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Tired of wasting time on free estimates and tire kickers? Use this free contractor calculator to decide when to offer a free quote, charge a trip fee, or require a paid consultation.

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Should You Charge for That Estimate?

Answer a few quick questions about the job and the caller. In about 30 seconds you get a straight recommendation, a fee range, a lead score, and word-for-word scripts you can use today.

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The Free Estimate Trap

Free estimates feel like the cost of doing business. They are not free. Every drive-out burns gas, billable hours, and a slot you could have given a buyer who was ready to sign.

Drive 40 minutes each way, spend an hour measuring and talking, then write up a detailed quote at the kitchen table at night. That is half a day gone for one job you may never land. Do that three times a week for a tire-kicker who is collecting bids and you have worked a full day for nothing.

This tool helps you decide, lead by lead, when a free estimate makes sense and when you should charge a trip fee, a diagnostic fee, or a paid consultation before you ever start the truck.

The True Cost of Free Estimates

Add up what one “free” estimate actually costs you before you decide it is harmless:

Windshield time. Two hours round trip you cannot bill. That is two hours you could have been on a paying job.
Fuel and wear. Gas, tires, and miles on the truck add up fast across a week of drive-outs.
Quote prep. Measuring, pricing, and writing the proposal is real office work, often done after hours.
Opportunity cost. Every slot you give a tire-kicker is a slot you took from a ready buyer.
Free consulting. Detailed scopes get handed to a cheaper bidder who never had to think it through.
Burnout. Chasing unqualified leads all week wears you down and pulls you off the tools.

Estimate Fee Calculator

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    When Free Estimates Make Sense

    Charging is not always the right move. A free estimate is a smart investment when the lead is real and the work to quote it is small. Give a free estimate when:

    The job is close. If it is fifteen minutes away, the drive-out barely costs you anything.
    It is a referral or repeat. Trust is already there and the close rate is high.
    The scope is obvious. You can walk it, measure it, and price it in under an hour.
    The job is big. On a $30k project, a free look is cheap marketing for a strong lead.
    They are ready to go. Real budget, real timeline, and they decide. That is a buyer.
    You have open slots. A slow week makes free estimates an easy yes.

    When To Charge a Trip Fee or Paid Consultation

    Charge when the cost of showing up is real and the lead has not earned a free trip yet. The fee is not about the money. It filters out the people who were never going to hire you.

    Trip fee. Job is far away but simple. Cover your windshield time and you will still take the work.
    Diagnostic fee. You have to find the problem before you can price it. That is paid work, not a free guess.
    Paid consultation. Design work, blueprints, insurance paperwork, or two hours of quoting. Your expertise has value.
    Bid collectors. Three or more bids, no budget, no timeline. A fee separates buyers from shoppers fast.

    A common move that works: credit the fee toward the job if they hire you. Now it costs the serious buyer nothing and still scares off the tire-kickers.

    How To Explain Estimate Fees Without Sounding Rude

    Most contractors fumble this because they apologize for it. Do not apologize. Say it plain, tie it to value, and move on. Confidence does the heavy lifting.

    Frame it as a service. “I charge a small fee for a detailed on-site assessment, and it comes off your project if we move forward.”
    Keep it short. State the fee, state the credit, then stop talking. Do not over-explain.
    Tie it to value. They are paying for your trained eye, not just a number on paper.
    Stay friendly. Warm tone, firm number. “Happy to come take a look. It’s a $75 trip fee, credited if you book.”

    The calculator above gives you the exact words for the phone, your website, and a text reply. Copy the one you need.

    Estimate Fee FAQ

    Straight answers to the questions contractors actually ask about charging for estimates.

    It depends on the lead and the work it takes to quote it. A quick look at a job fifteen minutes down the road is cheap marketing, so give that one away. But driving an hour each way, troubleshooting a problem, or pricing out a custom job that eats half your day is real work, and real work has a price. The trick is to stop treating every estimate the same. Charge when the cost of showing up is high and the lead has not proven they are serious. Skip the fee when the job is close, the scope is obvious, or it came from a referral. A small fee also filters out the tire-kickers who were never going to hire anybody. Most guys who start charging the right way land the same number of real jobs and waste a lot less time. Run your lead through the calculator above and it will tell you which bucket this one falls in.

