| They give you a figure. You stare at them with no expression. They will immediately start stammering and lower the price. Then you tell them that's not good enough. Then they lower the price again. If they're a good contractor you accept. Works every time. Follow me for more tips. |
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Does anyone know approximately much these bathroom/kitchen remodelers make who have a small crew, maybe 3 guys?
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| I recently had a demo and reinstall of an entire bathroom. All materials included 20K |
| I’m shocked to see so many people don’t negotiate! i guess this is why they come up with these crazy prices. I always get multiple bids and always negotiate. Never have i ever agree to the face value /list price quote . It’s just a starting point. Scope creep always happens because i add things mid project, but i find that adding things is wayyy cheaper than getting pricing up front. |
This. The contractor is telling you what your job is worth to them. |
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I just tell them what I was prepared to pay and ask how we can get it down to that price.
For example we are good at painting so remove painting from the quote. For a basement they were charging us 6x the material cost for a vinyl plank floor so we ended up doing that part ourselves. I have never been able to get them to actually lower their profit margin so you are all more savvy than I am. |
| It is a feast or famine thing for these guys. When they need work, their prices will reflect that. When they don't need it, their rates will be high. |
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I don't worry about how much profit small businesses are making. I look at competing offers, reputation for quality, value of the result, and if I can afford it.
People deserve to earn a living like I do. |
I just an email with the project description and the bid, and an offer of a 10% discount if sign it soon. I've never had someone offer me a price orally in person. That's ridiculous car sales behavior. |
"This sort of project costs between $10 and $100/sq ft, or $5K-$50K depending on materials quality, and region of the country". So helpful. |
This doesn’t work, or at least it didn’t for me. I got a quote for polishing some new marble tile floors we installed—so this was just labor, no materials involved (except for some capitalization and/or depreciation for the machine they already owned). I emailed them back, told him the rate seemed high based on the number of hours of labor this would require, and asked him if he could reduce the quote. They never responded back. This was at the end of a big renovation so I was already tight on cash and just decided not to do the job instead of getting other quotes. |
How do you know they’re unpadded? They don’t add a “bs” line to the proposal. |
Of course. But for most of use, our first duty is to make sure we use our hard earned money wisely to take care of our family. I'm doing a disservice to my kids if I'm overpaying a contractor when the money could have been used to finance their education. My duty isn't to make sure the contractor earns a living. That's the duty of the contractor. When we negotiate, we are each fighting to maximize our respective positions. It's fair game. |
exactly they barely work, they'll work a few months then go off and get drunk or high on vacation for most of the year, not reliable people |
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LOL! they always jack up the price by 40-50% so I negotiate hard.
OP, honestly, if you are asking about it then you aren't made to negotiate. Sorry |