Capex Planning: Step-by-Step Guide (With a Worked Example) | ModelReef
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Published March 17, 2026 in For Teams

Table of Contents down-arrow
  • Overview
  • Before You Begin
  • Step-by-Step Implementation
  • Tips, Edge Cases & Gotchas
  • Example
  • FAQs
  • Next Steps
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Capex Planning: Step-by-Step Guide (With a Worked Example)

  • Updated March 2026
  • 11–15 minute read
  • Capex Meaning
  • Annual planning
  • budgeting operations
  • Investment governance

🧭 Overview / What This Guide Covers

Capex planning is the bridge between “ideas” and “approved investment.” This guide shows you how to build a decision-ready capital expenditure plan, complete with priorities, timing, and reporting, so leadership can fund growth without losing control of cash. For context on what CAPEX includes (and what it doesn’t), review the broader CAPEX guide first. You’ll learn how to define a capex strategy, gather inputs, rank initiatives, produce a board-friendly capex report, and run a monthly capex reporting cadence. The outcome is a plan that stays stable as assumptions change, and a workflow your team can repeat every quarter.

✅ Before You Begin

Before you kick off capital expenditure planning, make sure you have the inputs that prevent “plan churn.” You’ll need a strategic roadmap (what the business is trying to achieve), a pipeline of initiatives with rough cost ranges and timing, and clear funding constraints (cash, debt capacity, covenant headroom, or board limits). You also need a governance baseline: approval thresholds, required documentation, and who owns each stage (proposal, validation, approval, tracking).

To speed up alignment, start from a consistent planning pack-one that includes a prioritisation rubric, a cash timing view, and a standard output format for your capex report. You should also confirm how you’ll integrate CAPEX into the broader model: will you plan centrally and push updates into monthly forecasts, or will every business unit maintain its own version? Model Reef works best when your plan lives in one structured model so approvals, changes, and outputs stay consistent across stakeholders.

🛠️ Step-by-Step Implementation

🎯 Define your capex strategy and decision rules

Start capex planning by writing down the “why” and the rules of the game. Your capex strategy should translate company goals into investment themes-capacity, efficiency, compliance, customer experience, or risk reduction. Then define decision rules: minimum ROI threshold (where relevant), payback expectations, security/compliance requirements, and what gets funded automatically (e.g., critical replacements).

This step prevents a common failure mode: comparing projects that aren’t comparable. If every proposal is framed differently, leadership ends up deciding based on storytelling, not economics. Anchor proposals to the same structure: objective, scope, cost range, timing, risk, and dependencies. If revenue growth is a key driver, align CAPEX decisions to your revenue plan assumptions and capacity requirements so the plan supports growth rather than competing with it. Sales planning is often the upstream input that sets those assumptions.

🧱 Build the plan structure with driver-backed categories

Next, create the structure of your capital expenditure plan. Use 4–6 categories that leadership recognises (maintenance, growth, compliance, tech/platform, new locations, and “other”). Then decide what’s project-based versus driver-based. Project-based is for discrete initiatives with clear milestones; driver-based is for scalable spend linked to units, hires, sites, or volume.

This is where Model Reef can remove busywork: with driver-based modelling, you can connect CAPEX to the same operational drivers that feed your forecast, so the plan updates automatically when assumptions change. The goal is to avoid re-keying and reduce version chaos. Output-wise, ensure each category can roll up into a one-page summary for leadership while still preserving detail for finance review. Once this structure is set, the rest of capital expense planning becomes about prioritisation and timing, not reformatting spreadsheets.

🔍 Prioritise initiatives and lock a decision-ready list

Now rank initiatives. Use a scoring model that combines strategic alignment, financial impact, risk reduction, and urgency. Then run a “portfolio check” to ensure you aren’t funding only one theme (e.g., all growth and no maintenance). Good capex planning is portfolio planning.

At this stage, you’ll also set the timing: what must happen in the next 90 days, what can wait, and what is conditional on performance. Document dependencies (hiring, vendor lead times, permitting) so the plan doesn’t collapse when one item slips. For multi-entity groups, align category definitions and rollups before you publish outputs; otherwise, your plan becomes hard to compare across divisions. That’s where a consolidation mindset matters-even if you’re not doing full statutory consolidation, you need consistent aggregation logic across the group. The output of this step is an approved “shortlist” with timing and confidence levels.

🧾 Create your capex report and set capex reporting cadence

Turn the shortlist into a leadership-ready capex report. Keep it simple: a summary page (totals by category, timing, committed vs optional), followed by project cards for the top items. Then define your capex reporting cadence: Monthly is standard, with a deeper quarterly refresh.

Include three tracking views:

(1) approved budget vs forecast vs actuals, (2) timing shifts, and (3) decision log (what changed and why).

