How to Decide Bed Strength for a New Hospital Project

July 12, 2026by admin@hoscons

How to Decide Bed Strength for a New Hospital Project: Choosing the Right Size for Your New Hospital

Hospital bed strength planning is one of the most important decisions in any new hospital project. Many doctors, investors and healthcare entrepreneurs start with a fixed idea such as “30 beds”, “50 beds” or “100 beds”, but the right bed strength should be decided through demand analysis, specialty planning, financial feasibility and infrastructure assessment.

Choosing too few beds can limit growth and revenue potential. Choosing too many beds can increase project cost, manpower cost, operating losses and break-even pressure. The ideal hospital bed strength should match the location, patient demand, service mix, investment capacity and long-term business plan.

Bed strength is not just a number. It affects the entire hospital project — land requirement, built-up area, construction cost, equipment budget, manpower, licenses, working capital, revenue potential and break-even period.

This guide explains how to decide bed strength for a new hospital project in India and why it should be part of a structured hospital feasibility study and DPR.

Quick Answer: How Should Bed Strength Be Decided?

The bed strength of a new hospital should be decided based on catchment demand, specialty mix, expected OP footfall, OP-to-IP conversion, average length of stay, occupancy potential, infrastructure cost, manpower availability, investment capacity and financial viability.

Why Bed Strength Should Not Be Decided Emotionally

A common mistake in new hospital projects is deciding bed strength based on ambition, land size or comparison with another hospital.

For example, a promoter may say:

  • “We want to start a 100-bed hospital.”
  • “Our land is big, so let us build more beds.”
  • “A nearby hospital has 50 beds, so we should build 75 beds.”
  • “Banks may prefer a larger project, so let us plan bigger.”

These assumptions can be risky. A hospital should not be planned only from a construction point of view. It should be planned from a market, clinical, operational and financial point of view.

Important Risk

Overbuilding a hospital without demand validation can lead to low occupancy, high fixed cost, delayed break-even and pressure on cash flow. Bed strength should be validated before finalizing the project size.

Key Factors in Hospital Bed Strength Planning

The right bed strength should be decided after evaluating multiple factors. Each factor can influence the final capacity of the hospital.

FactorWhy It Matters
Catchment populationShows the potential patient base around the hospital location.
Disease burdenHelps identify specialties such as medicine, surgery, ortho, OBG, paediatrics or nephrology.
Existing competitionShows current supply of beds and service gaps in the market.
Doctor availabilityA hospital cannot fill beds without the right consultants and referral network.
Expected OP footfallOP volume is an important driver of admissions.
OP-to-IP conversionHelps estimate how many OP patients may become inpatients.
Average length of stayDetermines how many bed days are generated from admissions.
Investment capacityBed strength must match project funding and working capital availability.
Phasing possibilityHospitals can be planned for future expansion without overinvesting initially.

Demand Analysis: The Starting Point for Bed Strength

Demand analysis helps estimate whether the proposed hospital can generate enough patient volume to justify the planned bed strength.

A proper demand analysis should study:

  • Population in the primary and secondary catchment
  • Age profile and disease patterns
  • Existing hospitals and nursing homes
  • Specialty gaps in the location
  • Doctor availability and referral potential
  • Patient affordability and payer mix
  • Distance from competing hospitals
  • Emergency and accident load, where relevant
  • Insurance, corporate and government scheme potential

Without demand analysis, hospital bed strength planning becomes guesswork.

HOSCONS Insight

A 50-bed hospital in one location may be viable, while the same 50-bed model may fail in another location. Bed strength must be customized based on the local healthcare market.

Simple Method to Estimate Bed Requirement

Bed requirement can be estimated using expected admissions, average length of stay and target occupancy.

Basic Bed Requirement Formula

Required Beds = Monthly Admissions × Average Length of Stay ÷ 30 ÷ Target Occupancy

This is a simplified planning formula. Final bed strength should also consider specialty mix, emergency load, ICU requirement, seasonal variation and future growth.

