for IT infrastructure and computers, but the final check depends on lease terms and contractor quotes. Child-friendly pediatric rooms need durable waiting areas, toys, storage, and parent seating, while adult neuro services may need different accessibility planning and clinical flow.

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Main cost drivers

  • Room count drives buildout
  • Sound control adds cost fast
  • ADA access can change layout
  • Landlord-ready space cuts work
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What changes the bill

  • $75,000 buildout and renovation source
  • $15,000 furniture and decor source
  • $18,000 IT and computers source
  • Lease and contractor quotes set the final cost

How much does it cost to open a speech therapy clinic?


Opening a Speech Therapy Clinic starts around $385,000-$587,000+ for a multi-room clinic, based on $183,000+ in listed capital expenditures and $67,400/month in payroll plus fixed overhead. Before sizing the budget, define the operating target here: What Is The Main Goal Of Your Speech Therapy Clinic? A small solo speech-language pathologist office should need less because it can avoid a multi-room buildout and a 6 SLP FTE Year 1 team.

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Base opening budget

  • $183,000+ listed CAPEX
  • $67,400/month payroll plus overhead
  • 3-6 months runway needed
  • $385,000-$587,000+ total funding target
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What changes cost

  • Add rooms, raise buildout cost
  • Add therapists, raise payroll runway
  • Add materials, raise startup cash
  • Add credentialing time, raise cash buffer

How do you fund a speech therapy clinic?


You fund a Speech Therapy Clinic by building lender-ready numbers first, because banks, SBA lenders, and investors will want startup cost assumptions, payer mix, ramp-up timing, payroll, and cash-flow projections before they talk terms. Here’s the quick math: the model shows $183,000+ in CAPEX, $67,400 a month in payroll plus fixed overhead, and about $52,080 in Year 1 monthly revenue at 55% to 70% capacity, while supplies, transaction fees, marketing, and professional development can total 95% of revenue.

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What lenders need

  • $183,000+ CAPEX plan
  • Payroll and fixed overhead
  • Payer mix by service line
  • Ramp-up timing by month
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What the model must show

  • Working capital runway
  • Credentialing lag risk
  • Cancellations and no-shows
  • Reimbursement delay coverage


Calculate Fuding Needs

Startup Cost Summary

This table separates clinic setup CAPEX from opening cash needs for a speech therapy clinic.

Highlighted CAPEX$173,000Base planning example
Excluded cash needs$4,000Outside CAPEX total
Funding need$177,000CAPEX + excluded cash needs
Cost Category Base Estimate Main Cost Driver CAPEX Calculator
Clinic Build-out & Renovation $75,000 Landlord condition and room count Yes
Specialized Therapy Equipment $40,000 Therapist mix and clinical spec Yes
Diagnostic Assessment Kits $25,000 Assessment volume and testing depth Yes
IT Infrastructure & Computers $18,000 Device count and network setup Yes
Office Furniture & Decor $15,000 Room count and finish level Yes
Operating Reserve $4,000 Payer lag and payroll timing before breakeven No

Planning note: Ranges reflect researched planning assumptions; non-CAPEX excludes debt service, owner draw, taxes, and benefits.


Speech Therapy Clinic Core Five Startup Costs



Facility Setup And Leasehold Improvements Startup Expense


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Buildout Budget

Set aside $75,000 across Months 1-3 for clinic buildout and leasehold improvements. That covers treatment rooms, reception, waiting space, therapy storage, child-safe finishes, adult access, flooring, sound control, signage, lighting, and a landlord-ready finish. Keep $5,000 monthly rent separate unless your model capitalizes the deposit.


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Sizing Inputs

This is the shell-to-clinic conversion. Price it from square footage, room count, landlord allowance, permit scope, furniture scope, and sound-control specs. Service mix matters too: pediatric, adult neuro, fluency, voice, diagnostic, or mixed patients all change the room plan and finish level.

