Physical therapy practice business plan in Niamey, Niger

Factual data · GO/NO-GO verdict · Financial model calibrated over 18 months

Market context

A solo physiotherapy practice in Niamey generates 8.3 M FCFA-26.0 M FCFA FCFA year 1, with net margin 30 %. A group practice (3-6 practitioners) generates 250-700K FCFA, similar per-practitioner margin.

Key indicators

Initial investment
8.3 M FCFA 25.0 M FCFA
Depending on location and positioning
Year 1 revenue
8.3 M FCFA 26.0 M FCFA
Year 1 target, ramp to 1.2-1.4x by year 3
Average ticket
2,600 FCFA 7,700 FCFA
30 % target net margin
Payback period
18 months
Typical steady-state payback

Economic profile of the area

Population
1.3M inhabitants
Niamey
Country
Niger
Tier 3 — secondary city
Setup cost
−58% vs average
Rent + labor index
Purchasing power
−82% vs average
Local disposable income

Dominant profile: business · capitale

Competition and positioning

Competitive density: moderate (first-mover advantage possible).

Dominant players: regulated public-insurance sector, few private chains.

Positioning recommendation: Premium positioning defensible thanks to comfortable sector margin.

3-year financial projections

Indicator Year 1 Year 2 Year 3
Year 1 revenue 8.3 M FCFA → 26.0 M FCFA ×1,18 (ramp-up) ×1,32 (steady-state)
Target net margin negative to low 26 % 32 %
Working capital (days of revenue) 45-60 d 35-50 d 30-45 d
Cumulative ROI investment ~50 % Payback at 18 months

These ratios are calibrated on MarketLens sector benchmarks and adjusted by local coefficients of Niamey, Niger (cost −58% vs average, income −82% vs average).

Main risks to anticipate

Launch milestones

1
Month 0 — Concept validation, location choice, competitive study
2
Month 1-2 — Funding search (equity, bank loan, public guarantees)
3
Month 2-3 — Legal incorporation, leases, trademark, insurance
4
Month 3-5 — Construction, equipment, hiring, process setup
5
Month 5-6 — Pre-opening, local marketing, soft launch, operational tuning
6
Month 6+ — Official opening, gradual ramp-up, first monitoring cycle

Frequently asked questions

Public-system or private-fee?
Public-system (regulated tariff): guaranteed patient flow but constrained margin. Private-fee: free pricing (40-90 FCFA/session), affluent or sports clientele, higher margin. Hybrid public-system + off-schedule procedures (sports massage, lymphatic drainage) optimizes.
Investment for an equipped practice?
8.3 M FCFA-25.0 M FCFA FCFA: electric massage table (1,000-3,000 FCFA), physiotherapy equipment (TENS, ultrasound, cryotherapy, pressotherapy: 5-25K), respiratory physiotherapy equipment, waiting-room furniture, patient software, accessibility-compliant fit-out.
How to build a patient base in Niamey?
Channels: online booking platform (50-90 % of new patients in 2025), GP and specialist partnerships (orthopedics, rheumatology, neurology), professional directories, local sports associations, polished Google Business presence, visible specialization (sports, geriatric, perineal, neurological).
How to optimize the schedule?
Top margin lever: target utilization >85 %, 30-minute sessions rather than 45 (same reimbursement), group classes (gentle gym, Pilates, preventive physiotherapy: per-patient ticket preserved, margin multiplied). Working four-hands with an assistant or colleague shares overhead and ceiling.

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