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£1,500 - £20,000+Medium difficultyPet services

Dog Grooming Startup Cost Calculator UK

Estimate the cost of starting a dog grooming business in the UK, covering grooming tables, dryers, clippers, training, insurance, premises or mobile setup.

Answers the UK planning query: dog grooming startup cost calculator UK

UK-focused cost assumptions
Editable calculator, no login
Reviewed June 2026
Links to official licence checks

Planning snapshot

Monthly running cost
£350 - £3,000+
Profit potential
Good
Licence complexity
Medium
Content status
Reviewed June 2026
Best for
Animal lovers with patience, handling skills and repeat demand

Interactive calculator

Edit the numbers for your dog grooming plan

Results update instantly using monthly revenue, variable cost, running cost, contribution margin and payback formulas. Treat the defaults as a starting point and replace them with supplier quotes.

Choose a launch scenario

Use these quick presets to compare a lean test, the default plan and a higher-capacity professional setup.

Total start-up cost

£10,550

Monthly running cost

£1,650

Monthly revenue

£4,871

Monthly gross profit

£4,098

Monthly net profit

£2,448

Break-even jobs/orders

43.6

Payback period

4.3 months

Recommended buffer

£3,300

Suggested minimum price

£54.38

Current result: This plan estimates £2,448 monthly net profit and needs about 43.6 appointments per month to break even.

Largest start-up costs

Vehicle or van£4,000
Equipment/tools£2,500
Training/certification£1,200
Emergency buffer£900
Initial stock or supplies£350
Website£350

Largest monthly costs

Rent/storage/unit cost£500
Fuel/transport£280
Stock/supplies£220
Advertising£220
Maintenance£120
Miscellaneous overheads£90
One-off start-up costs
Monthly running costs
Revenue and profit inputs

Formulas used

Total start-up cost is the sum of equipment, vehicle, stock, training, licences, insurance setup, branding, website, software, marketing, uniform, packaging, registration and emergency buffer.

Monthly revenue is average price x weekly appointments x 4.33. Monthly net profit is revenue minus variable costs and monthly running costs. Break-even is monthly running cost divided by the contribution per appointment. If contribution is zero or negative, the calculator shows the plan as not viable until price or direct cost changes.

Search intent

Built for "dog grooming startup cost calculator UK"

Estimate realistic UK launch costs, monthly overheads, break-even volume, pricing and next-step checks before spending money. This page also helps with related UK planning searches:

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What this dog grooming cost range includes

The estimated range of £1,500 to £20,000+ covers the practical costs most UK founders face before taking regular customers: core equipment, opening stock, training, insurance, marketing, website or booking setup, registration admin and an emergency buffer. A lean setup uses existing assets and proves demand first. A professional setup spends more on speed, capacity, branding and risk control.

The most important number is not the headline startup total. It is the amount of cash you need before predictable profit starts. That means you should check both the one-off setup cost and the monthly running cost. Rent, stock, fuel, payment fees and ads can make a business feel busy while still leaving very little net profit.

UK rules also depend on the council, property, product, trading location and whether you employ anyone. Use this page to build a sensible first budget, then confirm supplier quotes, insurer terms and official requirements before you commit to major spend.

Lean, typical and professional setup costs

£1,500+

Lean setup

A lower-cost dog grooming launch may start with training, compact kit, home permissions and limited appointments for small dogs before adding a salon or mobile conversion.

£10,750+

Typical launch

A typical dog grooming launch uses the default calculator assumptions, includes basic insurance, enough stock or supplies for the first month and a modest marketing test.

£20,000+

Professional setup

A professional setup adds a fitted salon or mobile van, high-quality dryers, backup clippers, booking software, strong insurance and a visible local search presence.

Cost breakdown table

These are editable defaults used in the calculator. Replace them with real quotes for your location, supplier choices and service model.

Startup cost breakdown
Cost itemEstimate
Equipment/tools£2,500
Vehicle or van£4,000
Initial stock or supplies£350
Training/certification£1,200
Licences/permits£150
Insurance first payment£180
Branding/logo£250
Website£350
Booking system/software£80
Initial marketing£300
Uniform/workwear£100
Packaging£40
Registration/accounting setup£150
Emergency buffer£900

Monthly running cost estimate

Monthly costs matter because they set your break-even target. If these fixed costs rise, you need more appointments, a higher average price or a lower direct cost per sale.