Sample Calculation for Bed Strength Planning

Let us assume a proposed hospital expects the following:

  • Expected monthly admissions: 300 patients
  • Average length of stay: 3 days
  • Target occupancy: 70%
Calculation StepValue
Monthly admissions300
Average length of stay3 days
Monthly bed days required900 bed days
Average occupied beds per day30 beds
Required beds at 70% occupancyApproximately 43 beds

In this example, a hospital may plan around 40 to 50 beds, depending on specialty mix, ICU requirement, emergency demand and future expansion plan.

30 Beds vs 50 Beds vs 100 Beds: How to Choose?

Different bed strengths suit different business models. A promoter should not assume that a larger hospital is always better.

Bed StrengthSuitable ForKey Planning Concern
10–30 bedsSmall hospitals, nursing homes, maternity centres, surgical centres, emergency-focused facilitiesMust control fixed cost and focus on limited high-demand services.
30–50 bedsSecondary care hospitals, small multispecialty hospitals, doctor-led hospitalsRequires balanced OP, IP, ICU, OT and diagnostic planning.
50–100 bedsGrowing multispecialty hospitals, tier-2/tier-3 city projects, expansion projectsRequires stronger doctor network, marketing, manpower and working capital.
100+ bedsLarger multispecialty or tertiary care hospitalsRequires strong feasibility, funding, leadership, specialty depth and operational systems.

Bed Mix is as Important as Total Bed Strength

A hospital should not only decide the total number of beds. It should also decide the right bed mix.

Bed mix may include:

  • General ward beds
  • Twin-sharing beds
  • Private rooms
  • Deluxe rooms
  • ICU beds
  • HDU beds
  • Emergency observation beds
  • Day care beds
  • Isolation beds
  • Maternity / labour recovery beds, where applicable

A wrong bed mix can affect revenue, occupancy, patient experience and operational efficiency.

Example

A hospital with many private rooms may struggle if the catchment is price-sensitive. Similarly, a hospital with too few ICU beds may lose high-acuity cases. Bed mix should match payer profile, specialty mix and local demand.

How Specialty Mix Affects Bed Strength

Specialty mix has a major impact on bed requirement. Different specialties generate different admission patterns and average length of stay.

Specialty FocusImpact on Bed Planning
General medicineCan generate steady admissions, especially in high chronic disease markets.
General surgeryRequires OT, recovery and surgical ward planning.
Obstetrics and gynaecologyRequires labour room, maternity beds, newborn care and emergency readiness.
OrthopaedicsRequires OT capacity, post-operative beds, physiotherapy and implant-related planning.
PaediatricsRequires paediatric beds, observation area and possibly NICU/PICU planning.
Critical careIncreases ICU infrastructure, manpower, equipment and MEP cost.

Investment Capacity and Bed Strength

Bed strength directly affects project cost. More beds usually mean higher construction cost, equipment cost, furniture cost, manpower cost and working capital requirement.

Before finalizing bed strength, promoters should estimate:

  • Land and site development cost
  • Civil construction cost
  • MEP and fire safety cost
  • Interior cost
  • Medical equipment cost
  • Furniture and fixtures
  • IT and HIS cost
  • Pre-opening expenses
  • Working capital
  • Expected revenue and break-even

A 100-bed hospital may look attractive on paper, but if the initial occupancy is low and funding is limited, a phased 50-bed approach may be safer.

Phase-Wise Bed Strength Planning

In many hospital projects, phase-wise planning is better than building the full capacity on day one.

For example:

Project VisionPossible Phased Approach
Future 50-bed hospitalStart with 25–30 operational beds and keep shell space for expansion.
Future 100-bed hospitalStart with 50–60 beds and expand based on occupancy and cash flow.
Future multispecialty hospitalStart with core specialties and add advanced departments later.

Phase-wise planning helps reduce financial risk while keeping long-term expansion possible.

Why Feasibility Study is Important for Bed Strength Planning

A feasibility study helps validate whether the proposed bed strength is suitable for the location and business model.

It helps answer questions such as:

  • Is the proposed bed strength suitable for the catchment?
  • What specialties should be prioritized?
  • What bed mix is suitable?
  • What will be the expected occupancy?
  • What will be the estimated revenue?
  • What project cost is required?
  • What is the break-even period?
  • Should the project be implemented in phases?
  • What are the key risks?

Start Your Hospital Project — Request Expert Guidance

Planning a new hospital, nursing home, clinic, or healthcare project?
HOSCONS can help you with feasibility study, DPR preparation, project cost estimation, hospital planning, licensing guidance, and commissioning advisory.

