HANDYMAN FINANCIALS
Labor Cost Calculator
This calculator allows you to accurately estimate the cost of labor for a given project. Download a copy of our free calculator and use it on the go!
What is a handyman labor cost calculator?
A handyman labor cost calculator is a tool used to estimate the cost of labor for handyman jobs. It considers factors like hourly wage, overhead costs, and profit margin. It even includes a markup factor to determine a comprehensive labor cost.
Why should I use a handyman labor calculator?
Using a calculator helps ensure accurate and fair pricing for both the technician and the customer. It provides a transparent estimate, helps in budgeting and can prevent disputes over labor costs.
How do you use this calculator?
To use this calculator and determine handyman labor costs, follow the seven steps outlined below.
A simple formula for calculating handyman labor rates might looks like this:
Labor Cost = (Hourly Wage + Overhead Costs + Profit Margin) × Markup Factor
- Hourly Wage: This is the hourly rate you pay each tech for handyman jobs. It will vary depending on the tech’s experience and skill level.
- Overhead Costs: These are the indirect costs associated with running a handyman business. Think insurance, tools, equipment, office space, administrative costs, break room supplies, vehicle maintenance, and more. Divide your annual overhead costs by the total number of billable hours worked by your technicians in a year to get the overhead cost per hour.
- Profit Margin: This is the percentage of profit you want to make on top of covering your average costs.
- Markup Factor: This is a multiplier that helps cover the overhead costs, profit margin, and other miscellaneous expenses.
How do I calculate handyman labor costs step by step?
7 Steps to Pricing Handyman Labor
Handyman labor costs can depend on several factors. As you’re calculating, you’ll need to take into account the skill levels of your team (master technician, journeyman, or apprentice), geographical location, type of handyman work, overhead costs and market demand.
It may seem complicated, but it’s not so bad! Let’s walk through it step by step.
Step 1: Calculate overhead costs.
Average annual overhead costs include all fixed and variable assets required to operate the business. This includes rent, insurance, utilities, break room supplies and more. These costs do not include payroll.
Step 2: Calculate the number of techs on payroll.
Next, figure out how many revenue-generating techs you plan to employ over the next 12 months. Include any new hires or team reductions. For instance, if you plan to open a new department, like heat pump or furnace installs, be sure to include those new employees in your calculations.
Step 3: Determine how many working hours each tech works annually.
To calculate your team’s annual working hours, you need to first know the total available working hours and your team’s total non-billable hours (think vacation days and holidays) in a year.
For this example, let’s say each of your techs works 40 hours a week and annually receives 10 days off for vacation and 7 days off for federal holidays.
Calculate the number of available working hours:
You can determine the total available working hours by multiplying each tech’s weekly hours (40) by the number of weeks in a year (52).
40 hours × 52 weeks = 2,080 total available working hours
Calculate the number of non-billable hours:
Next, determine the total non-billable hours by multiplying the number of vacation days and holidays each tech receives (17) by the number of hours in a typical workday (8).
(10 vacation days + 7 holidays) × 8 hours = 136 non-billable hours
Calculate the number of working hours:
Once you have those two figures, subtract the non-billable hours (136) from the total available working hours (2,080) to determine the number of annual working hours per tech.
2,080 hours – 136 hours = 1,944 hours per tech
Enter the total annual working hours per tech (1,944) into the labor cost calculator.
Step 4: Calculate projected billable hours per tech.
To determine projected billable hours per tech, calculate the average percentage of their workday that results in billable hours. Generally, 30% is good efficiency, while 50% is highly efficient. For example, at 30%, a tech bills 2.4 hours out of an 8-hour day.
Convert the efficiency rate to a decimal (for example, 30% = 0.30) and multiply by the total annual working hours per tech (from Step 3). With 1,944 available hours and a 30% rate, you get 583.2 billable hours per year. Enter this total into the calculator to estimate direct labor costs.
Formula:
Available Working Hours × Average Billable Efficiency Rate = Projected Billable Hours per Tech Each Year
Step 5: Calculate the hourly rate to cover overhead only.
To determine the hourly rate that would cover overhead costs only, you need to know the team’s total billable hours for the year and your annual overhead costs (from Step 1).
Total billable hours for team in a year:
To calculate the total billable hours for the team, take the projected number of billable hours each technician works (from Step 4) and multiply it by the number of technicians you plan to employ over the next year. For this example, let’s say you plan to have 5 techs.
583.2 annual billable hours × 5 technicians = 2,916 billable hours for technician team
Hourly rate to cover overhead only:
To get the hourly rate that would cover overhead only, divide your total overhead costs (from Step 1) by the team’s total billable hours in a year. For this example, let’s say overhead costs are $100,000.
$100,000 overhead costs / 2,916 total billable hours = $34.29 per hour to cover overhead costs only
Formula:
Overhead Costs / Annual Total Billable Hours = Hourly Rate to Cover Overhead Costs Only
Step 6: Calculate your break-even labor rate per billable hour.