    Free estimates everywhere is exactly why charging can work in your favor. When you put a small fee on a detailed assessment, you tell the customer your time and your trained eye are worth something. The shoppers who are collecting six free bids will pass, and good riddance, because they were going to grind you on price anyway. The serious buyers usually respect it. Frame it as a paid assessment that comes off the job if they hire you, and the fee costs a real customer nothing. You also stop competing on the one thing you never win, which is being the cheapest. If you are nervous about it, start small. Charge a trip fee only on the far jobs or the diagnostic calls, and keep free estimates for close, simple work. You will quickly see that the people who balk at a $50 or $75 fee were never the people who pay your invoices on time anyway.

    It comes down to what the estimate actually costs you in time and travel. A simple trip fee to cover gas and windshield time usually runs $50 to $100. A diagnostic visit where you have to find the problem before you can price it is more like $75 to $200, because that is skilled work, not a free guess. A full paid consultation for design, blueprints, or a complex custom job can run $150 to $500 or more, depending on how many hours you put in. Tie the number to your real cost, not to what feels comfortable. Then offer to credit it toward the project if they hire you. That makes it an easy yes for a serious buyer and a hard no for a shopper. Do not pull a random number out of the air or lowball it so much that it does not cover your time. The calculator above gives you a starting range for each situation. Adjust it to your market and your hourly rate.

    It scares away the wrong ones, and that is the point. The people who walk over a $75 fee were almost never going to hire you. They are collecting bids, price shopping, or just curious. A real buyer with a real budget barely blinks at a small fee, especially when you credit it toward the job. What actually scares away good customers is sounding unsure or apologetic about it. If you mumble and over-explain, they sense weakness. State the fee plain, tie it to the value of your time and expertise, and offer the credit. Said with confidence, most people accept it without a fight. You will likely book fewer total appointments but close a higher percentage of them, which means more money for less driving. If you are still worried, only charge on the jobs that cost you the most to quote, like far drives and troubleshooting calls. Keep free estimates for the easy, close, ready-to-go leads.

    Yes, and that is the move most contractors should use. Crediting the fee toward the job is what makes charging painless. You tell the customer the assessment is $100, and if they hire you, that $100 comes right off the project. Now a serious buyer pays nothing extra, so they have no reason to object. But the tire-kicker who was just shopping still has to put money down to get you out there, and most of them will not. That single sentence filters your leads for you. Make the terms simple and say them out loud or put them in writing so there is no confusion later. Some guys credit the full fee, some credit half, some only credit it on jobs over a certain size. Pick what works for your margins. The key is that the customer hears value and a fair deal instead of a toll booth. It turns the fee from a barrier into a no-brainer for the people you actually want to work with.

    In almost every case, yes. You are running a business and your time has value, so charging for an on-site assessment, a diagnostic, or a design consultation is completely normal and legal. The main thing is to be upfront about it. Tell the customer the fee before you show up, not after, so there are no surprises and no disputes. Put it in writing in a text or email when you can. A few states and trades have specific disclosure rules, and some service calls under home warranty or insurance have their own rules, so it is worth a quick check with your local licensing board if you are unsure. But there is no general law that says estimates must be free. Plumbers, HVAC techs, and appliance repair guys have charged service-call and diagnostic fees for decades. As long as you disclose it clearly and the customer agrees before the work, you are on solid ground. This is general information, not legal advice, so confirm the rules in your state.

    People use these words like they mean the same thing, but they do not. An estimate is your best ballpark of what a job will cost. It is not locked in, and the final number can move once you open walls or hit surprises. A quote, sometimes called a bid, is a firm price you are committing to. Once the customer accepts it, that is the number, so you only give a real quote when you fully understand the scope. A consultation is paid expert time, where you sit down, look at the project, work through options, maybe sketch a plan, and give professional advice. The customer is paying for your knowledge, not just a price. Knowing the difference helps you set expectations and decide what to charge for. A rough estimate over the phone is usually free. A detailed quote takes work. A consultation with design or planning is a paid service. Use the right word with the customer so nobody feels misled when the final bill shows up.

    For a basic replacement quote on an easy-access roof, most roofers stay free because the lead is competitive and the look is quick. Where roofers should charge is the inspection and diagnostic work. Climbing a steep or cut-up roof to hunt for a leak, doing a moisture survey, or putting together documentation for an insurance claim is real skilled work, and that should carry a fee. Storm chasers have trained homeowners to expect free inspections, but those often turn into hours of unpaid claim paperwork that goes nowhere. Charge a fee for the detailed inspection or the insurance report, and credit it toward the job if they sign. That separates the homeowner who actually needs a roof from the one who just wants free ammunition for their adjuster. If you do free estimates, at least qualify hard on the phone first. Confirm they own the home, that they are the decision maker, and that they are ready to move, not just gathering five bids to shop around.

