Check your competition. Starting a new business is hard. You must have enough capital on hand to ensure you can survive an entire year in case of poor/slow customer response.Develop a table of costs you expect to incur, everything from buying the tools to the gas you'll need. It's your call on the amount of profit you need to live, but it comes down to this: multiply your total net costs by, say, 20% -- that will tell you how much you need to make a year. Now break that down to the number of clients you expect to have. Divide the needed NET revenue by the number of customers to get the cost per customer.In the beginning, you can't charge your initial 5 customers the total year's operating cost, so you're going to have to guess on the total customers you WILL BE able to handle. That's why you've got to have enough capital money in hand during your startup period.
LOOK IN YOUR LOCAL PAPERS GREEN SHEETS PENNYSAVER,CALL FOR ESTIMATES THAT WILL GIVE AN IDEA WHAT TO CHARGE