How Much Does it Cost to Open a Restaurant in 2026?
In 2026, the cost to open a restaurant depends on concept, build-out, equipment, permits, staffing, tech, and working capital.

Your Cost Range (and What Drives It)
If you want a number you can actually plan around, start with this mindset - your opening cost is the combination of (1) your one-time startup spend and (2) the cash you need to operate until the restaurant becomes self-sustaining. Most people obsess over build-out and equipment, but underestimating early operating cash is one of the fastest ways to open stressed and stay behind.
A practical way to think about cost range is to tie it to four "budget drivers" that decide almost everything -
1) Concept complexity. A simple menu and assembly-style kitchen is fundamentally cheaper than a concept that needs a full hot line, high ventilation load, specialty cooking (wood fire, smokers), pastry production, or a serious bar program. More complexity means more equipment, more utilities, and more labor to execute.
2) Footprint and seating. A bigger space is not just "more rent." It's more flooring, more lighting, more HVAC capacity, more furniture, more bathrooms, and often more code requirements. Seating count also affects how much you spend on tables/chairs, dish capacity, storage, and staffing.
3) Location and building condition. In the U.S., two similar spaces can differ wildly based on what's already there. A "second-gen" restaurant space can save money, but only if the critical infrastructure is usable- hood and fire suppression, grease interceptor, gas lines, electrical panel capacity, ADA access, and overall condition. A bargain lease in a space that needs heavy MEP upgrades can destroy your budget.
4) Timeline and financing. Rushing almost always increases cost - expedited permits, change orders, premium labor, and bad purchasing decisions. Financing terms also matter - deposits, reserves, interest during build-out, and required cash on hand.
From there, you can build a realistic range by separating must-haves (legal compliance, core equipment, safety, basic tech) from nice-to-haves (custom finishes, premium furniture, extra decor, expanded marketing). The goal isn't to guess one "perfect" number - it's to create a range you can defend, then tighten it as you confirm your site, menu, and build-out scope.

Concept & Size Decisions That Determine Your Budget
Before you price a single hood or sign, lock in two decisions - what you're selling (concept) and how you're serving it (service model + size). These choices control your equipment list, labor model, required square footage, and how intense your build-out needs to be.
Start with the service model, because it dictates your "hidden" costs -
1. QSR / counter service - Typically lower front-of-house build-out, fewer tables, and faster throughput. You'll still pay for the kitchen and compliance items, but you can often keep decor and staffing lighter. The budget swings up if you need a drive-thru, high-volume production, or heavy refrigeration for prep.
2. Fast casual - Usually a step up in seating, finishes, and guest flow design (ordering line, pickup area, beverage station). Your kitchen may still be streamlined, but the guest-facing environment often costs more than owners expect.
3. Full-service - Higher costs across the board - more seating and furniture, a larger dining room, higher finish expectations, bigger dish capacity, more storage, and a deeper staffing plan (servers, hosts, bussers).
4. Bar + alcohol program - Alcohol can boost margins, but it often increases startup cost (licensing, bar build, refrigeration/ice, glassware, POS configuration, security, and sometimes additional insurance requirements).
5. Ghost kitchen / delivery-first - You can reduce dining room spend, but you may spend more on production efficiency - packaging, labeling, storage, and order management. You also need a plan for delivery integration and timing accuracy.
Next, get realistic about size. Bigger isn't automatically better. Square footage drives rent, utilities, build-out, and ongoing staffing. Many owners overshoot their first footprint and then feel the pain every month. A tighter, well-designed space can outperform a larger space if your kitchen is built for the menu and your guest flow is efficient.
Finally, match the menu to the build. Your menu is a "shopping list" for equipment, utilities, and permits. If your concept requires frying, grilling, charbroiling, or any high-heat cooking, you're likely in the world of ventilation, fire suppression, and heavier MEP work. If you can execute with more electric equipment, prep-forward cooking, or a simplified hot line, you may reduce complexity.
