Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator
Job Details And Costs
Pricing Settings
Check A Price You Already Plan To Quote
Line Item Breakdown
| Direct Costs | — |
|---|---|
| Overhead Cost | — |
| Contingency Cost | — |
| Gross Profit | — |
| Gross Margin | — |
| Net Profit | — |
| Net Margin | — |
| Markup On Direct Costs | — |
| Sales Tax | — |
| Customer Total | — |
Markup To Margin
Margin To Required Markup
Comparison Table
| Markup | Equivalent Margin | Price On $1,000 Cost |
|---|
Monthly Fixed Costs
What You Need To Bring In
| Total Fixed Costs | — |
|---|---|
| Monthly Break Even Revenue | — |
| Weekly Break Even Revenue | — |
| Annual Revenue Needed | — |
| Revenue Needed To Cover Owner Pay | — |
| Jobs Needed Per Month | — |
| Jobs Needed Per Week | — |
Overhead Allocation
How Much Overhead This Job Carries
| Overhead Rate | — |
|---|---|
| Overhead For This Job | — |
| Plain English | Pick a method to see the recommendation. |
Labor Burden Inputs
True Labor Cost And Billable Rate
| True Hourly Labor Cost | — |
|---|---|
| Labor Burden Amount | — |
| Labor Burden % | — |
| Billable Hourly Rate | — |
| Labor Markup Needed | — |
| Labor Profit Per Hour | — |
Industry Benchmark Guide
Put This Contractor Pricing Tool On Your Site For $47
You just saw how useful this calculator is. Now picture having it on your own contractor website, ready when you are pricing jobs in the truck, at the kitchen table, or standing in a customer’s driveway.
Enter your costs. Pick your trade. Check the target price, strong price, overhead, labor burden, markup, margin, and break even numbers before you send the quote.
One bad bid can cost more than this entire tool. This helps you catch weak pricing before the job starts, not after your profit has already packed a lunch and left town.
- Works on desktop, tablet, and phone
- Built for contractors who price their own jobs
- Print or save a clean pricing report
- No spreadsheet headaches
- Simple copy and paste website install
Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator FAQ: Real Answers For Contractors Who Are Done Underpricing Jobs
A lot of contractors are not losing money on the job site.
They lost it back at the kitchen table, in the truck, or at the desk when they priced the job too low.
They forgot overhead. They confused markup with margin. They underpriced labor. They did not pay themselves. They won the bid, stayed busy, and still felt broke.
This FAQ page answers the real questions contractors ask when they are trying to price jobs better, protect profit, understand markup versus margin, calculate overhead, find true labor cost, and stop sending bids that are too thin before the work even starts.
One bad bid can cost more than this entire tool.
Check your pricing before the next quote. Get real margin numbers, overhead recovery, labor burden, and break even calculations in one clean contractor pricing tool.
Get The Contractor Profit And Pricing CalculatorContractor Pricing Basics
Most contractors underprice jobs because they forget overhead, confuse markup with margin, underestimate labor burden, or price based on gut feel instead of real numbers.
Another big reason is fear. They are afraid the customer will say no if the price is too high, so they shave a little off the bid. That little shave adds up over 10 or 20 jobs. Pretty soon the contractor is busy, tired, and not keeping any profit.
A lot of contractors also price jobs based on what they think the customer wants to pay, not what the job actually costs to do right. That is a recipe for staying broke.
Profit gets lost in the quote. If the bid is wrong, the work does not matter. You can run a tight job site, finish on time, keep the customer happy, and still lose money because the numbers were bad before you swung the first hammer.
Common mistakes include forgetting to add overhead, using the wrong markup, underpricing labor, not including a contingency buffer, and not checking the real margin before sending the quote.
A contractor profit calculator helps you see those mistakes before they cost money.
A contractor profit calculator is a tool that helps you price jobs by calculating real margin, required markup, overhead recovery, labor burden, break even revenue, and job profit before you send the quote.