This is where most teams lose credibility-numbers move, but there’s no narrative trail. If you’re in retail or inventory-heavy industries, include operational triggers that affect CAPEX decisions (warehouse capacity, replenishment cadence, or store expansion assumptions). Demand planning often determines whether CAPEX is required now or later, so align your planning pack to those operational inputs. A disciplined reporting cadence makes your CAPEX plan a living tool rather than a once-a-year document.

🚦 Stress-test and communicate the plan like a portfolio

Finally, stress-test the plan. Run at least two downside scenarios: delayed revenue, higher costs, or tighter cash. Then define pre-agreed actions: what gets paused, what gets staged, and what remains non-negotiable. This prevents reactive cuts later and keeps the organisation aligned.

Communicate the plan in terms leaders care about: cash impact by month, trade-offs, and what the plan unlocks operationally. If CAPEX decisions affect inventory outcomes (for example, adding capacity or systems), ensure you’re not creating downstream excess stock or bottlenecks. CAPEX can solve problems, but it can also create overcapacity when assumptions are wrong. For fundraising or board contexts, frame the plan as an investable story: “here’s the portfolio, the controls, and how we’ll report progress.” That narrative discipline is what separates planning from spreadsheeting.

🧠 Tips, Edge Cases & Gotchas

A strong capex strategy includes explicit trade-offs. If you don’t define them, the organisation will usually resort to last-minute escalation. Build in “optionality” by tagging projects as committed, conditional, or opportunistic. That makes it easier to protect essentials (maintenance and compliance) while keeping growth moves flexible.

Watch for two common edge cases:

(1) multi-year projects that blow up annual plans, and (2) “hidden CAPEX” that shows up as software, implementation work, or equipment bundled into vendor contracts.

If you can’t see it clearly, you can’t plan it.

Also, be careful with decentralised planning. Business units move faster, but they often create inconsistent assumptions and duplicate spend. If you’re planning in Model Reef, keep category definitions and drivers standardised so a change in one assumption updates the whole capital expenditure plan without rewiring the model. Finally, if leadership asks for investor context, show how disciplined planning supports fundability-predictability, wins trust in board rooms and fundraising cycles.

🧾 Example / Quick Illustration

A simple worked example: a retail group builds a capital expenditure plan for the next 12 months. They allocate $400k to maintenance (store refits, replacement equipment), $600k to growth (two new locations), and $150k to systems (inventory + POS uplift). They tag each item as committed or conditional, then schedule spend by quarter based on vendor lead times and build schedules.

The capex report summary shows totals by category and a monthly cash impact chart, plus a short decision log (“new store #2 moved from Q2 to Q3 due to lease timing”). In the monthly capex reporting cadence, they review “budget vs forecast vs actual,” update timing, and escalate only material variances. This keeps leadership focused on decisions, not spreadsheet archaeology.

❓ FAQs

Capex planning is about what you choose to fund and how you govern it, while forecasting estimates what you think will happen if assumptions stay true. Planning includes prioritisation, approvals, and a reporting cadence; forecasting is the numeric projection. Mature teams do both: they plan a portfolio and then forecast monthly so they can spot variance early. If you want the tactical “how-to” on building the forecast mechanics, use the forecasting guide as the companion step. That sequence reduces rework and keeps planning decisions anchored to reality.

A capex report should be as detailed as needed for decisions, and no more. Leadership typically needs rollups (totals, timing, committed vs optional) plus short context on the top projects. Finance needs enough detail to validate assumptions and track variance. The trick is tiered reporting: one-page summary for execs, deeper project cards for reviewers. If you standardise the structure, you can change content without changing format. That consistency is what makes monthly review meetings productive rather than performative.

You align capital expenditure planning to demand by tying capacity and investment triggers to the same drivers used in operational plans: volume, sites, throughput, or service levels. For retail, demand planning is often the upstream signal that determines whether CAPEX should accelerate (capacity constraints) or pause (soft demand). The best practice is to pre-define thresholds: “if demand exceeds X, release project Y,” and “if demand drops below Z, delay project A.” This makes planning responsive without becoming chaotic. If you document triggers upfront, leadership can move faster with less debate.

Boards and investors look for discipline, clarity, and control in a capex strategy-not just ambition. They want to see governance (approval thresholds, reporting cadence), prioritisation logic, and scenario thinking: what happens if timing slips or costs rise. The more predictable your reporting and decision trail, the more credible your plan feels under scrutiny. If you want examples of how investors interpret operating discipline in growth companies, explore Venture Capital Stories. It’s a useful lens for turning CAPEX from “spend” into an investable narrative.

🚀 Next Steps

You now have a complete capex planning workflow: strategy → structure → prioritisation → capex report → capex reporting cadence. Your next move is operationalising it-setting a monthly rhythm, locking categories and drivers, and making changes traceable. If you’re using Model Reef, this is where a central driver-based model prevents version sprawl and keeps stakeholders aligned as assumptions shift.

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