Startup Cost Estimator — Categorized Budget Planner by Industry

Add your expected costs category by category. We will total everything and recommend a cash reserve.

Business Type

Select a template to pre-fill typical costs, or start from scratch.

One-Time Startup Costs

Business license, LLC filing, permits, trademark

$

Computer, desk, machinery, tools, POS system

$

Leasehold improvements, signage, deposits

$

Opening stock, raw materials, packaging

$

Logo, domain, website design, business cards

$

Training, consulting, initial marketing campaign

$

Monthly Operating Costs

$
$

General liability, professional, property

$

Accounting, email, CRM, project management

$
$
$
$

Cash Reserve

How many months of expenses to keep in reserve? 3-6 months is recommended.

Startup Cost Planning Guide

Why You Need a Startup Budget

Most businesses fail not from bad ideas but from running out of money. A realistic startup budget helps you understand exactly how much capital you need before generating revenue, and prevents the number one mistake: underestimating costs by 30-50%.

Typical Startup Costs by Business Type

Business Type Typical Range
Freelance / Consulting $500 - $5,000
Online Store (e-commerce) $2,000 - $15,000
Service Business $5,000 - $25,000
Retail Shop $25,000 - $100,000
Restaurant / Food Service $50,000 - $250,000+

Costs People Forget

  • Permits & licenses: Health permits, fire inspection, zoning approval — $200-$2,000+ depending on industry and location
  • Insurance: General liability alone runs $500-$3,000/year for most small businesses
  • Professional services: Accountant setup, legal review, bookkeeping — $1,000-$5,000 in year one
  • Security deposits: First/last month rent, utility deposits, equipment leases — often 2-3 months of rent
  • Working capital gap: The time between paying suppliers and collecting from customers (30-90 days)

The Cash Reserve Rule

Keep 3-6 months of operating expenses in reserve. This is not optional — it is the difference between surviving a slow start and closing down. Most businesses take 6-18 months to become profitable.

Reserve Level Best For
3 months Freelance, side business, low overhead
6 months Most small businesses (recommended)
9 months Seasonal business, slow ramp-up
12 months Restaurant, retail, high fixed costs

Funding Your Startup

  • Personal savings: The most common source. No debt, no giving up equity, full control
  • SBA loans: Government-backed loans with favorable terms (SBA 7(a) up to $5M, microloans up to $50K)
  • Business credit cards: Good for small purchases and building business credit. Watch the interest rates
  • Friends & family: If going this route, put everything in writing with clear repayment terms

Launch Checklist

  • Register business entity (LLC, Corp, or sole proprietorship)
  • Get EIN from IRS (free, instant online)
  • Open business bank account (separate from personal)
  • Get required licenses and permits
  • Set up accounting software (QuickBooks, Wave, FreshBooks)
  • Purchase insurance (general liability at minimum)
  • Build cash reserve before launch, not after

When to Use This Calculator

Before Seeking Funding

Investors and lenders want to see a detailed startup budget. A well-structured cost estimate shows you've thought through the business and know how much capital you actually need.

Deciding Between Concepts

Comparing a brick-and-mortar vs. e-commerce concept? Run both through this estimator to see the capital difference before committing to a direction.

Setting Your Cash Reserve

Most failed startups cite running out of cash as the cause. The cash reserve section helps you target the safety net needed to survive your first 3–6 months of operations.

Industry Benchmarks

Business Type Typical Startup Cost Key Driver
Home Service / Trades $10K–$50K Tools, licensing, vehicle
E-Commerce / Online Store $5K–$30K Inventory, platform, marketing
Restaurant / Café $175K–$500K Build-out, equipment, licenses
Retail Storefront $50K–$150K Lease, fixtures, inventory
Professional Services $5K–$25K Licensing, software, marketing
SaaS / Software $30K–$150K Development, infrastructure, legal

Source: SBA.gov Small Business Profiles, Kauffman Foundation Startup Activity data.

Common Mistakes When Estimating Startup Costs

Underestimating the cash reserve

Most businesses don't turn profitable immediately. Budget 3–6 months of operating expenses as a cash buffer beyond your startup costs. Without it, one slow month can force you to close before you've had time to grow.

Forgetting pre-opening costs

Legal formation ($500–$2,000), business licenses ($100–$1,000), initial marketing and branding ($2,000–$10,000), and website setup often get overlooked. These are real costs you pay before serving a single customer.

Ignoring working capital needs

If you carry inventory or have 30–60 day payment terms with customers, you need capital to bridge that gap. Working capital requirements can easily add 20–30% to your total funding need.

Using best-case estimates

Construction always runs over. Equipment takes longer to arrive. Permits get delayed. Add a 15–20% contingency buffer to every startup cost estimate. The startups that succeed plan for Murphy's Law.

Data Sources

SBA.gov Small Business Profiles
U.S. Small Business Administration annual state-by-state profiles covering startup costs, survival rates, and financing patterns across industries.
Kauffman Foundation
Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation publishes annual startup activity indexes and research on typical capital requirements by business type and industry.
BLS Business Employment Dynamics
Bureau of Labor Statistics quarterly data on business formations, survival rates by industry, and early-stage business characteristics.

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