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How to Start a Coffee Shop: Costs, Licences, and What Most Guides Don't Tell You

How to Start a Coffee Shop: Costs, Licences, and What Most Guides Don't Tell You

A small espresso coffee in a ceramic cup, representing the core product of a specialty coffee shop business where a well-extracted espresso typically costs between 15 and 25 pence in materials (coffee, milk, cup) and retails for £2.80 to £4.50, producing gross margins of 65 to 80 percent that must cover rent, staff, equipment, and all other operating costs
Coffee is one of the highest-margin food and beverage products: an espresso-based drink has a product cost of approximately 15 to 30 pence (coffee, milk, cup, lid) and retails for £3.00 to £4.50 in UK independent coffee shops, representing a gross margin of 80% to 90% on the drink itself. The challenge is that the gross margin is consumed by rent (often 10% to 15% of turnover in prime locations), staff (30% to 45%), and other overhead. A coffee shop that does not generate high enough daily transaction volume will be unprofitable regardless of the per-cup margin. (CC / Wikimedia Commons)

The coffee shop is one of the most commonly attempted and most frequently failed small business categories. The apparent simplicity of the operation (buy coffee, make drinks, sell them for more than they cost) obscures the reality: coffee shop profitability requires consistent high transaction volumes in a business where the peak trading window is often 3 to 4 hours per day, rent and staff costs are fixed regardless of trade, and the market is intensely competitive. That said, well-run independent coffee shops are profitable, and the UK market sustains over 25,000 independent cafés alongside the major chains. The difference between success and failure usually comes down to location, realistic financial modelling before opening, and sufficient working capital to survive the first 6 to 12 months.

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Startup Costs: A Realistic Breakdown

Startup costs vary enormously depending on whether you take an existing fitted café space (significantly cheaper), fit out a retail or industrial shell, or buy an existing coffee shop business as a going concern. Indicative ranges for a standalone 30 to 50 seat independent coffee shop in a regional UK city:

Cost Item Low estimate High estimate
Lease deposit (3 to 6 months rent)£5,000£25,000+
Fit-out (existing space) or shop fit (new)£8,000£60,000+
Commercial espresso machine (new)£4,000£15,000+
Commercial grinder(s) (2 recommended: espresso + decaf)£1,500£5,000
Other equipment (refrigeration, EPOS, dishwasher)£3,000£15,000
Initial stock and supplies£1,500£4,000
Legal, professional fees, insurance£2,000£6,000
Working capital (6 months overhead)£10,000£30,000
Total£35,000£160,000+

Equipment leasing reduces the upfront capital requirement significantly: commercial espresso machines are commonly leased through suppliers (La Marzocco, Sanremo, Nuova Simonelli) at approximately £200 to £500 per month with a service agreement included. This is often preferable to capital purchase for a first business, as it includes maintenance and replacement.

Licensing and Registration

A UK coffee shop requires the following before opening:

  • Food business registration: Free, via your local authority Environmental Health department. Must be registered at least 28 days before opening. Environmental Health officers will inspect the premises after opening.
  • Food Hygiene Rating: Not required to open, but your premises will be inspected and rated (0 to 5 stars) after opening. A poor rating (below 3) must be displayed on the premises door. Train yourself and staff to Level 2 Food Hygiene Certificate standard (online courses approximately £10 to £25).
  • Premises licence (if serving alcohol): Required from the local council if you wish to serve wine or beer. Application costs £100 to £1,900 depending on rateable value; process takes approximately 2 months.
  • Music licence: If playing music (including streamed background music from Spotify or similar), you require a PPL PRS licence. Standard small premises licence: approximately £200 to £400 per year.
  • Planning permission: Required if changing the use class of the premises (for example, from A2 office to A3 restaurant/café). Not required if taking over an existing café. Local planning authority application: approximately £206.
  • Business insurance: Public liability (minimum £2m, more commonly £5m to £10m), employer's liability (mandatory if you have staff, minimum £5m), contents and equipment cover. Estimated combined cost: £800 to £2,500 per year.
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The Unit Economics: Will It Be Profitable?

The critical numbers for a coffee shop:

  • Average transaction value: UK independent coffee shop average is approximately £4.50 to £6.50 per customer (coffee plus occasional food). Increasing food attachment rate is the primary lever for improving revenue per customer.
  • Daily customer count: A 30-seat café with efficient service might seat 3 to 4 covers per seat over a day's trading (90 to 120 customers per day) in a good location. At £5 average transaction: £450 to £600 per day gross revenue.
  • Monthly revenue at 6 days/week trading: Approximately £10,800 to £14,400.
  • Cost of goods sold (COGS): Approximately 25% to 35% of revenue for a coffee-led menu. At 30%: £3,240 to £4,320 per month.
  • Gross profit: £7,500 to £10,000 per month.
  • Fixed costs (rent, rates, utilities, insurance): £3,000 to £7,000 per month depending on location.
  • Staff costs: £4,000 to £8,000 per month for 2 to 4 full-time-equivalent staff.
  • Net profit range: Tight to positive in a good location. A high-rent central city location may break even on these numbers; a lower-rent location can produce £1,500 to £3,000 per month net for the owner-operator.

The model works best for owner-operated businesses where the owner's labour substitutes for one staff wage. A coffee shop run entirely by paid staff with an absent owner is very difficult to make profitable at the transaction volumes available to most independent cafés.

Coffee Supplier Selection

UK specialty roasters that supply to independent coffee shops (wholesale minimum orders typically £50 to £150 per delivery): Hasbean, Square Mile, Workshop Coffee, Caravan Coffee Roasters, and Origin Coffee. Many roasters offer free loan of equipment (espresso machine, grinder) in exchange for a minimum coffee purchase commitment; this is the standard arrangement for new independent cafés without capital for equipment purchase.


Related: Coffee Shop Equipment Buying Guide | Specialty Coffee vs Commercial Coffee: What Wholesale Buyers Need to Know

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