Discuss Pricing Jobs in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Status
Not open for further replies.
T

T & H Plumbing

Hello fellow drunks

As most of you know im just starting up on my adventure in the big world of running a business, the skills side to completing the job aint a problem, but the business side is all new and im picking it up with alot of help

Question is, on pricing a job up what should i take into account so i give a fair price to the customer and im getting a good return for my business, growing up when learning the trade id work for free coz im a good lad but the plumbers i laboured for gave me cash anyways were talking the £30-£50 a day to me this was beer tokens and i was happy with it, now i have bills like you all and i want to make a good life for myself

So any help n advice on how to go about pricing a job would be great
 
Give it a search, plenty of threads

wages + materials + mark up+ running costs + profit

Wages are just that, say charge £40 an hour but say cap that at £300 for a single day.
dont sell yourself short, you might have been on for £19 an hour for a company but they would have been charging you out at a higher rate!

Materials for your jobs, if you keep stock remember how much things are!
don't forget your consumables like mapp gas, flux, solder, screws, plugs, denso tape and so on as it all adds up and can quickly eat into your profit.

Mark up
if a boiler costs you £500 are you going to sell it to a customer for £500?
certainly not you add your markup if this is 5%, 10% or 20%.
this covers any call backs but if you dont have them then its money in your pocket.

running costs
van wear and tear,tools, registration fees, re assessment costs, fuel costs, various insurances, accountant fees ect and so on.
work it out and make this as a rule of thumb per day that you work.
I would say this only applies to all day jobsor longer projects, you cant exactly charge £22 quid extra to change a tap washer because its the only job you're doing that day ;)

profit!!
you're not running a business for the fun of it.
installing a boiler? You wont do that just for your wages, you want profit too.

thats the general idea and way i was taught to think about it.

hope that helps abit
 
Hi T H.

Billys hit it pretty good . But the daily charge will obviously depend what your comfortable and your area charges. Im £30ph. And as far as materials go same as billy said although when buying boilers , rads etc i sort everything out but get most of my custards to phone builders merchants to pay materials and this alone keeps me just under tha VAT registered bracket. It will come where i have to do it but for the mean time im happy where i am.
If your unsure about time taken to do the job then guess a rough idea then add a day or so depending on job size. You have to take into account , van , insurances, gasafe costs, registration and courses, all your calibrations . It all mounts up so dont be afraid to charge what you think is fair. Its all the hidden costs you must always remember about. Dont forget about the smaller jobs as they can be your bread n butter . Sit down and right out what youl charge for a service , removing rad , landlord cp12 etc. If you work the main ones out then when a prospective custard calls and asks for one your ready with an answer.
 
Don't lose your bottle if you think the price sounds expensive. I did that and ended up doing jobs too cheap. Can't make any money, ok to do a few cheapies to get going.

Gotta quote enough or you'll end up skint BUT don't get too greedy or you'll end up with nothing & then be skint.
 
I'm in the same position at the moment. Big quotes I'm not to worried about as generally you can justify the costs, its the small ones get me. Do you charge x amount for the 1st hour then your normal hourly rate like some of the companies I've worked for or just a flat rate?
 
To be honest ive only just got my NVQ having laboured for a plumber for years, so at the moment im trying to spread the word im out there so keeping prices down and enough to keep me going so this is where its tricky, i cant afford to be turning work down but at the same time i cant be giving Quotes what might seem over the top, i visited a site called Building sherriff and it gives average prices for certain jobs in certain areas and for the work that she needs doing it says an average of £150 so ive told the customer ill do it for £120, the job in question is to change a trap on a basin and to fit a basin in a on suite (existing pipes are there)

some plumbers might think too cheap or whatever, i know for a fact she wants a full on suite fitting in another property so im not sure if £120 will scare her off its a fine line is this pricing mark lol

opinions?
 
Is she supplying the trap? remember they are £15, may not seem much but you take the fitting you need out that £120 and your left with about £80
 
Too cheap once you are established but to start with you need to be a bit cheaper as you can't provide lots of feedback/a good trading history to potential customers.

I would price that at 4 hours to swap the basin over and up to 2 hours to change the trap, depending on whether the basin needed to come off the wall to do it.

Most likely I would do both quicker but that's what I would quote for that job. I win around 50% of my small job quotes at that price but I am not that fussed about small jobs to be honest.

Everyone has a different way of doing things, it's what works best for your business. You can grow a plumbing business by just doing small jobs or just doing large jobs. Whatever takes your fancy to be honest!
 
i knew trap would cost around that, £120 is labour parts will be on top

this small job will lead to a big job with the on suite she wants fitting, also tiling needs doing so im hoping to get that
My brain has been working overtime last week or so lol
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Reply to Pricing Jobs in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

B
    • Friendly
Hi, I've followed this excellent forum for several years but have never posted, so decided I'd better give some details. My status is the upper...
Replies
2
Views
264
Hi all Noticed bad smell in my drain out side put my hand down and it unclogged it for now however I checked my sewer drain and after flushing my...
Replies
3
Views
577
I was stupid enough not to check the position of the pipes under the tiles when installing a toilet and drilled right through the center of a 16...
Replies
0
Views
241
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4...
Replies
9
Views
465
Hi all, I'm installing a concrete patio out back. By the wall under the kitchen sink I have an existing P-Trap gully for the grey water from the...
Replies
0
Views
180
Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock