How Much Does It Cost to Start a Laundromat in the U.S.?

A practical look at equipment, build-out, utilities, leasehold improvements, and working capital for a new laundromat launch.

Laundromat startup cost planning image with washers, dryers, and build-out budget

Laundromat startup costs often begin with equipment, but the full budget usually goes well beyond washers and dryers. A realistic launch budget also needs to cover plumbing, electrical work, dryers venting, HVAC, signage, security systems, permits, deposits, and enough working capital to survive the early months.

That is why founders who only price the machines can underestimate the total project by a wide margin.

Startup budget worksheet for a laundromat project
Startup budget worksheet for a laundromat project

Equipment is usually the largest line item. Depending on store size, machine mix, and whether you buy new or used equipment, the machine package can represent a very large share of the total investment. Build-out costs also vary sharply if the site needs major utility upgrades or extensive tenant improvements.

Laundromat washers and dryers inside a retail location
Laundromat washers and dryers inside a retail location

Founders should also budget for pre-opening expenses such as legal setup, insurance, initial detergent inventory, marketing, camera systems, and software for card or loyalty systems. Working capital matters because a laundromat can take time to ramp up to a stable turns-per-day level.

Spreadsheet showing laundromat working capital assumptions
Spreadsheet showing laundromat working capital assumptions

The most reliable way to estimate startup cost is to separate the project into equipment, construction, deposits, pre-opening expense, and working capital. That makes it easier to see what is fixed, what is negotiable, and what can create financing pressure later.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is usually the biggest startup cost in a laundromat?
Equipment is often the largest single cost, but construction and utility upgrades can also become major budget items depending on the site.
Should I include working capital in the launch budget?
Yes. Working capital helps cover the ramp-up period and protects the business if revenue builds more slowly than expected.
Do used machines always make the project cheaper?
Not always. Used equipment can reduce purchase price, but repair risk, downtime, and efficiency trade-offs can offset some of the savings.
Why do founders underestimate laundromat startup costs?
Many people focus only on machines and forget build-out, deposits, permits, software, signage, and pre-opening expenses.