Monthly running cost breakdown
Cost itemEstimate
Insurance monthly cost£55
Fuel/transport£280
Rent/storage/unit cost£500
Stock/supplies£220
Website/software£35
Phone/internet£25
Advertising£220
Accounting/bookkeeping£45
Payment processing fees£60
Maintenance£120
Miscellaneous overheads£90

Example calculation

With the default assumptions, dog grooming startup costs come to £10,550. At £45.00 per appointment and 25 appointments per week, estimated monthly revenue is £4,871.

Estimated monthly net profit is £2,448 after direct costs and running costs. The simple break-even target is 43.6 appointments per month, and payback is 4.3 months.

Use this page before you spend

  1. 1. Replace the default dog grooming cost range with supplier quotes.
  2. 2. Check official licence, council, insurance and tax requirements.
  3. 3. Run lean, typical and professional scenarios before buying equipment.
  4. 4. Use the break-even result to set a minimum weekly sales target.
  5. 5. Save a two-month emergency buffer if the calculator shows tight cashflow.

Break-even and profit planning

Break-even is the number of appointments you need each month before owner pay, tax and reinvestment feel realistic. The calculator divides monthly running costs by contribution per appointment. Contribution is the customer price after the direct cost of serving that customer or order.

If the calculator shows weak profit, first check whether the average price is too low for the time involved. Then check direct costs, travel, waste and software or payment fees. Many small businesses look viable at revenue level but fail when the owner includes unpaid admin, quoting, cleaning, cancellations and customer messages.

Price by dog size, coat condition, behaviour and service type.

Charge extra for dematting, flea treatment or late pickup where appropriate.

Monitor real appointment length so the calculator reflects capacity.

Equipment checklist

  • Check: Grooming table and restraints
  • Check: Bath or bathing station
  • Check: Blaster dryer and finishing dryer
  • Check: Clippers, blades, combs and scissors
  • Check: Shampoos, conditioners and ear care supplies
  • Check: Towels, PPE and cleaning products
  • Check: Booking system and client records
  • Check: Van conversion or salon fit-out if relevant

Licence and legal checklist

  • Check: Check council rules for running a grooming salon from home or premises
  • Check: Confirm planning, lease and landlord permission
  • Check: Understand animal welfare and safe handling responsibilities
  • Check: Check waste-water, noise and neighbour considerations
  • Check: Register the business for tax and keep client records securely

Insurance checklist

  • Check: Public liability insurance
  • Check: Care, custody and control cover for animals
  • Check: Treatment or professional liability if available
  • Check: Equipment and stock cover
  • Check: Vehicle or mobile grooming conversion cover
  • Check: Employer's liability insurance if hiring staff

Hidden costs to budget for

Blade sharpening and clipper servicing

Extra drying time for large or double-coated dogs

No-shows and late collection

Cleaning between appointments

Laundry, towels and water heating

Handling difficult dogs safely

Common mistakes

Pricing by breed without allowing for coat condition

Buying a van conversion before proving bookings

Underestimating physical workload

Not having policies for matted coats and difficult dogs

Skipping specialist insurance for animals in your care

UK-specific planning notes

Dog grooming often grows from repeat clients, referrals and reliable rebooking cycles.

Premises, home-working rules and animal-handling cover need attention before launch.

The biggest constraint is often appointment capacity, not demand.

All costs are estimates. Prices vary by supplier, location, business model and local council requirements. Always check current prices, insurance quotes and official rules before starting.

Practical next steps

Decide whether you are home-based, salon-based or mobile before buying major kit.

Create policies for matted coats, aggressive dogs and missed appointments.

Build a local Google Business Profile and ask early clients for reviews.

Useful next purchases

Build the budget before you buy

These are natural costs to research after the calculator, not random add-ons. Compare prices before committing your launch budget.

Useful planning links

Use these with the dog grooming calculator to check insurance, licences, equipment, pricing and your wider business plan.

Related calculators

FAQ

How much does it cost to start a dog grooming business in the UK?+

Dog grooming startup costs depend on whether you use existing equipment, buy second-hand kit or build a professional setup. Use the calculator on this page to edit the example UK costs and create your own budget.

What should I include in a dog grooming business startup budget?+

Include equipment, stock, training, licences, insurance, branding, a website or booking system, marketing, registration costs and an emergency buffer. Also plan monthly costs before you depend on profit.

How do I calculate break-even appointments per month?+

Subtract the direct cost per job or order from the average price. Divide your monthly running costs by that contribution. If the contribution is too low, increase prices, lower direct costs or change the offer.

Do I need a licence for a dog grooming business in the UK?+

Rules depend on where and how you operate. Check council, premises, planning and animal welfare considerations, especially if animals stay on site.

Are the calculator numbers guaranteed?+

No. They are planning estimates only. Supplier prices, insurance quotes, rent, local council rules and demand vary by location and business model.