The cost to buy a laundromat in Ontario can vary significantly depending on location, business income, equipment condition, lease terms, property ownership, utility capacity, infrastructure, and local customer demand.
Some laundromat opportunities include only the operating business. Others may include the real estate, equipment, leasehold improvements, customer base, signage, and existing infrastructure. Buyers often focus on the asking price, but the true cost of buying a laundromat depends on what is actually included and what will need to be repaired, replaced, upgraded, or renegotiated after closing.
A laundromat can look affordable on paper and still become expensive if the equipment is old, the lease is weak, utility costs are high, or the space needs plumbing, drainage, water heating, electrical, gas, or ventilation upgrades.
OntarioCRE helps buyers evaluate laundromat opportunities from both a commercial real estate and construction feasibility perspective so the business, property, lease, infrastructure, and investment strategy are reviewed together.
Before estimating cost, review available laundromat opportunities and compare how pricing changes based on location, income, equipment, lease structure, and whether real estate is included.
Laundromat prices in Ontario vary widely. There is no single fixed cost because every opportunity is different.
Typical ranges may include:
These ranges are only starting points. The real number depends on income quality, lease control, equipment condition, rent, utility costs, location, zoning, infrastructure, and the buyer’s long-term plan.
A cheaper laundromat is not automatically a better deal. It may be cheaper because the equipment is aging, the lease is short, the location is weak, the financials are unclear, or the property needs major upgrades.
Several factors influence the true cost of buying a laundromat in Ontario.
Revenue, expenses, profit margins, and historical financials are central to valuation.
Buyers should review:
A laundromat with clean, consistent income usually commands a stronger price. But revenue alone is not enough. If expenses are understated, utility costs are rising, or equipment repairs are deferred, the business may be weaker than the asking price suggests.
Equipment condition can materially change the value of a laundromat.
Buyers should review:
Older machines can reduce the upfront price but increase future capital requirements. A laundromat with aging washers, dryers, water heaters, or payment systems may require significant investment shortly after closing.
Many laundromat purchases are business-only sales where the buyer does not own the real estate.
In those cases, the lease is one of the most important parts of the deal.
Buyers should review:
A profitable laundromat with a weak lease can be a bad acquisition. If the lease has limited term remaining, no renewal options, high rent escalations, or restrictive landlord conditions, the business may not justify the purchase price.
Some laundromat opportunities include the business and the property. Others include only the business.
If real estate is included, the buyer must separate the value of:
Buying the real estate usually requires more capital, but it may provide more long-term control over occupancy, renovations, financing, improvements, and resale.
A laundromat with real estate can be attractive, but the buyer still needs to evaluate zoning, building condition, utility capacity, environmental risk, access, parking, and long-term property value.
Laundromats depend heavily on surrounding demand.
Strong laundromat locations are often near:
A poor location can limit performance even if the equipment is good. Weak visibility, limited parking, difficult access, too much competition, or low surrounding demand can reduce revenue and resale value.
For location guidance, review:
Not every commercial space can support laundromat use.
Before buying a laundromat or converting a space, review:
Review:
Assuming a general retail unit can automatically support a laundromat is a lazy assumption. Laundromats are infrastructure-heavy, and zoning or building limitations can change the deal quickly.
The purchase price is only one part of the total investment.
Additional costs may include:
This is where buyers get themselves in trouble. They look at the asking price, not the total cost of ownership.
A $250,000 laundromat may not really cost $250,000 if the buyer needs to replace equipment, upgrade utilities, repair plumbing, renegotiate a lease, or carry the business through a transition period.
There is a major difference between buying a laundromat business and buying a laundromat property.
A business-only purchase may include:
A laundromat property purchase may include:
Buyers should be clear on whether they are acquiring:
Each scenario has different cost, risk, financing, and due diligence requirements.
Opening a new laundromat or converting an existing commercial space can be more complex than buying an operating business.
Build-out or conversion costs may include:
This is where OntarioCRE’s construction background matters. The question is not just whether the rent looks good or the space is available. The real question is whether the property can physically and legally support laundromat use without blowing up the budget.
A cheap vacant unit can become expensive fast if the servicing, drainage, water heating, electrical, gas, or ventilation systems are inadequate.
Laundromats place heavier demands on a property than many typical retail uses.
Before buying or leasing, review:
Utility costs can also have a major impact on profitability. A laundromat with inefficient equipment, poor water heating, weak ventilation, or high utility usage may underperform after expenses are properly reviewed.
Buyers should not spend all available capital on the purchase price.
A laundromat buyer may also need funds for:
A buyer who stretches too far on the purchase price may have no room left to fix the business after closing. That is a weak position.
The better approach is to evaluate the full acquisition cost, not just the seller’s asking price.
Many buyers underestimate how specialized laundromats are.
Common mistakes include:
These mistakes can turn a promising laundromat opportunity into a weak investment.
Before buying a laundromat in Ontario, evaluate:
The better question is not only, “What does it cost to buy a laundromat?”
The better question is:
“What will this cost to own, operate, repair, improve, finance, and eventually resell?”
Use these pages to evaluate laundromat opportunities before making a decision:
Laundromat buyers may also want to compare other commercial property categories before choosing a specific opportunity.
Laundromats require careful due diligence. Income, equipment, lease terms, zoning, utilities, location, infrastructure, financing, and operating costs all affect whether an opportunity makes sense.
OntarioCRE helps buyers review available laundromat opportunities, compare acquisition costs, identify major risks, and evaluate whether the property and business make sense from a real estate, infrastructure, construction, and investment perspective.
Contact OntarioCRE to discuss laundromat properties, laundromat businesses, and acquisition opportunities in Ontario.
The cost can vary widely. Smaller or older laundromat businesses may be listed around $100,000 to $300,000, while stronger laundromats may sell from $300,000 to $750,000 or more. Laundromats with real estate, strong locations, or higher income can cost significantly more.
No. Many laundromat sales are business-only transactions where the buyer does not own the real estate. In those cases, the lease, renewal options, rent, assignment rights, and landlord approval are critical. If real estate is included, the buyer also needs to evaluate land, building condition, zoning, infrastructure, and long-term property value.
Hidden costs may include equipment replacement, plumbing upgrades, drainage improvements, water heater replacement, electrical upgrades, gas service, ventilation, lease assignment costs, signage, flooring, legal fees, financing costs, utility deposits, and working capital after closing.
Washers, dryers, boilers, water heaters, payment systems, plumbing, and ventilation can be expensive to repair or replace. A laundromat with older equipment may have a lower asking price but require significant capital after closing.
A laundromat may be overpriced if the income is not verified, equipment is aging, rent is too high, the lease is weak, utility costs are heavy, zoning is uncertain, infrastructure is limited, or the buyer has to spend heavily on upgrades after closing.
Not seeing the right laundromat opportunity yet?
Use the OntarioCRE Property Directory to browse commercial property opportunities across Ontario, including laundromat businesses, service-commercial spaces, retail units, investment properties, redevelopment opportunities, and specialty commercial real estate.
