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Discuss Pricing in the UK Electrical Forum area at ElectriciansForums.net
So what price per item is a good guide? Say some one wants 4 extra sockets and they bought the cable and sockets. Could you say £40 per point?Depends on the job, if its new build then pricing per item is generally straightforward.
Jobs that include alterations and/or additions can be a more awkward due to what you might find during the job. What might on the face of it look like a straightforward job can end up a nightmare if you come across some previously dodgy or old installs.
You can offer a set price to your client with a caveat that upon inspection if you find additional requirements these may be extra.
I generally price which ever way fits the job best. Sometimes I work it all out and whack on a 10-20% contingency, if I fear the job may entail more work than expected. After a while you get a feel for it and can judge one way or another. This also applies to the client, in that whether they appear to be mean, generous or sensible.
You could but think you are under pricing at that unless all virtually next to one another on a stud wall!Could you say £40 per point?
Per point can still have so many variations etc .You could but think you are under pricing at that unless all virtually next to one another on a stud wall!
£50-60 an hr?? Thought £25 an hr was kind of going rate to be honest. So how do you quote a full rewire? Do you charge per point? Trying to sort my pricing out as I don’t like an hrly rate as i can put the work in fast on jobs at times.If you are unsure of the extent of work required , then an hourly rate is your safest best. somewhere in the £50-60 per hour is what most sparks in my area charge for small jobs. Some charge a lot more especially for more specialised stuff like board changes and eicrs but as a rule I quote £60 ph nearly always...
40£ per socket is way too cheap imo , if the customer really wants you 'on price' then I would quote £300 otherwise I let some other shmuck do it
I was charging £25 ph 15 years ago but had so much work on it was getting silly , so i slowly upped my rate year on year on year£50-60 an hr?? Thought £25 an hr was kind of going rate to be honest. So how do you quote a full rewire? Do you charge per point? Trying to sort my pricing out as I don’t like an hrly rate as i can put the work in fast on jobs at times.
Yeah i know that but just when a customer asks for a breakdown or if they did i would be able to cover myself in the pricing. Must be somewhere where you do point pricing. A house is a house end of day all pretty similar in build etc,I was charging £25 ph 15 years ago but had so much work on it was getting silly , so i slowly upped my rate year on year on year
a full re-wire would involve a site visit , inspection of the loft area , flooring , walls , discuss making damage , making good , redecoration , what they want , what they don;t want etc etc
once you are armed with all this information you can estimate a price
i have done re-wires as cheap as 3 grand right up to 10 grand and more
no 2 jobs are ever the same so imo point per price doesnt work unless its a string of identical new builds
New builds! Complete unoccupied refurbs!Must be somewhere where you do point pricing.
So new builds then, do you price per point and what do you price?New builds! Complete unoccupied refurbs!
Never occupied premises.
How long is a piece of string?So new builds then, do you price per point and what do you price?
So new builds then, do you price per point and what do you price?
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