Share your basic project details through the form below. Our team will review your requirement and guide you on the next steps.

Looking For

What Should a DPR Include for Bed Strength Planning?

A Detailed Project Report should connect the proposed bed strength with cost, revenue and operational feasibility.

A hospital DPR should include:

  • Project concept
  • Location and catchment overview
  • Demand assessment
  • Recommended specialties
  • Recommended bed strength
  • Bed mix and department planning
  • Area statement
  • Project cost estimate
  • Medical equipment budget
  • Furniture and fixture estimate
  • Manpower plan
  • Revenue assumptions
  • Operating cost assumptions
  • Break-even estimate
  • Implementation timeline
  • Risk assessment

Common Mistakes in Hospital Bed Strength Planning

  1. Choosing bed strength based only on land size
  2. Copying another hospital’s model
  3. Planning too many beds without demand analysis
  4. Ignoring doctor availability
  5. Not estimating OP-to-IP conversion
  6. Not studying average length of stay
  7. Planning too many private rooms in a price-sensitive market
  8. Underestimating ICU and emergency requirements
  9. Not budgeting for manpower and working capital
  10. Building full capacity on day one without phase planning
  11. Not preparing a feasibility study before construction
  12. Not preparing a DPR before bank funding discussions

Planning Reminder

The right bed strength is not always the highest bed strength. The right bed strength is the one that matches market demand, investment capacity, specialty potential and operational sustainability.

External Reference for Hospital Planning Standards

Hospital promoters should also consider quality and patient safety requirements while planning infrastructure.
The National Accreditation Board for Hospitals & Healthcare Providers (NABH)
provides healthcare quality and patient safety standards that are useful references for hospital planning in India.

How HOSCONS Can Help

HOSCONS supports doctors, healthcare entrepreneurs, trusts and investors in planning new hospital projects across India.

Our support for hospital bed strength planning may include:

  • Hospital feasibility study
  • Demand and catchment analysis
  • Specialty mix planning
  • Bed strength recommendation
  • Bed mix planning
  • Area statement preparation
  • Hospital DPR preparation
  • Project cost estimation
  • Medical equipment budgeting
  • Manpower planning
  • Revenue and break-even projections
  • Phase-wise hospital development planning

Planning a New Hospital Project?

Before deciding whether your hospital should be 30 beds, 50 beds, 100 beds or more, it is important to prepare a structured feasibility study and DPR.

HOSCONS can help you assess demand, estimate project cost, decide bed strength, plan departments and understand financial viability.

Website: www.hoscons.com
WhatsApp: 8270004004
Enquiry: Fill the New Hospital Project Questionnaire

Frequently Asked Questions

1. How do I decide the bed strength for a new hospital?

Bed strength should be decided based on catchment demand, specialty mix, expected OP footfall, OP-to-IP conversion, average length of stay, occupancy potential, investment capacity and financial feasibility.

2. Is a 30-bed hospital a good starting point?

A 30-bed hospital can be a good starting point for doctor-led hospitals, nursing homes, maternity centres, small surgical hospitals and secondary care facilities, provided the demand, specialty mix and cost structure are suitable.

3. Should I build 50 beds or 100 beds?

This depends on demand, investment capacity, land, built-up area, doctor availability, specialty plan and break-even viability. In many cases, a phased approach may be better than building full capacity immediately.

4. What is bed mix in hospital planning?

Bed mix refers to the distribution of beds across general ward, twin-sharing, private rooms, ICU, HDU, emergency observation, day care and isolation beds. It affects revenue, occupancy and patient experience.

5. Why is feasibility study important before deciding bed strength?

A feasibility study helps validate whether the planned bed strength is suitable for the location, demand, competition, specialty mix, revenue potential and investment capacity.

6. Can hospital bed strength be expanded later?

Yes. Many hospitals can be planned in phases. The building, MEP, lift, utilities and department layout should be designed to support future expansion without major rework.

7. Does bed strength affect hospital project cost?

Yes. Bed strength affects built-up area, civil construction, MEP, fire safety, medical gas, interiors, equipment, furniture, manpower, working capital and total project cost.

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