Real Estate & Build-Out Costs
In most U.S. openings, real estate and build-out are the biggest "make-or-break" categories because they can swing from manageable to brutal based on the lease terms and what the space needs to become legally operable. The key is to separate (1) what you pay to secure the space from (2) what you pay to make it a restaurant.
Start with lease-related costs. Even before construction, you may be paying -
- Security deposit + first month's rent (sometimes more, depending on credit and concept risk)
- Legal fees for lease review (don't skip this - one bad clause can haunt you for years)
- CAM/NNN charges in many retail centers (common area maintenance, property taxes, insurance)
- Tenant improvement (TI) structure - whether the landlord is contributing dollars, offering "free rent," or pushing all build-out responsibility to you
- Utilities deposits (electric/gas/water) and setup fees
Then comes the build-out, where budgets often blow up. The most expensive surprises tend to live in MEP + code compliance -
1. Mechanical - HVAC capacity, make-up air, ventilation requirements
2. Electrical - panel upgrades, additional circuits, lighting, emergency lighting, GFCI requirements
3. Plumbing - grease interceptor needs, floor drains, hot water capacity, bathrooms, mop sink
4. Fire/life safety - hood system, fire suppression (ANSUL), fire alarm, sprinklers (if required)
5. ADA compliance - accessible entrances, restrooms, seating clearances, ramps/handrails
A "second-generation" restaurant space can help, but only if the critical systems are usable and permitted. A hood that's the wrong size, a grease interceptor that's undersized, or an electrical panel that can't support your equipment can erase the savings fast.
Finally, don't forget the non-glamorous finish items that add up - flooring, wall surfaces that meet health standards, ceiling work, paint, lighting, millwork, signage, bathrooms, and furniture/fixtures. The best way to control this category is to define your scope early, get detailed bids, and protect your budget with a clear contingency - because change orders are where money disappears the fastest.
Equipment, Smallwares, and Opening Inventory
After build-out, this is the category that quietly determines whether your restaurant runs smoothly on day one - or feels like constant friction. Owners usually price the big-ticket equipment (ranges, fryers, refrigeration) but underestimate everything around it - installation, ventilation compatibility, smallwares, and the first wave of inventory and supplies you need to operate.
Big-ticket equipment (the obvious spend)
Your list depends on your menu, but most U.S. restaurants will need some combination of -
1. Cooking line - range, ovens, griddle, charbroiler, fryer(s), warmers/holding
2. Refrigeration - reach-ins, prep tables, undercounter units, walk-in cooler/freezer (if needed)
3. Prep - mixers, food processors, slicers, prep sinks, stainless tables, shelving
4. Dish - high-temp or chemical dishwasher, 3-comp sink, drainboards, drying racks
5. Beverage - coffee/tea system, soda/ice, bar refrigeration (if applicable)
Even when equipment costs look "done," remember the add-ons- delivery and rigging, equipment stands, plumbing and electrical hookups, gas connections, venting requirements, and fire suppression coordination. A piece of equipment that "fits the kitchen" on paper can still trigger real costs if it requires more power, more gas, or a different hood configuration.
Smallwares (where budgets get crushed)
Smallwares are the "death by a thousand cuts" category - pans, pots, knives, cutting boards, containers, cambros, sheet trays, spatulas, thermometers, labels, squeeze bottles, bus tubs, ramekins, and more. Then add FOH items- plates, bowls, glassware, flatware, trays, check presenters, and cleaning tools. The best way to control this spend is to build a checklist by station (prep, line, expo, dish, bar, service) and standardize wherever possible.
Opening inventory and supplies (what you need before the first sale)
Plan for -
- Initial food and beverage inventory (including backup staples that prevent 86'ing early)
- Paper goods and packaging (especially important for takeout and delivery)
- Chemicals and cleaning supplies (sanitizer, degreaser, towels, mop heads, etc.)
- Spare parts and maintenance basics (gaskets, thermometers, printer paper, filters)
A practical rule - don't just ask "What does it cost?" Ask "What keeps us from running out, breaking down, or slowing down in week one?" That's the difference between a smooth opening and a chaotic one.

