Plan formwork costs with itemized inputs and clear totals. Compare systems, rates, and allowances. Produce exportable results for estimating, bidding, and approvals.
| Scenario | Area | System | Type | Material rate | Labor rate | Overhead | Profit |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Residential slab | 120 m² | Purchase | Timber | 18 / m² | 9 / m² | 10% | 12% |
| Core walls | 260 m² | Rental | System panels | — | 11 / m² | 12% | 15% |
| Columns set | 85 m² | Purchase | Steel | 32 / m² | 10 / m² | 9% | 10% |
These rows are examples only. Use project-specific rates and allowances.
Purchase material gross: MaterialGross = Area × MaterialRate
Material with wastage: MaterialTotal = MaterialGross × (1 + Wastage%/100)
Effective material per project: MaterialEffective = MaterialTotal ÷ ReuseCycles
Rental cost: RentalCost = Area × RentalRatePerDay × RentalDays
Labor cost: LaborCost = Area × LaborRate
Accessories: Accessories = (MaterialEffective + RentalCost + LaborCost) × Accessories%/100
Direct subtotal: DirectSubtotal = MaterialEffective + RentalCost + LaborCost + Accessories + Scaffolding + Transport + Engineering
Overhead: Overhead = DirectSubtotal × Overhead%/100
Profit: Profit = (DirectSubtotal + Overhead) × Profit%/100
Tax/VAT: Tax = (DirectSubtotal + Overhead + Profit) × Tax%/100
Total: TotalCost = DirectSubtotal + Overhead + Profit + Tax
Unit cost: UnitCost = TotalCost ÷ Area
Note: For rental projects, material purchase is treated as zero.
Formwork estimating works best when you separate variable costs from fixed allowances. Variable costs include effective materials, rentals, labor, and consumables that scale with contact area. Fixed allowances include scaffolding, transport, and engineering. This calculator mirrors that structure so your totals remain auditable during tender reviews.
The biggest error source is inconsistent area takeoff. For slabs, use the soffit contact area. For walls, count both faces when both require forming. For beams and columns, include sides and soffits as applicable. Keep one method across the project so unit cost comparisons remain meaningful.
Rental can be attractive for short durations, irregular geometry, or limited storage and handling. Purchase becomes competitive when repeat pours are planned and the system remains serviceable. This calculator lets you model both paths: purchase uses reuse cycles, while rental uses daily rates and days on hire.
Purchased systems should be amortized across expected reuse cycles. If you plan eight cycles, only one-eighth of the adjusted material cost is charged to the current project. That is why the calculator applies wastage first, then divides by reuse cycles. Use conservative cycles when damage risk is high.
Labor cost is often the dominant component on complex pours. Productivity changes with crew experience, repetition, and access. Short cycle times can also increase overtime, supervision, and rework risk. Enter a labor rate per area that reflects actual crews, typical pour sizes, and the planned sequence.
Tie rods, clamps, wedges, spacers, chamfer strips, and release agents are small individually but significant in total. Many teams apply a percentage to cover these items because they scale with formed area and repetition. This calculator applies an accessories percentage on the main variable subtotal to stay proportional.
Overhead typically includes supervision, small tools, storage, handling, and site support. Profit is usually applied after overhead because it reflects business risk and cash flow. Tax or VAT is often applied on the final billed amount, but requirements vary. Adjust these percentages to match your local practice and contracts.
For tender submissions, a clear breakdown reduces disputes and speeds approvals. The CSV export supports spreadsheet checks and scenario comparisons, while the PDF provides a simple shareable report. Store the unit cost and assumptions alongside project notes so future pours can be benchmarked quickly and consistently.
Formwork is driven by contact area, not volume. Use soffit and side contact surfaces that will be formed. Volume can hide geometry changes that impact forming labor and accessories.
Start with manufacturer guidance, then reduce for site damage, storage, and handling. If the project has many repetitive pours, reuse cycles can be higher. When uncertain, choose conservative cycles to avoid underpricing.
Wastage is mainly for materials, offcuts, and losses. Labor variability is better handled by adjusting the labor rate or adding overhead. This calculator applies wastage only to the purchase material portion.
Include ties, clamps, fasteners, release agents, sealants, spacers, minor repairs, and small consumables. If your contract separately measures some items, reduce the percentage so you do not double count.
Put delivery, pickup, and handling fees into the transport lump sum. If the supplier charges installation support, include it in labor or engineering. Keep the rental rate and days reserved for time-based hire cost.
Unit cost helps compare options across pours and projects. It highlights when labor productivity is slipping or rental days are extending. Use it for quick sanity checks against historical benchmarks and market rates.
Yes. Run each pour separately using its own area and assumptions, export the CSV, and sum totals in a spreadsheet. This approach preserves different cycle times, rental days, and productivity conditions per pour.
Formwork costs can shift quickly with cycle time, crew productivity, and reuse quality. A rental system often suits short durations, while purchase can pay off when reuse cycles remain high. Accessories and consumables are commonly underestimated because small items accumulate across pours. Overheads should reflect supervision, small tools, storage, and equipment handling. Profit and tax/VAT are typically applied after overhead, but practices differ by contractor and region.
For high-rise work, track rental days carefully to avoid unplanned extensions. For repetitive floor plates, reuse cycles can be modeled more aggressively, but only if formwork remains serviceable. If you are pricing multiple pours, you can run separate calculations per pour and sum the totals. Always verify the area measurement method so that slabs, beams, and wall faces are counted consistently.
Estimate formwork costs accurately, plan budgets, and reduce surprises.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.