Opening a 3–4 bed Adult Family Home (AFH) in Wisconsin is not just a caregiving decision.
It is a capital allocation decision.
Too many operators enter this space asking:
The better question is:
What does a structurally sound AFH financial model actually look like?
This guide breaks down:
This is not surface-level math.
This is the economic architecture of a Wisconsin AFH.
Under DHS 88, a licensed AFH in Wisconsin may serve 3–4 unrelated adults.
Revenue comes from:
The economics depend heavily on payer mix.
Private Pay:
$4,800 – $6,500 per resident/month
(Madison often higher)
Medicaid Waiver:
$3,400 – $4,200 per resident/month
(Varies by county & care level)
For modeling purposes, a blended rate matters more than the headline rate.
If you have:
2 private pay at $5,500
2 Medicaid at $3,800
Monthly Revenue =
(2 × 5,500) + (2 × 3,800)
= $11,000 + $7,600
= $18,600 per month
Annualized:
$223,200
But this assumes:
That’s rarely reality in Year 1.
Most first-time operators underestimate ramp risk.
A realistic ramp:
Month 1–2: 1 resident
Month 3–4: 2 residents
Month 5–6: 3 residents
Month 7+: Full (4 residents)
That means early revenue may look like:
Month 1: $5,500
Month 2: $5,500
Month 3: $10,000
Month 4: $10,000
Month 5: $15,000
Month 6: $15,000
Month 7+: $18,000+
If you do not model this ramp, your cash flow collapses early.
Many AFHs fail not because they’re unprofitable — but because they’re undercapitalized.
Renovations: $15,000 – $40,000
Furnishings: $12,000 – $25,000
Licensing/Training: $3,000 – $7,000
Insurance Deposits: $3,000 – $6,000
Initial Supplies: $3,000 – $5,000
Working Capital Reserve (3 months): $45,000 – $60,000
Total Typical Startup:
$85,000 – $140,000+
Working capital is the difference between survival and stress.
Labor typically represents 45–60% of total revenue.
For 24/7 coverage:
24 hours/day × 30 days = 720 hours/month
At $18/hour:
720 × 18 = $12,960 base wages
Add:
Payroll taxes (~12%)
Relief/OT buffer (~10%)
Total Payroll:
~$16,000/month
This number surprises many new operators.
Mortgage/Rent: $2,800 – $3,500
Utilities: $900 – $1,200
Insurance: $600 – $900
Maintenance Reserve: $300 – $500
Typical Fixed:
$4,800 – $6,000/month
Food: $300–$400
Supplies: $180–$250
At 4 residents:
~$2,000–$2,400/month
Payroll: $16,000
Fixed: $5,000
Variable: $2,200
Total Operating Expenses:
~$23,200
Now compare that to revenue.
If blended revenue at full occupancy = $18,600
Expenses = $23,200
That model fails.
But that example assumes lower pricing.
If rates are:
Private: $6,000
Medicaid: $4,000
2 + 2 mix
Revenue = $20,000
Still tight.
This is why:
Pricing discipline
Staffing efficiency
Property cost control
Matter deeply.
Target:
Revenue: $22,000–$26,000
Expenses: $18,000–$22,000
EBITDA Target: $4,000–$6,000/month
Annual EBITDA: $48,000–$72,000
This is realistic for well-structured 4-bed homes.
If the owner works shifts:
You reduce payroll expense.
If owner replaces 160 hours/month:
160 × $18 = $2,880 saved
Owner-operated homes often outperform investor-owned homes.
If you borrow $120,000
10-year term
9.5% interest
Monthly payment ≈ $1,550
If EBITDA is $5,000:
Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) =
5,000 / 1,550 ≈ 3.2
Very healthy.
But if EBITDA is only $2,500:
DSCR = 1.6
Tighter.
Lenders prefer DSCR above 1.25.
Revenue should increase annually (2–4%).
Expenses inflate (2–3%).
Proper modeling shows:
Year 1: Stabilization
Year 2: Optimization
Year 3: Expansion readiness
Year 4–5: Portfolio build
One Home:
$60,000 EBITDA
Three Homes:
$180,000 EBITDA
But centralized management can reduce cost per home.
Scaling without systems increases compliance risk.
Conservative:
85% occupancy
Higher payroll
Lower pricing
Moderate:
Full occupancy
Stable pricing
Aggressive:
Higher private-pay mix
Premium pricing
Controlled staffing
Always model downside first.
Profit does not equal cash.
Cash impacts:
Always track cumulative cash position.
AFHs often trade at:
2.5× – 4× EBITDA
If EBITDA = $70,000
Valuation ≈ $175,000 – $280,000
Multi-home portfolios command higher multiples.
Lenders expect:
Professional modeling increases funding odds.
Operators who:
Outperform dramatically.
This is not a get-rich model.
It is a structured healthcare business model.
A 3–4 bed AFH can be:
But only if:
If you want a lender-ready financial model customized for your market:
AtlystCare provides:
✔ 60-Month Projection Models
✔ SBA-Ready Debt Structures
✔ Break-Even Analysis
✔ Multi-Home Portfolio Modeling
✔ Scenario Planning
✔ Compliance & Financial Integration
Schedule a Financial Strategy Session.