It is not a spreadsheet. It is not estimating software. It is not a CRM. It is a pricing and profit tool built for contractors who price jobs themselves and want to check the numbers before they commit.
The Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator includes 7 tabs: Job Price Builder, Markup vs Margin, Overhead and Break Even, Labor Burden, Quick Price Check, Hourly Rate Builder, and Annual Revenue Target. It also prints or saves clean pricing reports.
Most small contractors should aim for 15 to 25 percent net profit margin after all costs, including overhead, labor burden, materials, subs, and owner pay.
That number can vary by trade, market, and job type. Specialty work or custom jobs can support higher margins. Competitive commodity work might run thinner.
The key is knowing your margin before you send the bid. A lot of contractors think they are making 20 percent but the real margin is closer to 10 or 12 percent after everything is counted.
The Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator shows your real margin so you can decide if the job is worth it before you quote.
You are probably pricing jobs too thin. Busy does not mean profitable. If your bids do not include enough margin to cover overhead, labor burden, callbacks, small mistakes, and owner pay, you stay busy and broke.
Another reason is you are not tracking real costs. If you do not know your true labor cost, overhead percentage, or break even revenue, you are guessing. Guessing leads to thin bids.
The fix is to price every job with real numbers and walk away from bids that do not hit your target margin. One good month of profitable work beats three months of busy broke work.
Check your margin. If your net profit margin after overhead and labor burden is under 15 percent, the bid is probably too thin.
Also check your Minimum Walk Away Price. That is the lowest price you can quote and still cover all costs with a bare minimum profit. If your bid is at or below that number, you are one surprise away from losing money.
The Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator shows your Target Price, Strong Price, and Minimum Walk Away Price so you can see exactly where your bid sits before you send it.
Estimating is figuring out what the job costs. Pricing is deciding what you charge.
A good estimate tells you the cost of materials, labor, subs, and job specific expenses. Pricing takes that estimate and adds overhead, profit, markup, contingency, and risk buffer to create the final quote.
A lot of contractors estimate well but price poorly. They know what the job costs but they do not add enough margin to stay profitable.
A contractor pricing calculator helps you turn a solid estimate into a profitable quote.
Yes. New contractors benefit the most because they have not locked in bad pricing habits yet.
If you are just starting out and you do not know your overhead percentage or break even revenue, the calculator helps you build those numbers. You can start with industry averages and adjust as you learn your real costs.
The sooner you start pricing with real margin numbers, the faster you build a profitable business instead of a busy broke business.
Markup Vs Margin
Markup is based on your cost. Margin is based on your selling price. That little difference can quietly wreck a bid.
If a job costs you 10,000 dollars and you add a 25 percent markup, your selling price is 12,500 dollars. That sounds like a 25 percent profit, but it is not. Your margin is 20 percent because profit is measured against the selling price.
This is where a lot of contractors get punched in the wallet. They think they added enough profit, but the job ends up thinner than expected after overhead, labor issues, callbacks, and small surprises.
That is why the Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator includes a markup versus margin tool. It shows both numbers before you send the quote.
Most contractors need a 1.4 to 1.7 markup to hit a 20 to 25 percent net profit margin after overhead and labor burden.
The exact markup depends on your overhead percentage, labor burden, and desired margin. A contractor with 15 percent overhead needs a different markup than a contractor with 25 percent overhead.
A lot of contractors guess at markup. The smart move is to calculate the required markup based on your real costs and target margin. That is what the Markup vs Margin tab does.
Because they sound the same but they are not. Markup adds to your cost. Margin measures profit against the selling price.
A 50 percent markup gives you a 33 percent margin. A 100 percent markup gives you a 50 percent margin. Most contractors do not realize this until they run the numbers and see their margin is way lower than they thought.
The confusion costs money. You think you are making 25 percent but you are really making 18 percent. Over 10 jobs, that adds up fast.
