- Location
- St. Paul, MN
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Clearly prices vary drastically! I can hire a top notch climber in this area for $500-600/day, and that’s figuring 8-10 hours onsite, and no travel charge.As I'm making out my 2023 contract for companies I climb for, I was curious to see what other climbers are charging for contract climbing.
Just to be clear my definition of a contract climber is someone who has all the right insurance, all their own gear/saws and can do any job.
I know rates vary widely in different areas but just curious.
In MN I charge $150/hr with a 4 hour minimum.
Crane work I charge $175/hr with a 4 hour minimum.
Anything over 50 miles from my house gets a travel fee of $150 one way.
Thanks
I carry my own general liability and workers comp insurance.Curious as to what insurance you are referring to?
Two guys, plus me, chipper truck and mini. Average 5k a day, crane work average is closer to 7 to 8kWow, what are companies getting for a day with two guys, chipper, truck, loader in St Paul?
Full wc or ghost?I carry my own general liability and workers comp insurance.
I'm guessing ghost. From what I understand it covers the company I'm working for so they're not liable for me. I could be wrong on that, I just got it because companies were asking for it.Full wc or ghost?
The cost of living is 3.64% higher in Asheville, NC than in St Paul MN. Yet. Contract climbers are still making about $400 a day. #sadI'm guessing ghost. From what I understand it covers the company I'm working for so they're not liable for me. I could be wrong on that, I just got it because companies were asking for it.
That is sad. The amount of skill and knowledge it takes to contract climb but more so the wear and tear on our bodies. $400 to me isn't worth it, I'd find another job.The cost of living is 3.64% higher in Asheville, NC than in St Paul MN. Yet. Contract climbers are still making about $400 a day. #sad
This is about the highest paying job you could find in this town without a masters or PHD.That is sad. The amount of skill and knowledge it takes to contract climb but more so the wear and tear on our bodies. $400 to me isn't worth it, I'd find another job.
So there’s 260 working days in a year, let’s bring it down to 200 for holidays and sick.Two guys, plus me, chipper truck and mini. Average 5k a day, crane work average is closer to 7 to 8k
You don't America much do you? You'd be lucky to get two weeks holidays (so 10 working days) here. And sick days are an urban legend.So there’s 260 working days in a year, let’s bring it down to 200 for holidays and sick.
200 x 5k = 1 million a year (conservative estimate)
is that right?
8-10 hours on-site, ouch. I'm maxed out at 6 lol. I thought that was the universal tree man's agreement.Clearly prices vary drastically! I can hire a top notch climber in this area for $500-600/day, and that’s figuring 8-10 hours onsite, and no travel charge.
8-10 hours....does that mean you typically keep your contract guy around for cleanup? Legitimately curious. Most guys I know pay for the climber to come in, put the tree on the ground, and GTFO.Clearly prices vary drastically! I can hire a top notch climber in this area for $500-600/day, and that’s figuring 8-10 hours onsite, and no travel charge.
I'd like to see a job you guys bid (price wise) that would be 8 hours of craning and you're not bidding 10k plus. 1,400 is a drop in the bucket at that point.Rates in our area are very similar to Reach. We use several different contract climbers regularly.
At $1400/day for doing crane work you would get laughed off the jobsite around here. By the time a company paid the climber plus picked up the workmans comp(22 percent here, so $308 additional) and paid the crane rental, there would be basically nothing left on most jobs. But i understand our market is way different than yours. Only you know your market.
Obviously areas differ. Crane rental here is $350/hr so at 8 hours their bill would be $2800. A 4 man crew with two chip trucks, chipper, mini, and log trailer runs $5800 for the day. So all told that's $8600. And that is an extreme example that I've never actually witnessed. Usually the crane is sent packing as soon as the tree is down and the rest is crew time spent processing, cleanup, dumping. Longest I've ever seen a crane on site is 5 hours, so that knocks $1000 off the price.I'd like to see a job you guys bid (price wise) that would be 8 hours of craning and you're not bidding 10k plus. 1,400 is a drop in the bucket at that point.