    Plumbers, more than most trades, should charge a service or diagnostic fee, and customers already expect it. When someone calls with a leak, a clog, or no hot water, you cannot price the fix until you find the problem. Finding the problem is the skilled part of the job, so that visit is worth money. A diagnostic or service-call fee of $75 to $150 is standard and weeds out the people who just want a free guess over the phone. For a planned project like a repipe, a water heater swap, or a bathroom remodel where the scope is clear, a free estimate can make sense because you are quoting known work. The line is simple. If you have to diagnose, charge for it. If you are just pricing a defined job, you can give that away. Credit the diagnostic fee toward the repair if they let you do the work that day, and most customers happily say yes because they wanted it fixed anyway.

    Split it by the type of call. For a repair or a no-cooling, no-heat service call, charge a diagnostic fee, period. You have to troubleshoot the system before you can quote a fix, and that is skilled labor. A $79 to $149 diagnostic fee is normal in HVAC and customers expect it. For a new system or full replacement quote, most HVAC contractors stay free because the ticket is big and the lead is competitive, so a free load calc and proposal is worth the shot. Just qualify hard before you drive out on the free ones. Confirm they own the home, the age of the current system, and that they are actually ready to spend, not just curious what a new unit costs. The mistake guys make is sending a tech to troubleshoot for free, fixing the riddle, and then watching the customer call a cheaper company to do the repair you just diagnosed. Charge for the diagnosis and credit it toward the repair if they book you on the spot.

    For a simple, defined remodel you can walk and price in an hour, a free estimate is fine. The money question for remodelers is design-heavy work. If a kitchen or bath project needs measurements, layouts, material selections, and a few hours of planning before you can give a real number, that is a paid design consultation, not a free estimate. You are giving away professional design work that a cheaper contractor can then build off of. Charge a design or consultation fee of a few hundred dollars and credit it toward the project if they hire you. This does two things. It pays you for the hours you put in, and it filters out the homeowner who is collecting ideas and bids with no intention of pulling the trigger. The serious client who wants a real plan will gladly pay it. For a basic free walk-through, qualify hard first. Confirm budget, timeline, and that they are the decision maker before you spend an evening drawing up numbers.

    For most standard interior or exterior painting, painters stay free because the quote is fast. You walk the space, measure, count the rooms or the elevations, and you have a price in under an hour. Painting is a competitive trade and a quick free quote is usually worth it. Where a fee makes sense is the far drive and the complex job. If the house is an hour away, a trip fee covers your windshield time, and you can credit it if they book. If the job needs detailed color consulting, cabinet refinishing samples, or heavy prep assessment that takes real time, that is consultation work worth charging for. The bigger issue for painters is getting ghosted after handing out detailed quotes that the homeowner uses to shop. Qualify on the phone first. Ask about budget, timeline, and how many other painters they are talking to. If they are getting five bids with no budget and no start date, slow down before you drive across town to give away another free number.

    Yes, especially when the job is far away or when looking at it is half the work. A trip fee covers your gas and your windshield time so you are not driving forty minutes each way for free to look at something that may turn into nothing. For repairs, the visit usually involves figuring out what is actually wrong, which is diagnostic work and worth even more than a plain trip fee. Set the number to cover your real cost, somewhere around $50 to $150 depending on distance and complexity, and credit it toward the repair if they hire you on the spot. Most reasonable customers understand it. The ones who get angry about a small trip fee are the same ones who would have wasted your morning and then called somebody cheaper. If the repair is close and simple and you have an open slot, a free look is fine. But the farther and trickier it gets, the more a trip or diagnostic fee just makes sense.

    Insurance work eats hours, so yes, charge for it. An insurance estimate is rarely just a quick look. It usually means photos, detailed documentation, line-item scopes, and back-and-forth with an adjuster who is trying to pay out as little as possible. That is paperwork-heavy, skilled work, and plenty of those claims never turn into a job you get paid for. A paid consultation or inspection fee protects your time. Make it clear that the fee covers the detailed assessment and documentation, and credit it toward the work if they hire you to do the repairs. Be careful with one thing. In some states there are rules about contractors and insurance, like not waiving or rebating deductibles, so know your local law before you structure anything around a claim. But charging a fair fee for the hours you spend inspecting and documenting is normal and smart. It keeps you from becoming a free claims consultant for a homeowner who plans to take your report and hire whoever comes in cheapest.