Licenses, Permits, and Compliance
This category rarely feels exciting, but it's one of the most time-sensitive parts of opening a restaurant in the U.S. The real cost isn't just the fees - it's the delays that happen when permits, inspections, or required certifications aren't lined up early. The goal is simple - you want to be "inspection-ready" when construction is done, not stuck paying rent while you wait for approvals.
Core permits and approvals most restaurants need
While requirements vary by state, county, and city, many U.S. restaurants will deal with -
- Business registration and local business license
- Health department plan review and operating permit (often tied to equipment, sinks, surfaces, and workflow)
- Building permits for remodels and changes to electrical/plumbing/HVAC
- Fire department review and inspection (especially if you have a hood and suppression system)
- Certificate of Occupancy (CO) or final building approval before you can open
- Sign permits depending on your municipality and signage type
If you're doing a substantial remodel, you may also need engineered drawings, contractor documentation, and multiple inspection sign-offs (rough-in and final) across trades.
Many jurisdictions require a Certified Food Protection Manager (often ServSafe or equivalent), plus food handler cards for staff. These are usually not huge costs individually, but they're non-negotiable and should be scheduled early so you're not scrambling during hiring.
Alcohol (if applicable)
An alcohol program can add meaningful revenue, but it introduces additional steps - license applications, background checks, posting notices, hearings, and longer lead times in some areas. You may also need extra compliance items like ID policies, staff training, and point-of-sale setup for alcohol controls.
Insurance and risk requirements
Most landlords and lenders will require specific coverage before you open - commonly general liability, property, workers' comp, and sometimes liquor liability. Costs vary widely, but the important budget move is to treat insurance as a "must-have to unlock opening," not a line item you can postpone.
Technology and Operating Systems
In 2026, technology is no longer a "nice-to-have." For most U.S. restaurants, it's the operating backbone that turns orders into payments, schedules into payroll, and sales into real reporting you can manage. The mistake owners make is budgeting only for a POS terminal and forgetting the rest of the system - hardware, integrations, network, subscriptions, implementation, and ongoing support.
The core stack most restaurants need
At minimum, plan for -
- POS + payment processing (terminals, printers, cash drawer if needed)
- Receipt and kitchen printing or KDS (kitchen display screens or printers, bump bars, mounts)
- Online ordering (first-party site ordering and/or third-party marketplace integration)
- Network and security (business-grade router, access points, backup internet option, cybersecurity basics)
- Back-office reporting (sales dashboards, labor reporting, and cost tracking)
If your concept relies on volume, accuracy, and speed, a KDS and solid network often pay for themselves quickly in reduced mistakes and smoother throughput.
Labor and payroll systems (where owners either win or bleed)
Your labor tools should cover -
- Scheduling and timekeeping (to prevent early overtime surprises and staffing gaps)
- Payroll integration (to avoid manual exports and re-entry)
- Tip tracking and distribution (especially if you have tipped employees, tip pools, or multiple job roles)
- Compliance support (break rules, minor labor rules, predictive scheduling where applicable)
This is one area where "manual work" becomes expensive fast. The cost isn't just hours - it's the risk of payroll errors, missing records, and inconsistent policies.
Inventory and cost control tools
Even a simple setup benefits from -
- Inventory counts and variance tracking
- Recipe-level costing (or at least item cost updates)
- Vendor invoice tracking
These don't have to be complex on day one, but you should plan a method - because your first few months are when you form habits that either protect margins or slowly leak cash.
Budgeting the true cost of restaurant tech
When you price this section, include -
- Hardware (screens/tablets, printers, cash drawer, barcode scanners if needed)
- Software subscriptions (monthly fees add up across multiple tools)
- Implementation and training
- Integration work (connecting POS to payroll, accounting, loyalty, inventory)
- Support/warranty
The goal isn't to buy every tool at once. It's to ensure your "day one stack" supports accurate orders, clean payroll, and basic cost visibility - so you're not trying to rebuild your systems in the middle of a busy Friday night.
