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Show Highlights

Getting a tank in your house and floating some people is a great first step on the path to opening a float center. It helps you figure out exactly what the maintenance is going to be like, along with just the experience of floating other people and introducing them to this neat salty practice.

There are things to consider and there’s a right way and a wrong way to run a home based float center. First thing to consider is your local laws for small businesses and making sure you comply with those. Additionally, you need to decide if you’re just floating friends and family or if you’re going to have paying customers. This is also going to impact what type of float tank you should use and the demands you should consider on your house. Graham and Ashkahn have seen plenty of these and share the best practices as they’ve seen them laid out.

Listen to Just the Audio

Transcription of this episode… (in case you prefer reading)

Ashkahn: What’s our question?

Graham: Boy, am I glad you asked. It is kind of a long one, actually. “My question is in reference to DSP 107”, which that’s what we call it on iTunes now. We abbreviate it as DSP.

Ashkahn: First question based off another question. I like this.

Graham: For DSP 107, which for those of you not in the know, means Daily Solutions Podcast episode number 107 …

Ashkahn: Yeah, it’s a classic one.

Graham: Best of. Best of. “I’m slowly working towards starting a float center, but my time frame is roughly one year out.” That sounds ambitious. It’s probably more like two years, first of all. I’m sorry to be the bearer of bad news. “I was wondering if you guys have any advice/guidelines about starting as one tank in your home. I’ve heard you guys mention this a few times here and there. What kind of guidelines would I need to abide by if was to charge money? Would I have to treat it just like it was a multiple-tank business? Anything helps. Thanks for everything.”

Ashkahn: All right, the old tank-a-roony in your house. Yeah, we have talked about this before, because we often mention it as a nice stepping stone in the process of opening a float center. As you’re on your path towards figuring things out and finding a location and all that sort of stuff, it can be nice to get a float tank, put it in your house, and just start to get a feel for what it’s like, what the cleaning’s like, what the maintenance is like, how much of your house is going to be destroyed by salt.

It just helps you get a good sense for what dealing with a float tank is like, and you get to float and you get to get your friends to come float and you get to start spreading the word on floating by having people actually get to experience it. There’s all these benefits like that of having a float tank that you can start out with in your home, but there are some questions like this person is asking that need to go along with that concept.

Graham: What does it involve? How do I do it? Am I breaking the law?

Ashkahn: Let’s start with that, the breaking the law.

Graham: Hold on, hold on, hold on. Breaking the law, breaking the law. Let’s not talk about that on the air yet. There’s a couple other benefits to having a float tank in your home that I think too, just before we go on to the how, more the why, one of which is especially if you are going to open up a bigger center, like a four- or five-tank center.

The idea of having one that you actually get to play around with and test for even a few months or a year before you make that final purchase of a bunch of units is nice. You might find that you actually don’t enjoy the float that that tank provides, or how easy it is to take care of behind the scenes or something like that, and if you do like it you can just put that float tank immediately into your business, which is nice. It’s not like you then have this home tank that you need to use for your home and you’re still going to be buying five extra float tanks for your center.

You can reuse it or again, if you find out that you might want a different type of float tank, you can resell the one that you had in your home and invest in other float tanks that might be better for your center. There’s just a little feeling it out and making sure that you’re ending up with a product that you want to stock in your full center.

Ashkahn: Yeah, and it’s pretty easy to sell float tanks used, which is nice.

Graham: Yeah, there’s even a float web site for it. UsedFloatTanks.com.

Ashkahn: I wonder who runs that.

Graham: We’ll find out one day.

Ashkahn: Now we’ve convinced you. You want to put a float tank into your house.

Graham: The why is done now. You can move on to breaking the law.

Ashkahn: There’s a jump between you floating and having your friends floating, and charging people money to come to your house and float, and that line is the law.

Graham: Just like there’s a line between baking a casserole for you and your family and baking a casserole and serving it to strangers.

Ashkahn: Yeah, and this is just going to be different from place to place. Different jurisdictions have different rules regarding home businesses, and zoning and everything that would be involved in that sort of thing, so you’re going to have to do a little bit of research in your area. Most of the time there’s usually some sort of rules that would allow you to do this above board and get the proper permit and stuff like that to have something like this set up in your house.

Graham: Often it involves going through the city and getting a permit to do it. It involves checking in with your neighbors very often, making sure that no one immediately around you has a problem with you running a business out of your home of a certain type. Often there’s traffic restrictions, like you need to not have any more than a certain number of visitors a day or more than a certain number of cars parked out front.

Again, I think a lot of the laws around residential businesses revolve around making sure that no one that you’re right next to is going to feel an impact from suddenly all these cars and people coming in and out and noise and things like that. When I’ve looked into it in different areas, it almost always has this very strong element of checking in and just making sure that it’s all right with the people around you.