    Say it plain, tie it to value, and stop talking. The whole reason it sounds rude is that nervous contractors over-explain and apologize, which makes the customer feel like something is off. Do the opposite. Try this: “I’d be glad to come take a look. I charge a $75 fee for a detailed on-site assessment, and that comes right off your project if we move forward.” Then go quiet and let them answer. Notice you are not saying sorry and not justifying it ten different ways. You stated a service, a price, and a benefit. Keep your tone warm and friendly, but keep the number firm. If they push back, you can repeat that it covers your time and expertise and that it credits toward the job. Most people accept it. The ones who get offended over a small, fair, creditable fee were going to be a headache anyway. Confidence is what makes it land. The script on the calculator above gives you the exact wording for the phone.

    You will never stop all of it, but you can cut it way down. First, qualify before you quote. Ask how many bids they are getting, what their budget is, and when they want to start. If they are collecting five bids with no budget and no timeline, they are shopping, so slow down. Second, do not hand over a detailed line-item scope that a cheaper guy can just copy. Give a clear price for the finished job and save the granular breakdown for after they commit. Third, charge a fee for the heavy estimates so the shoppers screen themselves out before you spend the hours. Fourth, sell yourself, not just a number. Walk them through your process, your warranty, and why your bid is built the way it is, so they are comparing value and not just price. Finally, follow up fast and stay human. A lot of jobs are won simply because you called back and the other two contractors never did. Make it easy to say yes to you specifically.

    Usually it is one of three things. One, the lead was never real. They were price shopping, gathering bids, or just curious, and a free quote let them do that with zero skin in the game. Two, you never qualified them, so you have no idea if they had a budget, a timeline, or the authority to say yes. Three, you handed over a number and then went silent, so they drifted to whoever followed up. Fix it from the front. Qualify on the phone before you drive out. Ask about budget, timeline, decision maker, and how many bids they are getting. Put a fee on the estimates that cost you the most time, which screens out the shoppers automatically. Then follow up like you mean it, twice in the first week, by call and text. Half of ghosting is just contractors who quote once and never check back. When you qualify hard and follow up consistently, the ghosting drops off and your close rate climbs because you are only chasing real buyers.

    Three or more bids is a yellow flag, not an automatic no. It tells you they are price shopping, so adjust how you handle it. Do not pour hours into a detailed free quote for someone comparing four contractors on price alone. Qualify hard first. Ask their budget, their timeline, and what matters most to them besides price. If they have a real budget and a real start date, they may just be doing due diligence, and that lead is worth pursuing. If they have no budget, no timeline, and are clearly hunting for the cheapest number, put a fee on your estimate or give a remote ballpark before you drive out. When you do bid, do not try to be the lowest. Sell why your price is built the way it is, your warranty, your process, your reputation. Then follow up fast, because a lot of these are won simply by the contractor who calls back first. The calculator above will often flag this as a maybe lead and point you toward a remote ballpark or a trip fee.

    Yes. Design-heavy and custom work is where free estimates bleed you dry. A custom kitchen, an addition, or a one-off build cannot be priced from a quick walk-through. It takes measurements, drawings, material research, and hours of planning before you can put a real number on it. That planning is professional work, and a cheaper contractor would love for you to do it for free so they can build off your ideas. Charge a design or consultation fee for that upfront work and credit it toward the project if they hire you. A few hundred dollars is normal, and a serious client who wants a real custom plan will pay it without blinking. It also protects you from the homeowner who is gathering ideas with no intention of building. On top of the design fee, your actual project pricing should carry a higher margin for custom work, because custom means more unknowns, more risk, and more of your expertise. Do not price a one-of-a-kind build like it is a cookie-cutter job. It is not.

    Qualifying is just a few honest questions on the phone before you ever start the truck. Find out four things. One, are they the owner or the decision maker, because you do not want to pitch someone who has to ask a spouse or a landlord. Two, what is their budget, even a rough range, so you know the job is realistic. Three, what is their timeline, because someone ready to start beats someone who is just researching. Four, how many other bids are they getting, which tells you if they are buying or shopping. Mix in the basics like location and a clear description of the work. If they own the home, have a budget, want to start soon, and are not collecting six bids, that is a strong lead worth a free trip. If they dodge every question, have no budget, no timeline, and are clearly shopping, slow down, give a remote ballpark, or put a fee on the visit. The calculator above runs these exact questions and scores the lead for you.

    Disclaimer: This calculator and the information here are for general guidance only and are not legal, financial, or business advice. Fee ranges are starting points, not rules, and you should set your own pricing based on your market, your costs, and your local laws. Rules on charging for estimates, insurance work, and deductibles vary by state and trade. Confirm the regulations that apply to you with your local licensing board or a qualified professional before setting your policy.

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