OP
trev
Cracking idea mateGet a quote off British gas, and do it for £500 less.
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Discuss Pricing a Re-wire in the Business Related area at ElectriciansForums.net
Cracking idea mateGet a quote off British gas, and do it for £500 less.
Price the material quantity,estimate the amount of man days that it will take,add on a percentage to cover the costs of self employment,insurance tax,fuel and vehicle, tools etc and there is your figure
How many rewires have you assisted with to date ?
it would possibly be necessary to have done at least, say, a hundred, before reaching up to the level of a solo job.thats especially so if the house is occupied and the system has to be constructed and running as the old is being replaced
I use to go on £40 a point, so 10 sockets, 10 lights, £800 - includes materials, time, travel and the like, its an all inclusive price. Some here will find that expensive, depends on what part of the world your in. Cambridgeshire i would say your safe to price between £35-40 per point. Always worked out fair for me and never had any negative feedback.
I would say however, if your new and still getting your feet under the table, taking on a re-wire solo is a SERIOUS mistake. You won't hit target time deadlines, you inevitably hit issues you wouldn't perceive upon initial surveys, it's a lot of work to accomplish on your own let alone being new to the game, some jobs just need a second pair of hands, simple as that. I would suggest you re-consider diving head first into a full re-wire, and if you get the job, have your paper work perfect, - DO NOT lift a tool in anger until you have a contract of works written out and signed by the customer outlining every tiny detail about the job, i made this mistake, ended up in court and month and months of ball ache trying to get my money out of the scrotum who decided not to pay.
As already said, change your own board, get to grips with that side of things, and search for an experienced helping hand to help out with the re-wire if you get it. You'll need it mate.
best of luck[/QUOTE
This sounds like a bad way to quote for a full rewire. £40 per point so lets say 10 sockets down and 10 sockets up £800. 6 lights + switches down and the same upstairs gets you another £960, in total £1760, last full rewire i did the materials alone cost me just over £800 that would leave me £960 for me and my apprentice for about 5 days wages,he gets £50 per day which would leave me with £710 for the week.....take off fuel anything up to £75 for the week, so im already down to near on £600 for a week, nat insurance and tax taken off im down to £450. I would price as you do for just adding extra sockets or lights to an existing installation but on a full rewire its not the same. take into account the materials you would use on a full rewire against just adding a couple of sockets for someone. clips,capping 10mm bonding for gas and water,new tails and main earth,consumer unit,3 core and earth for 2 way lighting or singles if preffered.it all adds up and makes the price a lot different.
Im not sure at which point you saw Wade 88 state that everything that isnt a socket or a pendant is free...
Obviously, C/U, bonding, extractors, oven + hob circuit, outside lights, 2 way switching, spot lights, under unit lights, Immersion heaters, central heating, TV points, telephones etc etc etc are going to bring the price of a 2 up 2 down to nearer the 3k mark.
Having said that I'd usually go in minimum £50 per point and £100 for a pendant and switch
Personally I swear by price per point on domestic jobs. If there are circumstances which will make the job more time consuming ie: occupied house/egineering bricks/long travel etc just put the price up 20% or so. I always give the client a full itemised quote with terms at the bottom and nowadays I get them to sign it as a contract. Never had a dispute over an invoice.
Invariably what you quote for and what you end up installing are not the same thing and with an itemised price per point quote any variations are easy to charge for.
I'd usually expect to make £300-£400 a day using this method after paying the mate/labourer and the cost of materials.
qty | description | unit price | line total |
18 | Sockets @ £40 per item | £720 | |
25 | Down lights @ £40 per item | £1000 | |
6 | Pendant lights @ £40 per item | £240 | |
6 | TV points (RG6) @ £40 per item | £240 | |
2 | Fire alarms @ £40 per item | £80 | |
1 | New 17[SUP]th[/SUP] Edition RCD protected split load Consumer unit | £400 | |
1 | Bonding to incoming utilities | £150 | |
12 | Switch points @ 25 per item | £300 | |
1 | Repair damaged shower circuit | £100 | |
1 | Feed to outside security light | £40 | |
- | Material costs | £1075 | |
Subtotal | £4345 | ||
Sales Tax | -- | ||
Total | |||
A hundred???
WTF???
What kind of person needs to have been on a hundred rewires in order to know how to do one??? If somebody still doesnt know how to pull floorboards, drill joists, chase walls and poke cables around after being on 50 rewires I'd say its time for them to get a job on the bins...
Get a quote off British gas, and do it for £500 less.
Last re-wire i did broke down like this:
qty description unit price line total 18 Sockets @ £40 per item £720 25 Down lights @ £40 per item £1000 6 Pendant lights @ £40 per item £240 6 TV points (RG6) @ £40 per item £240 2 Fire alarms @ £40 per item £80 1 New 17[SUP]th[/SUP] Edition RCD protected split load Consumer unit £400 1 Bonding to incoming utilities £150 12 Switch points @ 25 per item £300 1 Repair damaged shower circuit £100 1 Feed to outside security light £40 - Material costs £1075 Subtotal £4345 Sales Tax -- Total
I was £3000 cheaper than the two earlier quotes they had been given. Welcome to the south
Gotta love the south eh wade
I did a job near you (West clandon) recently.
So...out of interest...your price per point is for labour only? Not seen it done like that before. My worry is they'd ask how long it was gonna take then work out what you're making a day and then decide that you're a money grabbing **nt (which of course I am)
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