Ashkahn: You may find, now that float tank regulations from place to place are getting a little bit more existent or now that that world is developing a little bit, there might be some places where you run into possibly bigger hurdles than other places. There are some regulations out there that require things like floor drains in your room. That’s part of the necessity of opening up, that they actually have a rule for stuff like that.

You could find yourself in a position where it might not be as easy to put a float tank into your house if you do have to do some actual construction or something to alter the room to meet the rules. You might be able to get waivers and exemptions too to stuff like that, and it’s probably not very many places where you’d run into that at the current moment, but that could be something that might be in front of you.

Graham: I guess that’s a good point too. Even without being a commercial business, you can still have a float tank in your house, and float friends and relatives and yourself and get a lot of the benefits that we were even talking about early on about having a float tank in your house, without being fully set up as a commercial business and even really letting money exchange hands or letting total strangers in to float or anything like that.

Really, a lot of this stuff is related directly to once you decide that you want to accept money, especially if you’re advertising anywhere, putting yourself out as a float business. All of these make it seem like you really are running something commercially out of your home, as opposed to you just have a float tank that other people can get access to.

Ashkahn: Yeah, and what your setup is, I think probably changes a little bit at the point you start charging money. If you’re not charging money it’s a lot easier to … Maybe there’s a little bit of noise that gets in here or there, or you’re just not quite fully set up to be accommodating to strangers, but at the point that you’re charging for a service, I feel like you got to step your game up a little bit. You maybe do want to invest in some good blackout curtains to really make sure there’s no light leaks and you probably want to make sure that the float tank is decently close to a bathroom with a shower in it so people don’t have to be walking through your house with a towel.

Graham: Covered in salt.

Ashkahn: Yeah. There’s just a few more accommodations like that that I think you need to figure out as you change from floating your friends to floating customers.

Graham: Yeah, and there does seem to be a difference, too, between people who do have a tank in their house as an interim and they’re planning on developing into a center in the future versus people who actually are just setting up a full-on float tank center in their house and that’s where they want it to be, and maybe they’ll expand to a center someday but there are two- and three-tank centers that people are operating just out of their homes with a commercial residential license.

Those I got on this track because I was thinking that very much is the case with them, especially, right? It’s like a whole section of their house is almost set up like a business. You can go into a lot of these places that are home float tank centers and you barely even recognize them as a home for how they’re set up.

Ashkahn: Depending on how long you’re doing this, it gets more serious the more you’re thinking of this as a permanent installation. If you’re thinking of this as a stepping stone, you maybe can get away with not having to worry as much about waterproofing and stuff like that, but if you’re really, seriously trying to put float tanks into your house and run it as a home float tank center, you’re probably going to want to step your game up in terms of the waterproofing and what you’re doing to protect the rooms or you’re just going to destroy your house. It’s going to doubly suck. Your business and your home will be ruined simultaneously.

Graham: Yeah, there’s no getting around it. If you’re only having a float tank in there for a year and you’re only doing scattered appointments, it’s like all that damage is stretched out a little bit over time, so you don’t see as much just immediate destructive qualities of salt when something’s in your home as opposed to in a commercial space.

Ashkahn: It should be noted, too, that I think there’s some nice things that come with having a float tank in your house, especially if you are using it as a stepping stone and you’re trying to get a feel. It’s not just getting a feel for the operations and maintenance and salt of the float tank center, but it’s a really nice way to talk to people.

When someone comes out of a float and you have one float tank and it’s in your house, they very often will just hang out with you for another 30, 45 minutes, sitting down on your couch and chatting. That’s a really great place to get feedback on what their experience was like, if they got cold or hot or if they heard noises. You’ll just get a lot of those great one-on-one interactions with people as they’re floating under your belt, which will be very informative, I think, going into opening a commercial space.

Graham: It’s true. You just meet lots of cool people if you’re running a float tank out of your house. Maybe even more so, as far as being able to sit down for just 40 minutes. I guess this is true of one-tank centers in general that aren’t home-based, but if that’s all you have is one customer and there’s no one coming in after and it’s just you there, that’s your only responsibility is to hang out with them, which is pretty cool. Yeah, there are perks that even commercial centers don’t get sometimes for running a smaller home-built float center.

Ashkahn: I will say, the other thing to consider, if you’re getting a float tank and you’re putting it in your house and you’re starting to get to the point where you’re having multiple people come a day and they’re customers and stuff like that, you should have a commercial float tank in your house, because they make home float tanks that have sanitation systems that are made for home use, but if you’re at the point that you’re doing a higher-capacity thing, then you need to get a proper float tank for it.

Or you just need to realize that you’re using a home float tank and you probably need to filter for hours between people instead of the 15 minutes that people do in commercial setting, but even that might not totally be enough to be doing the commercial level of sanitation that people are doing in brick-and-mortar float centers.

Graham: Yeah, as soon as you and your family are opening anything up to things that aren’t you and your family, especially with sanitation concerns, there just becomes this added risk involved of now strangers are getting into the tank and other strangers are getting in after them and cross-contamination, I guess, just outside of people in your immediate sphere becomes a little more of a risk.

