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Have only been on a pay monthly basis since I was 16. I'm now moving onto 6 months of 'price work'. Can someone give me a brief explanation of how this works? Much appreciated thank you
 
Generally bend over and grease up because you are about to get shafted. You get paid a set amount per job or item in a job. If you're quick it can work out well for you but when things go wrong you end up out of pocket. Firm I used to work for paid their subbies on price work. A set amount for a boiler swap, extra for vertical flue, extra for long gas run etc.
 
I'm a subbie and get paid in price work and it suits me down to the ground. I think it depends what type of work your doing and ultimately what the rates are.

Im on a good rate and do work that I know will be first fix in one visit and all my work is local. I've done 9 jobs today and driven about 20 miles.
 
Did expect mixed reviews. The job is on one site and is new build houses so I can't see it being too much of a problem but we will see. Cheers for your responses
 
The backside has fell out of new build prices. Too many people trying to get the work.
have you not had a price list, first fix heating, plumbing etc. i would not start one until I had that.
that's when you take one look get in the van and drive off to Tesco shelf stacking as you are on more money.
 
I do price work on new build and can earn £200 a day on average. And when we are really busy I can earn anything up to £400 a day so I personally think price work on new build is still going good.
 
I do price work on new build and can earn £200 a day on average. And when we are really busy I can earn anything up to £400 a day so I personally think price work on new build is still going good.

The last one I looked at they were saying you can earn just over £200 per day.
the amount you had to do in 1 day was quite something, it depends on how long your day is.
i said no thanks
 
new build prices have dropped about 30-40% in my area, you can still make money but you do have to drop the standard of work the more they reduce prices imo.

seen it as bad as £30 a boiler, £6.50-7.00 a rad, £40 -50 a full bathroom.

if your direclty employed they can not pay you less than your contract of employment hourly rate states. So you will always get your basic rate if the price work does not work out. They should also supply all tools and site equipment etc....

give it a few weeks and im sure you will see the rewards, try and stay on first fixing as it normally pays better unless the houses are a bad design or very large.
 
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new build prices have dropped about 30-40% in my area, you can still make money but you do have to drop the standard of work the more they reduce prices imo.

seen it as bad as £30 a boiler, £6.50-7.00 a rad, £40 -50 a full bathroom.

if your direclty employed they can not pay you less than your contract of employment hourly rate states. So you will always get your basic rate if the price work does not work out. They should also supply all tools and site equipment etc....

give it a few weeks and im sure you will see the rewards, try and stay on first fixing as it normally pays better unless the houses are a bad design or very large.

them prices are shocking, I thought our prices were poor. Like you said aswell prices have dropped big time, we used to get about £300 to first fix a 1 bed 1 bath flat with a combi nowadays we get about £200. Still not bad as you can do two of them a day but its still a big drop compared to what it used to be.
 
Really, there dreadful compared to what they used to be. Hopefully they will go back up one day and I'll become a millionaire :)
 
this is what the new build prices are in swest
piece of sanitary £20
bath£25
boiler £60
combi£70
unvented cylinder £80
rad £7
fill up system test £20
commision£20
kitchen sink £30

First fix per meter £1

usually depends how good the site was reliabity of gear turning up and what other plumbs are trying to shaft you with the carp they have left over
 
Its crap really, the prices and ression competition squeezes ever last drop of blood out of ya..if you want to make decent money on new builds youve got to ruff it in as fast as possible unfortunatley. s'pose it depends where in the country you are. the midlands are dire.
 
I'm down in the south, we get about £78 for a bathroom, £65 for a boiler £85 for a combi, £100 for a cylinder, £11 a rad, £65 kitchen sink and so on
 
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