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Discuss help with pricing to install new radiator in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

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Hi had a quote to install new radiator being tapped from another radiator
the room is 3m so would be copper piped from that radiator to this new 1

was told if he does pipework along the wall will cost £150 in labour or under the floor £300 in labour

i just dont understand he wants 45-£50 an hour
just wondering if pricing seems fair
I have to supply radiator and pipework an all other bits for this money
 
Get one or two other quotes.

Keep in mind that there can be a factor of two in cost between a job by a skilled time-served plumber and an odd-job man who does a bit of plumbing. IMO, if you are dealing with a reputable small business you're more likely to get what you pay for and be happy with the result.

The correct/fair/right price is the one that your plumber is willing to do the job for and you are willing to pay. End of.
 
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Hi maybe your correct
But still trying to work out are plumbers/engineers millionares
As say £50 an hour thats £2000 a week over £100k a year
Now where i live in the south seems crazy money
Well he does cars in the week use to work for flogas
so seems very strange
 
Hi maybe your correct
But still trying to work out are plumbers/engineers millionares
As say £50 an hour thats £2000 a week over £100k a year
Now where i live in the south seems crazy money
Well he does cars in the week use to work for flogas
so seems very strange


Seething here after reading this , you havent got a bloody clue how our businesses work , not a clue .
I am out ..
 
Seriously buddy how much of that £50 p/h do you think we see???? We have to pay insurance, run a van, consumables, training, re-training, pay for tools, trade recognised affiliations to name but a few. It’s not £50 in the pocket. I’d be surprised if the average plumber saw half of that as profit. Maybe think a little bit before coming onto a professional forum asking for free help from very knowledgeable people
 
wow i would guess in a company also you proberly get £15-£20 and hour and company would charge out more to pay staff and lots of things
Maybe its just as im self employed not gas or plumber but always think i charge a fair price and normally would be max £25 an hour
and its hard working getting that so normally get less
 
Hi maybe your correct
But still trying to work out are plumbers/engineers millionares
As say £50 an hour thats £2000 a week over £100k a year
Now where i live in the south seems crazy money
Well he does cars in the week use to work for flogas
so seems very strange

I shouldn't feed the trolls but...

There are closer to 1000 billable hours a year, not 2000. That makes £50k / year in receipts and half of that will go in business overheads. Hence £25k/year is closer.

If you don't want to pay a plumber to fit an extra radiator, don't. It's a free country, buy an extra pullover instead.
 
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Get 3 quotes is good advice. The guy may be trying it on, or he may not want the job, or he may know what he needs to charge in your area to make a living and the price is right. He may be factoring in the fact that this might take longer than 3 hours: a fixed price is a risk for the plumber as if it takes longer, he gets no extra. We can't tell over the internet if the price is right.

In fact, last week I spent over two full days fitting two radiators, and it wasn't the first time this has happened.
 
Best getting a few quotes and not worry about the running and finances of the engineer in question.
Last time you had your car serviced did you ask the hourly rate?
You would be surprised at what folk pay and never question it, then question the tradesman standing in his house :confused:
 
Fair enough
i know the pricing to get car serviced and yes all the bits dont cost the earth
But i know the wages of the car man
and the insurance costs are massive
I think and no offence to any gas fitter or plumber
because a lot of people cannot or not legally allowed if its gas safe they can kind of charge the price they wish
 
You don’t always pay for parts you pay for safety and training?? Do you even have the first idea what it costs to be gas safe in say natural gas and lpg? Some people then choose to to get further qualifications such as oftec, heatas and the like. And the huge insurance premiums associated with protecting joe public like you. I find it highly offensive that you seem to be implying that these very qualified people cannot make a living or pass some of the business running cost back to the customer. Sorry we should just do these jobs for love. You pay for experience. It doesn’t matter if you think it’s an easy job. If it’s so easy crack on
 
There is massive competition in our trade and we cant just name a price unfortunately as he next guy through the door will get the job. the area i live in is full of gas safe registered engineers, in fact i can throw stones at 5 from my house lol. I would never get away with charging what i wanted with the mass of engineers around me.
Most of us guys have some resepect for the public and wouldnt overcharge or name a price, its our reputation on the line.
I feel we should all be earning way more than what we do based on the knowledge and hoops we have to jump through to do our job legally.
 