A good net profit margin for most small contractors is 15 to 25 percent after all costs.
Specialty trades, custom work, or high skill jobs can support margins on the higher end. Competitive commodity work might run closer to 12 to 18 percent.
The key is knowing your margin before you send the quote. If your margin is under 15 percent, you are one surprise away from losing money. If your margin is under 10 percent, you are working for free.
You can, but it might cost you money on some jobs and leave money on the table on others.
A fixed markup works if your jobs are similar, your overhead is consistent, and your labor costs do not vary much. But if you do a mix of small service calls and big projects, a one size fits all markup can lead to thin bids on complex jobs and overpriced bids on simple jobs.
The smarter move is to calculate the required markup for each job based on your overhead, labor burden, and target margin. That is what the Job Price Builder tab does.
You price the job too thin and wonder why you are not making money.
A lot of contractors say they want a 20 percent profit, so they add a 20 percent markup. But a 20 percent markup only gives you a 16.7 percent margin. That 3.3 percent difference might not sound like much, but on a 50,000 dollar job, that is 1,650 dollars you did not get.
If you run 20 jobs a year with that mistake, you just left 33,000 dollars on the table.
Use this formula: Required Markup equals 1 divided by 1 minus your target margin.
If you want a 20 percent margin, the formula is 1 divided by 0.80, which equals 1.25. That means you need a 1.25 markup, or 25 percent.
If you want a 25 percent margin, the formula is 1 divided by 0.75, which equals 1.33. That is a 33 percent markup.
The Markup vs Margin tab does this math for you. You plug in your target margin and it shows the required markup.
Stop guessing at markup and margin.
One wrong number can turn a good estimate into a thin bid. Get the Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator and see your real margin before you send the next quote.
Stop Underpricing Jobs TodayOverhead And Break Even
Overhead is all the business costs that are not tied to a specific job. That includes truck payments, insurance, shop rent, office supplies, phone, accounting, marketing, licenses, permits, tools, and owner salary when you are not in the field.
A lot of contractors forget overhead when they price jobs. They add up materials and labor and call it done. But if you do not recover overhead in every bid, you are working for free.
The Overhead and Break Even tab helps you calculate your overhead percentage and spread it across your jobs so you actually cover those costs.
Most small contractors run 10 to 25 percent overhead as a percentage of annual revenue.
A lean one truck operation might be closer to 10 or 12 percent. A contractor with a shop, office, admin help, and multiple crews might be 20 to 30 percent.
The key is knowing your number. If you do not know your overhead percentage, you are guessing when you price jobs. Guessing leads to thin bids.
Break even revenue is the amount of money you need to bring in to cover all your fixed costs and overhead without making a profit.
If your annual overhead is 60,000 dollars and you want to break even, you need to bring in at least 60,000 dollars in gross profit from jobs. That means your revenue needs to be higher than 60,000 dollars because materials, subs, and direct job costs eat into that number.
The Overhead and Break Even tab calculates your monthly and annual break even revenue so you know the minimum you need to hit just to keep the lights on.
Because overhead feels invisible. You see the materials. You see the labor. But the truck payment, insurance, and phone bill do not show up on the job site.
A lot of contractors price jobs by adding materials, labor, and a little profit. They forget to add overhead. Then they wonder why they stayed busy all year and still do not have any money in the bank.
The fix is to add overhead to every job. If your overhead is 15 percent of revenue, you need to include that 15 percent in every bid.
Add up all your annual overhead costs. That includes insurance, truck payments, tools, shop rent, office expenses, phone, accounting, marketing, licenses, and owner salary when you are not working on jobs.
Divide that total by your annual revenue. Multiply by 100 to get a percentage.
If your overhead is 50,000 dollars and your revenue is 400,000 dollars, your overhead percentage is 12.5 percent.
The Overhead and Break Even tab walks you through this calculation.
Yes, but be smart about it.