To determine the break-even labor rate per billable hour that covers both overhead and labor costs, you need to first calculate the technician payroll cost.
Calculate technician payroll cost:
Multiply the average hourly payroll rate per tech by the total billable hours per year for all techs (from Step 5). For this example, let’s say the average hourly payroll rate is $28.
$28 per hour × 2,916 total billable hours = $81,648
Calculate total expenses:
Once you have that figure, combine the payroll cost with your overhead costs (from Step 1) to calculate your total expenses. For this example, let’s say overhead costs are $100,000.
$81,648 for technician payroll + $100,000 for overhead = $181,648 total expenses
Calculate break-even labor rate:
To calculate the break-even labor rate, divide your total expenses (payroll cost + overhead costs) by the total number of billable hours for your tech team (from Step 5).
$181,648 / 2,916 hours = $62.29 per billable hour
Step 7: Calculate your profitable labor rate.
Last, but not least, determine the billable rate needed to reach your desired net profit. For this example, let’s say you’d like to achieve 30% net profit.
Calculate direct labor rate for profitability:
First, convert your desired net profit percentage into a decimal by dividing it by 100.
30% / 100 = 0.30
Next, subtract that amount from 1.
1 – 0.30 = 0.70
Lastly, divide your break-even rate per billable hour (from Step 6) by that amount.
$62.29 / 0.70 = $88.99 billable hour rate to reach 30% net profit
Formula:
(Break-Even Rate per Billable Hour) / (1 – Desired Net Profit Percentage Expressed in Decimals) = Profitable Billable Labor Rate
Take this labor cost calculator on every job
Get our free handyman labor cost calculator and find the labor rate that actually covers your costs and your profit. No more pricing off a tech’s wage and wondering where the money went.
Handyman labor cost calculator: FAQs
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What is labor burden, and why does it matter for handyman pricing?
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Labor burden is the total cost of employing a technician beyond their base wage — payroll taxes, workers’ comp, insurance, benefits, vehicle, tools, training, and overhead allocation. For most handyman businesses, labor burden adds 25–40% on top of base wages, so a tech you pay $25/hour actually costs you $31–$35/hour before you’ve earned a dime. Pricing off base wage instead of fully burdened cost is the most common reason handyman businesses lose money on labor.
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What’s the difference between labor cost and labor rate?
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Labor cost is what it costs you to put a technician on a job — their wage plus burden. Labor rate is what you charge the customer per hour, which includes your labor cost plus profit margin. The gap between the two is your margin. A tech costing you $35/hour fully burdened might be billed to the customer at $85/hour, with the $50 difference covering profit and unbilled time.
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What percentage of revenue should labor cost be for a handyman business?
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For a healthy handyman business, direct labor should run 25–35% of revenue, with total labor including burden staying under 50%. If labor exceeds 50% of revenue, you’re either underpricing your services or running at low billable efficiency. Use this calculator to find the billable rate that keeps labor in a profitable range.
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What is billable efficiency, and how does it affect my labor rate?
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Billable efficiency is the percentage of a technician’s paid hours you can actually bill to customers. A tech paid for 8 hours but billing only 2.4 of them is running at 30% efficiency — the industry baseline. The rest goes to driving, restocking, paperwork, and downtime. Lower efficiency means your billable rate has to be higher to cover the unbilled hours you’re still paying for, which is why two businesses paying the same wage can land on very different labor rates.
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Why is my labor rate so much higher than what I pay my technician?
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Your labor rate is higher than your technician’s wage because it has to cover everything beyond the wage: payroll taxes, insurance, benefits, vehicle and fuel, tools, overhead, unbilled hours, and profit. A tech earning $28/hour can easily need to be billed at $85–$90/hour to keep the business profitable once burden, billable efficiency, and target margin are factored in — exactly what this calculator works out for you.
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What’s a good labor markup for handyman work?
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Most handyman businesses apply a labor markup of 1.5× to 3× the technician’s base wage to reach a profitable billable rate, depending on overhead and billable efficiency. A solo handyman with low overhead might mark up 1.5×–2×; a business with employees, vehicles, and an office typically needs 2.5×–3×. Markup isn’t profit — most of it covers burden and unbilled time before any profit is left over.
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Should I charge the same labor rate for every type of handyman job?
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Not necessarily. Many handyman businesses charge a higher labor rate for specialized or higher-liability work (electrical, plumbing-adjacent, or anything requiring permits or advanced skill) and a standard rate for general repairs. You can also tier rates by technician skill level — master, journeyman, apprentice. The key is that every rate, regardless of tier, must clear your fully burdened labor cost plus target margin.
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How do I lower my labor cost without cutting wages?
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The fastest way to lower effective labor cost is to raise billable efficiency — reduce drive time with tighter routing, cut paperwork with mobile invoicing, minimize restocking trips with a well-stocked truck, and book jobs more densely. Improving efficiency from 30% to 40% can drop your required billable rate significantly without touching what you pay your techs. Cutting wages, by contrast, usually raises turnover costs and lowers quality, which costs more long-term.