You have the concept. You have the menu. You probably have the name. What you don't have yet is the space, the capital, or the timeline. This is the 90-day playbook we wish every first-time operator had read before signing anything.

Before Day 1: The Working Capital Cushion Problem

Most first-time operators dramatically underestimate the cash they need before opening day. Here's a realistic budget for a small first restaurant in Indianapolis:

Cost categoryRange
Equipment (used & new)$25,000 – $65,000
Build-out contribution$0 – $40,000
Permits & licenses$3,000 – $8,000
Initial inventory$4,000 – $10,000
POS & tech setup$2,000 – $6,000
Pre-opening marketing$3,000 – $8,000
Working capital reserve$15,000 – $35,000
Total$52,000 – $172,000

Working capital reserve is not optional. The single most common reason first-time operators fail is running out of cash in months 2–4 while sales ramp. Plan for at least 60 days of fixed costs in the bank on opening day.

Days 1–15: Space Assessment and Deal Term Negotiation

The most expensive mistake is signing the wrong space. Before any commitment, walk every candidate site with this checklist:

On the deal side, negotiate these terms carefully — especially in a Pairdex-style revenue-share or partnership lease:

Days 16–30: Permits and Health Department Pre-Application

The single longest-lead-time item in opening a restaurant is the Marion County Health Department plan review. It typically takes 3–6 weeks. Submit on Day 16, not Day 70.

Other permits to start in parallel:

Pro tip: hire a permit consultant. The $1,500 fee saves you weeks of unfamiliar paperwork and rejections.

Days 31–60: Build-Out Begins

If you're doing build-out, this is where it happens. Two rules:

Schedule rough-in inspections (electrical, plumbing, mechanical) before walls close. Re-doing inspections after closure costs days you don't have.

Days 61–80: Pre-Opening Operations Setup

This is the part most operators rush. Don't.

Days 81–90: Final Inspections and Certificate of Occupancy

The last sprint is inspections. Required, in order:

Budget for at least one re-inspection. Anything found in the first round usually has a 5–10 day fix window. Plan for it.

The Honest Truth About Day 91

Day 91 is opening day. It's also the day the real work starts. Cash is going out faster than it's coming in. The line cook didn't show up. The POS just crashed during the dinner rush. You'll wonder why anyone does this.

The partnership model exists because you don't have to do it alone. The asset owner has skin in the game. The capital partner is aligned with your success. The Pairdex Deal Room kept everyone honest from the term sheet onward.

Not that partnerships are easy. That the right partnership makes hard things achievable.

Ready to find your space?

This article is informational only and not legal, tax, or financial advice. Permit timelines and licensing requirements vary by jurisdiction and change frequently — verify current rules with the relevant local authority before you commit.