In AP Business, startup costs are the one-time expenditures (like legal fees, incorporation and licensing fees, and equipment) plus the initial expenses incurred while establishing a new business or product before it begins normal operation.
Startup costs are the money you spend to get a business off the ground, before it's actually up and running. The CED splits them into two buckets. First are the one-time expenditures: legal fees, incorporation and licensing fees, and in some cases equipment purchases. You pay these once to legally exist and to set up shop (EK 3.4.A.2).
Second are the initial expenses you incur while establishing the business: occupancy expense (rent or space), research and development, marketing, insurance, and the cost of producing or buying your first batch of inventory (EK 3.4.A.3). Here's the key twist the CED wants you to catch: these initial expenses don't stay "startup" forever. Once the business opens its doors, they become ongoing operating expenses. Rent you pay before launch is a startup cost; rent you pay every month after is a recurring cost. Same dollar, different category, depending on timing.
This term lives in Topic 3.4 (Business Expenses) inside Unit 3: Personal Saving and Borrowing / Business Finance and Accounting. It directly supports learning objective AP Business 3.4.A, which asks you to determine the startup costs of launching a new business or product. Topic 3.4 is also where you learn to tell startup costs apart from the recurring direct and indirect costs covered under 3.4.B, so getting this distinction right sets you up for the whole expense framework. If you can sort a list of expenses into "one-time to launch" versus "keeps coming back," you're doing exactly what this part of the unit is testing.
Keep studying AP Business with Personal Finance Unit 3
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryOperating Expenses (Unit 3)
Startup costs and operating expenses are two ends of a timeline. The same expense (rent, insurance, marketing) starts as a startup cost before launch and turns into a recurring operating expense once the business opens, which is exactly what EK 3.4.A.3 tells you to watch for.
Insurance (Unit 3)
Securing initial liability insurance is listed as a startup expense, but the premiums you keep paying afterward are ongoing. Insurance is the perfect example of a cost that crosses the startup-to-operating line.
Fixed vs. Variable Costs (Unit 3)
Once startup is done and costs become recurring, you re-sort them again into fixed (don't change with output) and variable (rise with production). Startup classification is step one, fixed/variable is step two.
Expect this term mostly in multiple-choice questions that hand you a scenario and ask you to identify which expense counts as a startup cost. A typical stem describes a new restaurant or a tech company launching software and asks which item is a startup cost, a one-time expenditure, or a legal fee. Your job is to recognize categories: incorporation and licensing fees, patents, equipment, market research, and initial insurance all qualify, while routine monthly costs after opening do not. No released FRQ has used "startup cost" verbatim, but the concept supports any prompt asking you to plan or budget for launching a new business or product (AP Business 3.4.A).
Startup costs happen before and during launch to get the business established; operating expenses are the recurring costs of running it afterward. The tricky part is that many startup expenses (rent, insurance, marketing) become operating expenses once the business opens. Timing decides the label, not the type of expense.
Startup costs are one-time expenditures plus initial expenses incurred to launch a new business or product before it begins normal operation.
One-time expenditures include legal fees, incorporation and licensing fees, and sometimes equipment purchases.
Initial expenses include occupancy, research and development, marketing, insurance, and the cost of first inventory, and these become ongoing once the business opens.
The exam-favorite trap is that the same expense can be a startup cost before launch and an operating expense after, so check the timing.
On MCQs, identify startup costs by asking whether the expense exists to establish the business rather than to run it day to day.
A startup cost is a one-time expenditure or initial expense you pay to launch a new business or product, such as legal fees, incorporation and licensing fees, equipment, market research, and initial insurance (EK 3.4.A.1).
Both, depending on timing. Occupancy expense paid while establishing the business is a startup cost, but once the business opens, the rent you keep paying becomes a recurring operating expense (EK 3.4.A.3).
Startup costs get the business established before and during launch; operating expenses are the recurring costs of running it afterward. Many startup expenses, like insurance and marketing, simply convert into operating expenses once you open.
Not always. The CED says equipment is a one-time startup expenditure 'in some cases,' meaning it counts as a startup cost when you buy it to launch, but later equipment bought during normal operations would not be a startup cost (EK 3.4.A.2).
Legal fees at startup include incorporation and licensing fees and costs like obtaining patent protection for a new product, all paid to legally establish the business before it operates.
Connect this key term to the AP exam workflow: review the course, practice questions, and check related study tools.