  • Count treatment rooms first
  • Check landlord allowance early
  • Price permits before signing
  • Match layout to patient mix
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Keep It Lean

Use the landlord allowance first, then phase noncritical upgrades after opening. Protect quality on safety, access, and acoustics, but do not overbuild storage or décor before patient volume is clear. The usual mistake is sizing the finish-out for the ideal clinic instead of the first working setup.

  • Buy only room-specific furniture
  • Delay cosmetic extras
  • Keep acoustic spend targeted

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Cash Timing

Rent deposits are pre-opening cash unless the model capitalizes them. With $5,000 rent from Month 1 through Month 60, lease terms matter as much as the buildout budget. Ask whether deposits, tenant improvements, and any required return to landlord-ready condition are paid up front or spread into startup funding.



Clinical Equipment And Therapy Materials Startup Expense


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Cost split

Budget $65,000 for launch materials: $40,000 in specialized therapy equipment from Month 2 to Month 4 and $25,000 in diagnostic assessment kits from Month 3 to Month 5. That covers standardized test kits, mirrors, oral-motor tools, toys, books, articulation cards, language materials, storage, and optional augmentative and alternative communication demo resources when clinically relevant.


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Estimate it

Size this cost from quotes, room count, and duplicate sets. The main inputs are age mix, service mix, and how many speech-language pathologists need the same tools at once. Here’s the quick math: unit count × unit price, plus replacement spares. Ongoing supplies are modeled at 20% of Year 1 revenue.

  • Count rooms needing duplicates
  • Price each kit separately
  • Plan for replacements
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Keep it lean

Buy the core set first, then add extras after patient mix is clear. Avoid overbuying toys, books, and cards for rooms that stay underused. Shared inventory can cut waste, but keep enough duplicate materials for busy rooms. By Year 5, the model drops ongoing supplies to 15% of revenue.

  • Stage purchases by month
  • Share safe materials across rooms
  • Track breakage and reorders

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Scale rule

Set the first order around the actual schedule, not the ideal one. If pediatric, adult neuro, fluency, and voice services all run at once, duplicate kits rise fast. If one clinician covers most sessions, the same stock can go farther. What this estimate hides: room turnover speed and how often materials need replacement.



Technology, EHR, Billing, And Teletherapy Startup Expense


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Hardware CAPEX

$18,000 in Month 1 through Month 2 covers the one-time tech setup: computers or tablets, secure internet, phones, telehealth tools, data backup, access controls, and HIPAA-related setup. Keep this separate from software so the startup budget shows real cash needed before visits begin. If EHR setup or customization is budgeted, put it on its own line.


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Monthly Software

Recurring tech is $700 per month for the EHR base subscription plus $1,000 per month for IT support and general software. That budget covers scheduling, documentation, billing, payment processing, telehealth, and routine support. Simple rule: monthly run rate is $1,700 before any billing transaction fees.

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Billing Fees

EHR billing transaction fees equal 15% of Year 1 revenue, so this cost moves with patient volume instead of staying flat. Here’s the quick math: fee expense = 0.15 × Year 1 revenue. That makes billing efficiency matter, because every missed claim or slow payment raises the real cost of collecting cash.


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Control the tech burn

Keep hardware, subscriptions, and transaction fees on separate lines so you can see what is fixed and what scales with visits. Buy only the devices you need for launch, and avoid padding software seats before therapist schedules are full. One clean setup now is cheaper than messy rework later.



Licensing, Compliance, Insurance, Legal, And Credentialing Startup Expense


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What it covers

This line covers business formation, state professional requirements, malpractice and general liability insurance, contracts, privacy and HIPAA policies, billing compliance, payer enrollment support, and credentialing follow-up. In the model, it runs from Month 1 to Month 60, so treat it as mostly pre-opening cash plus recurring overhead, not equipment or buildout.


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Monthly run rate

The source model includes $1,200 per month for professional liability insurance and $300 per month for credentialing and licensing fees, or $1,500 per month total from Month 1 through Month 60. That is $18,000 per year before any state, payer, or attorney-specific charges.