Hi maybe your correct
But still trying to work out are plumbers/engineers millionares
As say £50 an hour thats £2000 a week over £100k a year
Now where i live in the south seems crazy money
Well he does cars in the week use to work for flogas
so seems very strange
You aren't an accountant, obviously.

In the nicest possible way, perhaps it is YOU who undercharges?

Last week, I billed £320 in labour for 2 days' work. £160 x 5 x 52 = £42k a year? One day I finished at 18.00, the next I finished at 19.30 approx, but then we were talking and chatting and I got home well after 10. Profit though? £40 in mileage as it wasn't that local (should have charged more really), and let's say £10 in insurances etc (I'm not Gas Safe, just a humble plumber). I tend to say 10% on use and wear and losses on tools and consumables, so that £320 becomes £252. On at least one day I was working at home before 7 getting everything I needed in the van.

The day after I was tired and achieved nothing useful except making soup and I still need to go out and replace the copper pipe I used (for which I made 10% mark-up which just about pays for the cost of running a van to the merchants). That was the end of my week's plumbing as I then had three days' work at my other employed job.

I may or may not have been able to fit in another day's work that week had I been a full-time plumber working 5 days (allowing a day for admin, tidying, paperwork etc), and might have earned another £126. So that's £378 a week self-employed.

Then I need to factor in my holiday. Employee gets 5.6 working weeks, (as a member of two trade unions, I won't accept any less from myself as an employer), so that leaves 46.4 working weeks.

A part of my house ends up being my workplace. Doesn't cost me anything, but does mean I need a bigger house. Let's factor in the cost of using my house for storing stuff as the cost of not being able to have a lodger to try to quantify the cost of my house being bigger than the flat I would otherwise quite happily fit in: £50 a week. £378 - £50 is £328, 46.4 weeks makes £15,219 a year. For myself as a single person, it would be enough and it's a little more than I would earn working full-time in a shop, but for someone who spent a lot of time and money to be in the position of being able to do it, it isn't very much. When I get faster I may be able to fit in more work, or charge more per hour.

Back to your case, if you want a lower hourly rate, then you need to give the plumber a full day's work. (Who said it would take three hours anyway and are you going to pay extra if it takes longer?) THEN he can fit in 8 working hours in a day. Sadly there is no way on earth you can manage 8 hour days out of small jobs, and very often the afternoon is spent driving, tidying the van after your job, looking at the next job for free, like yours, that he may or may not get, so probably you are paying for most of a day's work. And that's fair enough.
 
I really would like to know how the OP got to an 8 hour day based on 3 hour jobs, and how s/he knows the job will take 3 hours though. It'll be interesting to know what the job finally costs when s/he's compared prices and what sort of work the OP gets for the money. Hopefully we'll get to know.

OP - where in the South are you? South could be Essex, or it could be Cornwallshire...
 
If your not happy then get another engineer to give you a estimate very very few of us make the sort of money you quoted, it's more like £20 - £30 a hour of which all of our overheads need to be deducted. Cheers kop
 
Hi was only a question seemed to upset people and never would have thought about the abuse from people.
Expected someone to say that price doesnt seem wrong and would normally charge £50 an hour
 
You may be suffering from a part timer, who thinks it will take him all day ( and itprobably will) . Whereas a proper plumber would do it quicker and better and quite possibly cheaper - to us it’s a simple job - he is probably unsure and erring on side of safety
 
Hi was only a question seemed to upset people and never would have thought about the abuse from people.
Expected someone to say that price doesnt seem wrong and would normally charge £50 an hour
Not upset at all this end. Just trying to help you see our side of things. As I hope I said, it could be over the odds if it turns out to be very straightforward, but very hard to say without seeing the job, so best bet is compare other plumbers if you are concerned.
 
If you go on the Rated People website, you'll see that an average cost for fitting a radiator is £160, excluding the radiator and valves and this price is based on an average price quoted by 50 different plumbing firms. However in my price, I include pipework and fittings.
A radiator install can take around 4 hours to add to an existing heating system. The system has to be drained, the radiator fitted and new connections adapted to the old pipework, which is often 8mm microbore, the system then has to be refilled and every radiator in the house bled of air, plus as it's been drained, new inhibitor has to be added. If the boiler is old, problems often occur in getting it to fire up again after being drained and more often than not the pump will be a pain in the erse too.
A rad install is far from being a quick and easy job.
 

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