If you work in the field and bill your time to jobs, that is labor cost, not overhead. But if you spend time on admin, estimates, scheduling, bookkeeping, marketing, or running the business, that time is overhead and needs to be covered in every bid.
A lot of owner operators do not pay themselves properly because they do not separate field time from office time. That mistake keeps them broke.
Fixed costs stay the same every month whether you do one job or ten jobs. That includes rent, insurance, truck payments, phone, and base salaries.
Variable costs change based on how much work you do. That includes materials, hourly labor, subs, fuel, and job specific supplies.
Understanding the difference matters because fixed costs need to be covered by overhead in every bid. If you only price for variable costs, you lose money.
Calculate your overhead percentage and include it in every bid. If your overhead is 15 percent, you need to add 15 percent to your direct job costs before you add profit.
A lot of contractors skip this step and wonder why they are busy but broke. They are not recovering overhead, so every job leaves them a little more in the hole.
The Job Price Builder tab includes overhead in the calculation so you can see if your bid actually covers all costs before you send it.
Labor Burden And True Labor Cost
Labor burden is the real cost of an employee beyond their hourly wage. That includes payroll taxes, workers comp, liability insurance, health insurance, paid time off, holiday pay, unemployment insurance, and non billable time.
A lot of contractors only look at the hourly wage when they price labor. But if you pay an employee 25 dollars an hour, your real cost might be 35 to 40 dollars an hour after burden.
If you do not include labor burden in your bids, you are losing money on every job.
Labor burden typically adds 20 to 50 percent on top of the base hourly wage.
If your burden is light, you might be at 20 to 25 percent. If you have high workers comp rates, health insurance, and paid time off, you might be closer to 40 or 50 percent.
The Labor Burden tab helps you calculate your real burden percentage based on payroll taxes, workers comp rates, insurance, and non billable time so you know your true labor cost.
Because they only think about the hourly wage. They see 25 dollars an hour and price labor at 25 dollars an hour. But the real cost is closer to 35 dollars an hour after payroll taxes, workers comp, insurance, and non billable time.
That 10 dollar difference adds up fast. On a 200 hour job, that is 2,000 dollars you did not recover. Over 10 jobs, that is 20,000 dollars gone.
The fix is to calculate your true labor cost with burden included and price every job based on that number.
Non billable time is time you pay employees but do not charge to a customer. That includes drive time, shop time, tool maintenance, loading trucks, training, waiting for materials, weather delays, and cleanup.
If you pay an employee for 40 hours a week but only 32 hours are billable to customers, you need to spread the cost of those 8 non billable hours across the 32 billable hours. That increases your true hourly cost.
The Labor Burden tab includes non billable time in the calculation so you can see your real billable labor rate.
Start with the hourly wage. Add labor burden, which includes payroll taxes, workers comp, insurance, and benefits. Adjust for non billable time. Then add overhead and profit.
If you pay an employee 25 dollars an hour, your burden might add 10 dollars, so your cost is 35 dollars. If only 80 percent of their time is billable, your true cost per billable hour is closer to 44 dollars. Add overhead and profit, and your billable rate might be 60 to 80 dollars an hour.
The Labor Burden tab and Hourly Rate Builder tab do this math for you.
Labor cost is what you pay. Billable rate is what you charge.
If your labor cost is 35 dollars an hour after burden and non billable time, you cannot charge 35 dollars an hour and make money. You need to add overhead and profit to create your billable rate.
A lot of contractors confuse the two and end up charging their cost instead of their rate. That keeps them broke.
Not if their wages are different. A lead carpenter who makes 30 dollars an hour costs you more than a helper who makes 18 dollars an hour.
Some contractors use a blended labor rate. They average the cost of all employees and charge one rate. That works if your crew mix is consistent.
Other contractors charge different rates for different skill levels. A lead might bill at 85 dollars an hour while a helper bills at 55 dollars an hour.
Either way, make sure your rate covers your cost plus overhead and profit.
