Disclosure: This article is written by Shaun McManus, founder of SmartPubTools and creator of the Restaurant Console. All operational claims reflect genuine experience at Teal Farm Pub, Washington.
How Much Does It Actually Cost to Open a Restaurant in the UK in 2026?
Key Takeaway: A realistic budget to open a UK restaurant in 2026: premises deposit and lease costs £10,000-40,000, fit-out £50,000-200,000, commercial kitchen equipment £20,000-80,000, first-month working capital £30,000-60,000, licences and professional fees £5,000-15,000, plus contingency of at least 20%. Total realistic range: £120,000-400,000. Most first-timers underestimate by 30-50%.
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By Shaun McManus | Last Updated: May 2026
I opened Teal Farm Pub in Washington, Tyne and Wear in March 2023. Having lived through the process — the quotes that doubled, the costs you didn’t know existed, the things nobody tells you until you’re already committed — this guide gives you the honest numbers. Not the optimistic ones. The real ones.
Restaurant Opening Costs — Full Category Breakdown
1. Premises Costs
| Cost | Typical range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Lease deposit (typically 3-6 months rent) | £12,000-50,000 | Non-negotiable — you need this cash on day one |
| Rent advance (typically 1-3 months) | £4,000-20,000 | First rent payment before trading begins |
| Legal fees (lease review and negotiation) | £1,500-5,000 | Do not skip. A bad lease clause costs far more than a solicitor |
| Surveyor’s report | £500-2,000 | Schedule of condition — protects you at lease end |
| Business rates (first quarter) | £0-5,000 | Check SBRR eligibility — 100% relief under £12k rateable value |
2. Fit-Out Costs
| Element | Budget fit-out | Mid-range fit-out | Premium fit-out |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kitchen installation (extraction, plumbing, gas) | £15,000-25,000 | £25,000-50,000 | £50,000-100,000+ |
| Electrical works (3-phase, sockets, lighting) | £5,000-12,000 | £12,000-25,000 | £25,000-50,000 |
| Flooring (commercial grade) | £3,000-8,000 | £8,000-20,000 | £20,000-50,000 |
| Decoration and painting | £2,000-5,000 | £5,000-15,000 | £15,000-40,000 |
| Bar installation (if applicable) | £5,000-15,000 | £15,000-35,000 | £35,000-80,000 |
| Furniture (tables, chairs, banquettes) | £3,000-8,000 | £8,000-25,000 | £25,000-60,000 |
| Signage (exterior and interior) | £1,500-4,000 | £4,000-10,000 | £10,000-30,000 |
| Total fit-out | £34,500-77,000 | £77,000-180,000 | £180,000-410,000 |
What most first-timers underestimate on fit-out: the cost of making an existing space food-business compliant. A landlord-supplied shell unit rarely has: adequate three-phase electrical supply, commercial-grade gas supply and gas safety certification, extraction compliant with TR19 standards, grease trap installation, or disabled access compliant with building regulations. Each of these can add £5,000-20,000 in unexpected costs.
3. Commercial Kitchen Equipment
| Equipment | New cost | Quality second-hand |
|---|---|---|
| Commercial range (6-burner gas) | £3,000-8,000 | £800-2,500 |
| Commercial fryers (2-3 unit) | £2,000-5,000 | £500-1,500 |
| Commercial oven (convection or combi) | £3,000-10,000 | £1,000-4,000 |
| Walk-in fridge (4.8m²) | £5,000-12,000 | £1,500-4,000 |
| Chest freezers / reach-in freezers | £800-2,500 | £200-800 |
| Prep fridges and fridges (2-3 units) | £1,500-4,000 | £400-1,200 |
| Commercial dishwasher (pass-through) | £3,000-8,000 | £800-2,500 |
| Prep tables (stainless steel) | £800-2,000 | £200-600 |
| Smallwares (pots, pans, knives, boards) | £1,500-4,000 | N/A — buy new |
| EPoS and payment system | £500-3,000 + monthly fee | — |
| Total kitchen equipment | £21,600-58,500 | £7,000-22,000 (mixed) |
Second-hand equipment strategy: Quality second-hand commercial kitchen equipment from reputable catering equipment dealers (Caterquip, used-catering-equipment.co.uk) can reduce equipment costs by 50-70%. Key rules: always buy second-hand refrigeration from a dealer with a service warranty, never buy second-hand gas appliances without a Gas Safe engineer check, and expect to budget 20% of purchase price for servicing and parts in year one.
