Article

Calculating hardware startup cash flow

Hardware businesses fail on cash more often than on spreadsheet profit. The difference is timing: when cash leaves for tooling, stock, and overhead versus when customers or channels finally pay you.

Topic Startup cash flow
Audience Founders and commercial leads
Tool Cashflow Projection Tool
Use it for Runway and working-capital planning

Quick answer

Cash flow is a timing problem, not just a margin problem.

Closing cash = opening cash + cash received - cash paid

A business can grow in revenue and still run out of cash if it pays for stock and overhead before customer cash arrives.

This is especially common in hardware because growth often increases the need for working capital. You buy more stock, carry more packaging, pay more suppliers, and still wait thirty or sixty days for cash to return.

The four cashflow traps hardware teams hit early

Inventory is paid before it is sold. Even if the business is profitable per unit, the stock still has to be financed first.
Channels pay late. Marketplaces, distributors, and retailers often introduce a delay between sale and cash receipt.
Upfront project spend is treated as one-off and ignored. Tooling, development, compliance, and launch assets can create a hole that growth does not refill quickly enough.
Fixed overhead keeps leaving every month. Rent, people, software, contractors, and basic operations do not wait for the revenue curve to mature.

What a useful early cashflow model needs

  1. opening cash
  2. one-off launch or development spend
  3. monthly unit sales and growth
  4. COGS per unit
  5. fixed monthly overhead
  6. payment delay from customers or channels

The business does not run out of cash because growth is bad. It runs out of cash because growth changes the timing of cash faster than the team planned for.

A simple example

Start with GBP85,000 in cash, spend GBP18,000 upfront on development or tooling, sell 120 units in month 1, grow 12% per month, and carry GBP22 of COGS on a GBP49 sale price. Add GBP9,500 of monthly overhead and a one-month payment delay.

The P&L may look healthy later in the year, but the cash graph often dips much earlier because month 1 and 2 outflows happen before revenue arrives.

How to use the model well

  • run a conservative, expected, and optimistic sales case
  • test both same-month payment and delayed-payment scenarios
  • check whether your first large stock order creates the real low point, not the launch month
  • pair the result with startup-cost and break-even tools, not in isolation

If the cash low-point surprises you, the model is doing its job.

Orion Design can help founders connect product cost, launch route, and working-capital pressure so the business model survives the first real scale-up.