Hiring, Training, and Pre-Opening Payroll
Your restaurant can have a beautiful build and the right equipment - and still fail to open strong if your staffing plan isn't funded properly. People costs start weeks before opening day, and in many U.S. openings, pre-opening labor is one of the most underestimated line items. The reason is simple- you're paying for time before you have revenue.
Build your staffing plan from the service model
Start by mapping the minimum roles you need to operate safely and consistently -
1. BOH - kitchen manager/lead, prep, line cooks, dish
2. FOH (if applicable) - host, servers/cashiers, runners, bussers, bar staff
3. Leadership - GM/AGM or an owner-operator who is truly present and scheduled
The more complex the menu and service style, the more training time you'll need - and the more "coverage" you'll need on each shift to avoid quality slipping.
Hiring costs you should budget for
Even if you aren't paying a recruiter, you'll likely pay for -
- Job ads and recruiting tools (even basic postings can add up)
- Background checks (common for management and cash-handling roles)
- Uniforms and basic supplies (shirts, aprons, non-slips, name tags)
- Onboarding time (paperwork, account setup, payroll and time clock setup)
Training time is real payroll
Training isn't free labor - it's wages paid while staff learns your standards. Plan for -
- Orientation + food safety basics
- Station training and cross-training
- POS training and order accuracy drills
- Service standards and guest recovery
- Mock services (practice runs that expose workflow problems)
If you're doing a soft opening or friends-and-family events, remember you're paying staff while you're intentionally limiting volume. That's smart operationally - but it needs to be funded.
Don't forget payroll "extras"
Your actual people cost is more than hourly wages -
- Employer payroll taxes
- Workers' comp premiums
- Overtime risk during ramp-up
- Tips administration (if tipped staff; especially if you run tip pools)
A practical approach - treat pre-opening labor like a project budget. Put dates next to it. Define how many training shifts each role needs. Then add a buffer - because someone will no-show, someone will quit, and your opening week will require more leadership coverage than you think.
Working Capital, Contingency, and a Practical Budget
Even if you estimate your startup costs perfectly, you can still get into trouble if you don't fund the gap between opening day and stable operations. That gap is what working capital is for. In real terms, working capital is the cash that lets you pay payroll, rent, and vendors while sales climb and your processes tighten. It's also what gives you the ability to fix problems quickly instead of making desperate choices (cutting training too early, delaying maintenance, or buying cheaper inventory that hurts quality).
Working capital - budget for the "ramp," not the dream
Most new restaurants don't hit steady, predictable weeks immediately. Early sales are often uneven, reviews are still forming, staff is still learning, and food waste can be higher while you dial in portioning and pars. Your working capital plan should cover -
- Payroll for several cycles (including training and early overtime risk)
- Rent + CAM/NNN + utilities
- Vendor payments for food, beverage, paper, and cleaning supplies
- Marketing spend you'll actually use (grand opening, local promos, signage, online listings)
- Maintenance and replacement (something will break or be missing)
Contingency - the budget line that keeps you from panic
A contingency isn't a luxury. It's a recognition that remodels and openings produce surprises- hidden plumbing issues, code upgrades, backordered equipment, or change orders when your plan doesn't match the site conditions. The most practical approach is to add a contingency buffer specifically to -
- Build-out and MEP work
- Equipment installs and hookups
- Permits/inspections and timeline extensions
A simple budget structure you can use
To make your budget usable (not just a spreadsheet you never open again), split it into three sections -
1) One-time startup costs
- Lease/deposits/legal
- Design/permits
- Build-out
- Equipment + smallwares
- Initial inventory
- Tech setup/hardware
- Pre-opening labor and training
2) Monthly fixed costs
- Rent/CAM
- Insurance
- Software subscriptions
- Loan payments
- Base staffing/management payroll
3) Monthly variable costs
- COGS (food/bev/paper)
- Hourly labor (variable scheduling)
- Utilities
- Marketing
- Repairs and maintenance
Your goal is to walk away with two numbers - your "open the doors" number (startup) and your "stay open while we ramp" number (working capital). When you have both, you're not guessing - you're planning.