๐ฐ Budget & Funding ยท All Roles ยท Beginner
Team Budget Planning
Spartan Design's district covers registration and starter supplies. Here's exactly what that covers, what you need to fund yourself, and what championships realistically cost so you can target the right sponsors.
๐ซ What the District Covers
โ District Provided
Team registration (per team)~$150
V5 Brain (shared)~$350
V5 Controller ร2~$180
V5 Batteries ร2~$120
Starter structural parts~$200
Field tiles (shared)~$400
โ Team Must Fund
Additional motors ($40 ea)varies
Sensors (IMU, GPS, etc.)$30โ80 ea
Mechanism-specific partsvaries
Replacement motors (attrition)$40โ120
Championship entry fees$50โ200
Championship travel & lodging$$$
๐งฎ Season Budget Calculator
What Does Your Season Cost?
๐ Championship Cost Reality Check
These are realistic estimates for 2025โ26. Costs vary significantly by location, team size, and whether you share hotel rooms. Always get actual quotes before presenting to sponsors.
| Event | Entry Fee | Hotel (3 nights, 2 rooms) | Flights (5 people) | Food Est. | Total Range |
| Regional / State Championship | $50โ100 | $300โ500 (drive distance) | None (typically drive) | $150โ300 | $500โ900 |
| Signature Event (in-state) | $100โ200 | $400โ600 | None (drive) | $200โ350 | $700โ1,150 |
| Signature Event (out-of-state) | $150โ200 | $600โ900 | $1,500โ2,500 | $300โ500 | $2,550โ4,100 |
| VEX Worlds โ St. Louis 2026 | $200โ250 | $900โ1,400 (4 nights) | $1,800โ3,000 | $400โ600 | $3,300โ5,250 |
Worlds 2026 is in St. Louis, Missouri (April 21โ30). If you're targeting Worlds, start sponsor outreach at the beginning of the season โ not after you qualify. Sponsors need lead time for budget approval. A team that qualifies in March and starts asking for travel money in April will almost always come up short.
โ What to Cut If Budget Is Tight
Ranked by impact-per-dollar. Cut from the bottom first.
- GPS sensor โ IMU only. $80 savings. Odometry pods + IMU achieves competitive auton at most levels. GPS is a quality-of-life improvement, not a necessity.
- Aluminum โ steel on non-critical structure. $2โ3 per piece. Only use aluminum where weight savings matter (arms, high-mounted mechanisms). Base plates and side rails can be steel.
- 6-motor drive โ 4-motor with optimized gearing. $80 savings. A well-tuned 4-motor 450 RPM drive outperforms a poorly tuned 6-motor. Save the two motors for the intake.
- Delay intake mechanism design until early season results are in. $0โ200 savings. Some mechanisms only matter at high levels of play. Wait for week 3โ4 of competition before committing to an expensive intake system.
- New motors โ test and reuse existing. $40/motor. Test current draw and RPM on your existing motors. Most degraded motors are still functional โ replace based on actual performance data, not assumption.
Do not cut: IMU sensor (essential for accurate auton), at least 1 spare battery (mission critical at competition), and entry fee budget for at least 3 events. A team that can't afford to compete hasn't used their budget well.
Team budget management applies linear programming — optimization subject to constraints. The objective function is robot performance. Constraints include total budget, per-category limits, and part availability. Budget optimization finds the allocation that maximizes the objective function without violating constraints — the same mathematical framework used in supply chain management and engineering procurement.
🎤 Interview line: “We treat our budget as a linear programming problem: maximize robot performance subject to our $400 constraint. We maintain a running budget ledger and evaluate every purchase against our performance model. When we needed to choose between a GPS sensor and a pneumatics kit, we calculated the expected score impact of each and chose based on EV per dollar.”
Your $400 budget has covered $240 in purchases. You want a GPS sensor ($100) and a new motor ($35). Can you afford both?
⬛ Yes: 400 - 240 - 100 - 35 = $25 remaining
⬛ No: the GPS alone puts you over budget
⬛ It depends on sponsor reimbursements not yet received
📝Notebook entry tip: Appendix — Grey slide — Maintain a running budget ledger in the Appendix: date, item, vendor, planned cost, actual cost, and running total. Update it every time a part is ordered. A running ledger that matches receipts shows judges your team managed finances deliberately — and discrepancies between planned and actual cost, when documented with explanations, are evidence of real engineering trade-offs.