4. Licences and Professional Fees
| Item | Typical cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Premises licence application | £100-1,905 | Based on rateable value — see licensing guide |
| Personal licence (DPS) | £37 + APLH course £200-400 | Required if you plan to be DPS |
| Food business registration | Free | Must register 28 days before opening |
| PPL PRS music licence | From £200/year | Required if playing any music |
| Public liability insurance (year 1) | £400-1,500 | See restaurant insurance guide |
| Employers liability insurance (year 1) | £500-2,000 | Legally required if you have employees |
| Accountant (year 1 setup) | £1,500-3,000 | VAT registration, payroll setup, first accounts |
| Gas safety certificate | £150-400 | Required before opening; annually thereafter |
5. Working Capital — The Most Underestimated Cost
Working capital is cash to fund operations before revenue stabilises. Most restaurant failures in years 1-2 are not caused by bad food or bad location — they are caused by running out of cash during the ramp-up period before the business reaches break-even.
Minimum working capital requirement: 3 months of total fixed costs plus enough to cover the first month’s food stock and wage bill before any revenue arrives.
| Working capital component | Typical monthly amount | 3-month reserve |
|---|---|---|
| Rent | £2,000-8,000 | £6,000-24,000 |
| Business rates (if applicable) | £0-1,500 | £0-4,500 |
| Utilities (gas, electric) | £800-2,500 | £2,400-7,500 |
| Insurance | £200-400 | £600-1,200 |
| First food stock order | £2,000-8,000 | £2,000-8,000 (one-off) |
| Wages (month 1, before revenue) | £5,000-20,000 | £5,000-20,000 (month 1) |
| Minimum working capital | — | £16,000-65,200 |
The break-even point calculation tells you how much working capital you actually need. See the restaurant break-even calculator and cash flow template to model your specific ramp-up period.
The 20% Contingency Rule — Non-Negotiable
Every experienced operator and anyone who has opened a restaurant will tell you the same thing: add 20% contingency to every budget line. Not 10%. Not 15%. 20%. The extraction that needed upgrading, the asbestos found in the ceiling tiles, the gas supply that wasn’t where the survey said it was — these costs are not rare, they are standard. Budget for them before you start.
What You Need From Day One — Compliance
Opening day requires: food business registration (28 days before — free), HACCP food safety management system in place, all temperatures logged from day one (see HACCP temperature log guide), allergen information available for all menu items (see allergen management guide), fire risk assessment completed, and employers liability insurance in place. An EHO may visit within weeks of opening.
📦 Useful Equipment for This Task
Disclosure: These are affiliate links. We may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.
🌡️ Food Probe Thermometer — essential day-one equipment for HACCP compliance. Required for cooking temperature checks and delivery verification.
❄️ Fridge Thermometers — place one in every cold storage unit from day one. Required for HACCP temperature records — EHO will check these.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to open a restaurant in the UK in 2026?
Realistic total: £120,000-400,000. Premises (£16k-70k), fit-out (£35k-200k), kitchen equipment (£20k-60k), licences and insurance (£5k-15k), working capital (£16k-65k), plus 20% contingency.
What are the biggest underestimated costs when opening a restaurant?
Making a shell unit food-business compliant (extraction, gas, 3-phase electrics can add £30k-60k), working capital before break-even, VAT cash flow, employer NI, and a 20% contingency on everything.
How much working capital do I need to open a restaurant?
Minimum 3 months fixed costs plus first-month wages and opening stock. Typically £16,000-65,000. If break-even takes 6 months, you need 6 months of working capital.
What is the biggest financial mistake when opening a restaurant?
Insufficient working capital and not knowing your break-even point before you open. Most early failures are cash flow failures, not product failures.
What compliance is needed on opening day for a restaurant?
Food business registration (28 days before), HACCP system documented and in use, allergen information available, employers liability insurance displayed, fire risk assessment complete, gas safety certificate in place.
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