Factual data · GO/NO-GO verdict · Financial model calibrated over 42 months
Opening a spa in Vancouver requires a 150-400 m² space with appropriate facilities (cabins, locker rooms, sauna or steam, sometimes pool), substantial investment (190K CAD-810K CAD CAD) and trained staff.
Dominant profile: business · portuaire · touristique
Vancouver (British Columbia, Canada) has about 675K inhabitants and shows dense business fabric (HQs, B2B services, professionals), and port and logistics activity bringing daily inflow beyond residents. For a spa and wellness project, this means a high average ticket and a setup cost above national by 55 %.
Local purchasing power and lead density allow targeting the high end of the revenue range from year 2. Concretely, initial investment calibrated for Vancouver ranges from 190K CAD to 810K CAD, and Year 1 target revenue sits between 350K CAD and 1.1M CAD — a range that already factors in the local coefficients of this city (+55% vs average on costs, +30% vs average on purchasing power).
Competitive density: high (dense supply, segmentation required).
Dominant players: regulated public-insurance sector, few private chains.
Positioning recommendation: Competitive positioning required: sector margin is tight, edge comes from operational efficiency.
| Indicator | Year 1 | Year 2 | Year 3 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Year 1 revenue | 350K CAD → 1.1M CAD | ×1,18 (ramp-up) | ×1,32 (steady-state) |
| Target net margin | negative to low | 8 % | 14 % |
| Working capital (days of revenue) | 45-60 d | 35-50 d | 30-45 d |
| Cumulative ROI | investment | ~50 % | Payback at 42 months |
These ratios are calibrated on MarketLens sector benchmarks and adjusted by local coefficients of Vancouver, Canada (cost +55% vs average, income +30% vs average).
This page combines multiple data sources for a factual analysis calibrated on Vancouver.
MarketLens combines AI market study, business plan calibrated for 24 countries, and post-launch monitoring. Everything exportable to PDF, PowerPoint, Excel and Word.