Ashkahn: You should consider that that’s where the home-use tank stops, is at the point that it’s not just you and your close friends and family using it for your own recreational purpose.

Graham: Occasional pets or whatever, yeah. Alright. Yeah, hopefully that was a good … Let’s see, did we miss any parts of this? Guidelines, would I treat it like it’s a multiple-tank business? Anything helps, thanks for everything. No, I think we got it.

Ashkahn: Yay, good. Inhaled another one. All right. If you guys have any other questions you want to send us, especially if you reference other episodes, like DSP …

Graham: Makes us feel very official. Very important.

Ashkahn: Yeah, it’s nice. Go over to FloatTankSolutions.com/podcast. You can enter your questions there, and we’ll talk to you tomorrow.

Recent Podcast Episodes

Monthly Budget for Float Centers – DSP 305

Graham and Ashkahn break down the real truth about how closely they watch their budget for Float On on  a monthly basis. 

The truth is… not much. As it turns out, monthly expenses for float centers don’t have huge variations unlike businesses that rely on retail, for example. Graham and Ashkahn explain they developed a sense for what’s within reason. 

How to Sign on Float Ambassadors – DSP 304

How to Sign on Float Ambassadors – DSP 304

Float Ambassadors have been with the industry since the beginning, but gained popularity sometime in the last few years. What are ambassadors and how to float centers find them? When they do find them, how do they get them to represent floating? 

Graham and Ashkahn share their experiences with the practice of finding float mavens out in the world and the impact they’ve had on Float On. 

How do you Talk about Psychedelics? – DSP 303

It’s no secret that the inventor of the float tank, John Lilly, was also an early psychonaut and used the tank for mental exploration in conjunction with LSD. Not everyone in the float community appreciates this shared history and some actively try to distance themselves from it given the taboo nature of psychedelics. 

Graham and Ashkahn share their thoughts on psychedelics and floating and how, as a business, they can be completely separated while still being important, as well as explaining why some people might reasonably decide to disassociate from them. 

What About 75 Minute Floats? – DSP 302

Most float centers divide on floats offered between 60 or 90 minute floats, but some split the difference right down the middle and offer 75 minutes. Graham and Ashkahn share their thoughts on this tactic, what they see as the pros, cons, and things to consider when implementing it. 

Free Floats for Teachers – DSP 301

Graham and Ashkahn give their perspective on the pros and cons of giving free floats away for teachers. Giving out free floats is the Float On way and giving them to a specific group of people who could really use them sounds like a good idea.

The guys break it down and address some of the concerns any float center may have about running a program like this.

Latest Blog Posts

The Basics of Float Tank Sanitation

The Basics of Float Tank Sanitation

Some of the most common questions you’ll get as a float center operator involve the cleanliness of the tanks. This post will be an introduction to some of the most commonplace sanitation methods used in float tanks. These are generally either chemicals that go in the water or devices that attach to your filtration system. We’ll be discussing chlorine, bromine, ozone, UV, and hydrogen peroxide, which accounts for the sanitation methods used on nearly every float tank on the market.

Testing and Maintaining Float Tank Water Quality

Testing and Maintaining Float Tank Water Quality

Editors Note: This is a revision of a past blog post, updated to reflect the most current sanitation methods and standards

 

In a perfect world, you could just pour water and salt into a float tank and it would stay pure and clean and fresh and salty forever. In the real world, conditions in the water are constantly changing, so keeping your water safe and clean takes a fair amount of vigilance.

This post covers how we maintain basic water quality in the float tank, except for sanitization methods, which will be covered in their own beastly sanitation blog post. Stay tuned for that coming out next week!

Floating, mental health, and wellness

Floating, mental health, and wellness

This post will explore the intersection of floating with the concepts, beliefs, and experiences related to mental health and wellness, with a focus on anxiety and depression. I’ll explore my own story as it relates to floating before diving into the current intersections of floating and mental health, with a look at past, current, and potential opportunities for research and personal growth.

Massage, Acupuncture, and Float Tanks…  A Chat with Sandra Calm

Massage, Acupuncture, and Float Tanks… A Chat with Sandra Calm

We’ve seen lots of float centers that aren’t just float centers.

Many have massage, some offer counseling, some have yoga classes next door. Lots of people start out either by incorporating float tanks into a larger business, or with float tanks only being one of many modalities at their center. Being specialists in floating, Float On has not mastered anything else.

So, to help gain insight into this growing aspect of the industry, we contacted our old friend, Sandra Calm. She started up The Float Shoppe here in Portland with her husband and podcast sensation, Dylan Calm, back in 2011. When they first opened, they had just two float tanks, and slowly added acupuncture, massage, counseling, along with two more tanks. Talk about expansion!

She was more than happy to take some time for the industry to help us understand just what it’s like to run a center with multiple services by answering some questions.