Stop leaving money on the table because you underpriced labor.
Get your real labor cost with burden, non billable time, and overhead included. Check your billable rate before the next bid.
Check Your Pricing Before The Next QuoteJob Price Builder And Reports
The Job Price Builder is the main pricing tool. You enter your direct job costs, including materials, labor hours, subs, and other expenses. Then you add your overhead percentage, desired net margin, contingency buffer, and risk buffer.
The calculator shows your Bare Minimum Price, Target Price, Strong Price, and Minimum Walk Away Price. It also calculates your required markup, gross profit, net profit, and Bid Safety Score.
You can compare different pricing scenarios, adjust your margin, and see how the numbers change before you send the quote.
Target Price is your ideal bid price. It includes all costs, overhead, your desired net margin, and a small contingency buffer. This is the price you should send most of the time.
Strong Price adds a risk buffer on top of Target Price. Use this when the job has uncertainty, a difficult customer, tight timeline, unknown site conditions, or anything that could go wrong. Strong Price protects you from surprises.
Both prices are shown side by side so you can decide which one fits the job.
Minimum Walk Away Price is the lowest price you can charge and still cover all costs with a bare minimum profit. If the customer pushes you below this number, walk away. You will lose money.
This number is calculated by adding your direct costs, overhead, and a minimal margin just to keep the lights on. It does not include contingency or risk buffer.
A lot of contractors drop their price to win the job and end up below their Minimum Walk Away Price. That is how you stay busy and broke.
Bid Safety Score is a quick visual check that shows whether your bid is strong, acceptable, or risky based on your margin, contingency buffer, and risk buffer.
A score of 80 or higher is strong. A score between 60 and 80 is acceptable. A score under 60 is risky.
It is not a magic number. It is a sanity check. If your score is low, take another look at the bid before you send it.
Yes. The calculator includes a print or save report button. It creates a clean one page pricing report that shows your job name, customer name, estimator name, all your costs, pricing options, margin, markup, and Bid Safety Score.
You can save it as a PDF or print it. Some contractors keep the report in their job file. Some contractors show it to the customer to explain how the price was built.
Yes. The calculator saves your job data in your browser so you can come back to it later. It also saves your business settings, trade preset, and calculator defaults.
The data stays in your browser. It does not get uploaded anywhere. You are not sending data to a server or cloud. It is your data on your computer.
The calculator includes 7 tabs: Job Price Builder, Markup vs Margin, Overhead and Break Even, Labor Burden, Quick Price Check, Hourly Rate Builder, and Annual Revenue Target.
Each tab solves a different pricing problem. Markup vs Margin helps you understand the difference and calculate required markup. Overhead and Break Even calculates your overhead percentage and break even revenue. Labor Burden calculates your true labor cost. Quick Price Check is a fast markup calculator for small jobs. Hourly Rate Builder calculates your billable hourly rate. Annual Revenue Target helps you set revenue goals based on your desired income.
Website And HTML Tool Questions
No. It is a self contained HTML tool that runs in your browser. You do not need Excel, Google Sheets, or any other software.
You download one HTML file, open it in your browser, and start using it. It works on desktop, laptop, tablet, or phone. It does not require an internet connection after you download it.
Yes. After you download the HTML file, you can use it offline. You do not need an internet connection.
Open the file in your browser and it works. All the data stays on your computer. Nothing is uploaded or sent anywhere.
Yes. The package includes an embed version that you can add to any website or WordPress page.
You get embed instructions, and you can customize the business name, logo, colors, and default settings before you add it to your site.
A lot of contractors add the calculator to their website as a free tool for customers or as a pricing resource page.
Yes. The calculator includes a Customize Tool panel where you can add your business name, website URL, logo, brand colors, and default pricing settings.
You can save those settings in your browser, or you can export a customized version of the calculator with your settings permanently baked into the HTML file. That exported file works anywhere without needing to save settings again.
