Contractor Estimate Calculator: The Math the Pros Use
A contractor estimate calculator runs five formulas: materials (quantity × unit cost × (1 + waste%)), labor (hours × burdened rate), subs, other (permits, equipment, dump), and then price = total direct cost ÷ (1 − target margin). The last formula is the one that separates pros from guessers — it sets the price to actually hit your margin, instead of “adding a percent” and coming up short.
You can build this on paper, in a spreadsheet, or in a calculator — but the math is the same. Here’s exactly what’s happening under the hood, so your number is defensible and profitable.
The five formulas
- Materials = Σ (quantity × unit cost) × (1 + waste %). Waste is 5–15% depending on material/layout.
- Labor = estimated hours × burdened labor rate (not the wage).
- Subcontractors = quoted sub costs (often marked up 10–15% for coordination).
- Other = permits + equipment rental + dump fees + mobilization.
- Price = (Materials + Labor + Subs + Other) ÷ (1 − target margin).
A worked example
| Input | Math | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Materials | $3,000 × 1.08 waste | $3,240 |
| Labor | 40 hrs × $37.50 burdened | $1,500 |
| Subs | $1,200 × 1.10 | $1,320 |
| Permits/dump | $300 | |
| Direct cost | $6,360 | |
| Price @ 25% margin | $6,360 ÷ 0.75 | $8,480 |
“Adding 25%” would have priced it at $7,950 — a real $530 short of the margin you intended. The division formula is the whole game.
Contractor Estimate Calculator (General)
All five formulas wired up: enter quantities, your burdened rate, subs, and a target margin — it returns the margin-correct price, line by line, for any trade. Excel + Google Sheets.
Get the labor input right with the Labor Burden Calculator, set the right markup using markup vs margin, and see the full bid workflow in how to estimate a job.
Trade Templates Co. builds back-office templates for solo trade businesses, QA’d against real job numbers before they ship. Numbers are illustrative.
Frequently asked questions
What formula does a contractor estimate calculator use for price?
Price = total direct cost ÷ (1 − target margin). Dividing (not adding a percent) is what makes the price actually hit your margin.
Should I mark up subcontractor costs?
Commonly yes — 10–15% — to cover the coordination, risk, and warranty you carry on their work.
Do I use wage or burdened rate for labor?
Burdened rate, always — the wage understates true cost by 30–50%.
Can the calculator handle any trade?
Yes — the five-formula structure is trade-agnostic; only the inputs (waste %, production rate, sub mix) change.
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