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How to size it

Use the clinic’s state rules, payer mix, and number of clinicians to set the budget. Here’s the quick math: more therapists mean more credentialing work, and more in-network payers mean more enrollment follow-up. If billing is outsourced, some compliance work shifts into vendor fees; if in-house, staffing and process time rise.


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How to keep it tight

Keep the legal scope lean but complete: form the entity once, use standard contracts, and reuse HIPAA and billing policies across sites only after state review. Don’t skip credentialing follow-up, because slow payer setup delays cash. The main savings lever is fewer in-network payers and cleaner documentation, not cutting insurance below safe levels.


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What changes the estimate

The budget moves fast with state law, payer rules, and staffing count. A solo clinic with simple billing will spend less than a multi-SLP practice with several insurers. What this estimate hides: attorney fees, filing costs, and any one-time compliance setup, which can land before opening and should be planned as cash needs.


Staffing, Recruiting, And Pre-Opening Payroll Startup Expense


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Pre-Opening Payroll

Treat staffing as pre-opening working capital, not CAPEX. This Year 1 team totals $690,000, or about $57,500 per month before taxes and benefits. It covers the lead SLP clinical director, pediatric, adult neuro, fluency voice, diagnostic, clinic manager, admin, and billing support before patient volume steadies.


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Headcount Math

Build the budget from headcount × salary, plus months of pre-opening coverage. Use the listed pay: $110,000, $85,000 x2, $90,000, $88,000, $92,000, $70,000, $45,000, and the billing role at $50,000. Add recruiting, onboarding, training, and credentialing before visits begin.

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Lean Hiring

The biggest savings lever is the staffing model. An owner-clinician can replace one salaried lead SLP, and assistants can help only where allowed. Start lean on nonclinical roles, but do not underfund credentialing or payer enrollment. Idle payroll is the risk; if volume ramps slowly, cash burn rises fast.


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Cash Timing

Plan cash for the first months of wages, because payroll starts before collections do. Billing lag and credentialing delays can push cash out before cash in. That is why this line belongs in launch funding and working capital, not the equipment budget.



Compare 3 Startup Cost Scenarios

Startup cost scenarios

Launch size shifts this clinic's cash need fast. Lean keeps one owner-clinician room and lower working capital; Base matches the model's 6 SLP FTE; Full adds rooms, staff, and more pre-opening spend.

Lean, Base, and Full launch cost bands for a speech therapy clinic.
Scenario Lean LaunchLowest fixed risk Base LaunchLender-ready base Full LaunchGrowth-ready
Launch model Owner-clinician model with one room and a narrow start, built to test referral flow before adding staff. Multi-room clinic with the core specialty mix and enough staffing to run the model's base volumes. Scaled clinic with more rooms, more staff, and a wider service mix from day one.
Typical setup Small office, basic reception, one set of tools, and lean pre-opening spend. Standard clinic layout, normal reception and back office, and a balanced staffing plan. Larger clinic layout, child-friendly waiting areas, expanded reception, and more inventory and working capital.
Cost drivers
  • One room build-out
  • one assessment kit set
  • minimal furniture
  • light admin help
  • lower working capital
  • Clinic build-out
  • six SLP FTE
  • admin and billing staff
  • EHR setup
  • standard working capital
  • Extra therapy rooms
  • pediatric-friendly buildout
  • more SLP and admin FTE
  • larger materials budget
  • higher working capital
Planning rangeCAPEX only $150,000 - $250,000Low cash need $300,000 - $500,000Bankable base $500,000 - $750,000Capital heavy
Best fit Founder testing referrals and wanting the lowest fixed risk. Founder who wants a lender-ready base case and balanced growth. Founder planning faster growth and a bigger operating footprint.

Planning note: These ranges are researched planning assumptions from the model, not vendor quotes or exact lender terms.

Frequently Asked Questions

A home-based practice should cost less than the leased clinic in this model because it may avoid the $75,000 buildout and $5,000 monthly rent It still needs licensing, insurance, EHR, billing, materials, assessment kits, and marketing The supplied budget is for a clinic with $183,000+ listed CAPEX and multi-specialty staffing, so don’t use it as a solo-home estimate