Yes. The calculator is mobile friendly. It works on phones and tablets.
The layout adjusts for smaller screens. Tables stack into cards. Buttons are touch friendly. You can price a job from your truck, job site, or kitchen table.
Neither. It is a single HTML file. You download it, open it in your browser, and use it. No installation. No login. No subscription.
You own the file. You can use it forever. You can save it on multiple devices. You can back it up. You can keep it in Dropbox or Google Drive.
No. All your data stays in your browser on your computer. Nothing is uploaded to a server or cloud.
The calculator does not require an account, login, or internet connection after you download it. Your pricing data is yours. Period.
Buyer Questions
Small contractors and trade business owners who price jobs themselves and want to stop guessing at margin, markup, overhead, and labor cost.
This tool is for general contractors, remodelers, roofers, HVAC contractors, plumbers, electricians, painters, flooring contractors, concrete contractors, landscapers, and any trade business owner who sends quotes and wants to check the numbers before they commit.
If you are tired of being busy but not making money, this tool helps.
One bad bid can cost more than this entire tool.
If you underprice one 20,000 dollar job by 5 percent because you forgot overhead or used the wrong markup, you just lost 1,000 dollars. That is more than the cost of the calculator.
If this tool helps you price one job better, avoid one thin bid, or walk away from one money losing quote, it pays for itself.
You get the full Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator HTML file, the embeddable version, setup instructions, quick start guide, license file, and support notes.
Everything is included. No upsells. No monthly fees. No subscriptions. You pay once and own it.
No. This is a single business license. You can use the calculator for your own contracting business, but you cannot install it on client websites, resell it, redistribute it, share it, give it away, or upload it to other marketplaces.
If you want to use it for multiple businesses or install it on client websites, you need a separate agency license.
Yes. The calculator includes an Export Customized Calculator button. It creates a new HTML file with your business name, logo, colors, and default settings permanently baked in.
You can use that customized version for your own business website.
You cannot resell it, redistribute it, share it, give it away, upload it to marketplaces, or install it on client websites unless you buy a separate agency license.
No. You download the HTML file, open it in your browser, and start using it. No coding required.
If you want to customize your business name, logo, and colors, you use the built in settings panel. No coding.
If you want to add it to your website, you copy and paste the embed code into a WordPress page. Still no coding.
No. This is a contractor pricing and profit tool for contractors, not homeowners.
It is not a lead capture form. It is not a homeowner instant quote generator. It is not a CRM. It is not estimating software.
It is a tool to help contractors check their pricing, understand margin, calculate overhead, include labor burden, and avoid thin bids before they send the quote.
No. This is a pricing and profit tool, not full estimating software or accounting software.
You still need to estimate your job costs. You still need to track expenses and job costs in your accounting system.
This tool helps you take your estimate and turn it into a profitable quote by adding overhead, calculating markup, checking margin, including labor burden, and comparing pricing options before you send the bid.
Digital downloads are final sale. You get immediate access to the full tool after purchase, so refunds are not available.
If you have technical issues or questions, contact support and we will help.
No. You pay once and own it. No subscriptions. No monthly fees. No recurring charges.
You download the HTML file and use it forever. You can save it on multiple devices, back it up, and keep it in cloud storage.
Stop Underpricing Jobs Before They Cost You Money
A lot of contractors lose money before the work even starts because the bid was wrong.
They forget overhead. They confuse markup with margin. They underprice labor. They win jobs that are too thin. They stay busy and still feel broke.
The Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator helps you check your pricing before you send the quote. You see your real margin, required markup, overhead recovery, labor burden, break even numbers, and Minimum Walk Away Price before you commit.
One bad bid can cost more than this entire tool. One good bid can pay for it.
Stop guessing. Start pricing with real numbers.
Get the Contractor Profit And Pricing Calculator and stop leaving money on the table.
Check your pricing, protect your profit, and avoid thin bids before they cost you money.
Get The Digital Download