Rough Terrain Crane Rental Calculator

Smart rental estimates for every rough terrain lift. Compare hourly, daily, weekly, and monthly rates. See full breakdown, then export a clean quote instantly.

Calculator Inputs
Enter project details to estimate rental, travel, staffing, and add-ons.
Base rates vary by crane size and market.
Weekly/monthly include built-in bulk discounts.
Applies a market multiplier to base pricing.
Minimum billable hours can apply.
Use whole days for most rentals.
weeks months
Used when billing unit is weekly or monthly.
Used to convert days to equivalent hours.
Typical is 5 working days.
Shift multipliers account for premium staffing.
Length over included boom adds a surcharge.
Applies only to feet above the included boom.
Common add-ons priced by time used.
Used to estimate mobilization costs.
Includes trucking, logistics, and dispatch.
Ensures small moves cover fixed costs.
Waiting time billed at a reduced rate.
Typical standby is 0.50–0.70 of hourly rate.
Charged as a premium above base pricing.
If not included, operator cost is excluded.
Used only when operator is included.
Applied across equivalent rental days.
Common overtime multiplier is 1.5.
Engineering fee supports lift planning effort.
Road permits, access, and local approvals.
Flaggers, cones, and temporary closures.
Applied to subtotal before discounts.
Typical range is 2–6% depending on risk.
Optional waiver can reduce unexpected exposure.
Common minimum is 4 hours.
Often 1 day minimum.
Volume discounts are added automatically.
Apply local sales tax or VAT if required.
Reset
How to use this calculator
  1. Choose a capacity class that meets your lift chart requirements.
  2. Select a billing unit, then enter hours/days/weeks/months accordingly.
  3. Set region and shift to reflect local market conditions.
  4. Enter boom length and add attachments needed for the lift.
  5. Fill in travel, standby, and overtime if applicable.
  6. Add operator, permits, traffic control, and lift complexity fees.
  7. Apply fuel, insurance, discounts, and tax. Press Calculate.
  8. Use Download CSV or Download PDF for a shareable quote.
Formula used

This estimate combines base rental pricing with project multipliers and add-ons, then applies surcharges, discounts, and tax.

Step Calculation
1) Base rental Base = Rate(unit, capacity) × Quantity × Region × Shift
2) Boom surcharge ExtraBoom = max(0, Boom − IncludedBoom) × ExtraRate × EqDays × SizeFactor
3) Attachments Attach = Σ(AttachmentRate × EqHours/EqDays)
4) Mobilization Mob = max(MinMob, Miles × PerMile)
5) Standby & overtime Standby = StandbyHours × (HourlyRate × Mults × StandbyMult)
OT Premium = OTHours × (HourlyRate × Mults × (OTMult − 1))
6) Operator & fees Operator = (OpHours/day × EqDays × OpRate) + (OTHours × OpRate × OTMult)
Engineering + Permits + Traffic
7) Surcharges Fuel = CoreSubtotal × Fuel%, Insurance = CoreSubtotal × Insurance%, Waiver = CoreSubtotal × Waiver%
8) Discounts & tax Discount = Subtotal × (Volume% + Custom%)
Tax = (Subtotal − Discount) × Tax%
Final total Total = Subtotal − Discount + Tax
Notes: Rates and multipliers are configurable inputs for planning purposes. For an exact quote, confirm vendor minimums, dispatch fees, and local compliance requirements.

Rough terrain crane rental guide

1) What this estimator covers

This calculator models a typical rough terrain crane hire quote by combining base rental rates with project drivers: capacity class, billing period, region and shift premiums, mobilization mileage, boom length needs, attachments, standby time, overtime, operator cost, permits, traffic control, and percentage-based surcharges.

2) Capacity class and base rate bands

Larger machines generally have higher hourly and daily pricing because of higher ownership, maintenance, and transport costs. The estimator includes common capacity bands from 35 to 130 tons, with separate hourly and daily baselines. Use the smallest class that safely meets the lift chart after accounting for radius, boom, and rigging weight.

3) Billing periods and production assumptions

Hourly quotes often include minimum billable hours (commonly four). Daily rentals typically assume an 8-hour shift, while weekly and monthly rentals are usually discounted compared to buying single days. In this tool, weekly pricing approximates five working days with an 8% discount, and monthly pricing approximates 22 working days with a 15% discount.

4) Region and shift multipliers

Market conditions change pricing. Metro areas can carry higher labor and compliance costs, while remote locations may increase travel, support, and downtime risk. Shift premiums also matter: double shifts and night work often add staffing and supervision requirements. This calculator applies a multiplier to reflect those impacts consistently across line items.

5) Boom length, lift radius, and attachments

Rough terrain cranes include a typical boom length within the base rate. If your required boom exceeds that included length, the estimator adds a per‑foot surcharge per day, scaled slightly by crane size. Attachments like fly jibs, spreader bars, hook blocks, mats, and rigging are priced by time to match how suppliers invoice these add-ons.

6) Mobilization, standby, and overtime

Mobilization is estimated as a per‑mile charge with a minimum fee to cover dispatch and trucking. Standby is modeled as a reduced percentage of the hourly rate (commonly 50–70%). Overtime is modeled as a premium above the base rate using your overtime multiplier, helping you compare extended shifts versus additional days.

7) Operator, compliance, and planning costs

Many rentals bundle an operator, but rates can still be itemized for transparency. Critical or complex lifts may require lift plans, engineered picks, or third‑party oversight. Permits and traffic control are included as flat costs because they vary heavily by jurisdiction, access roads, and required closures.

8) Surcharges, discounts, and budgeting

Fuel, insurance, and optional waivers are applied as percentages on the core subtotal. The tool also adds automatic volume discounts based on equivalent rental days: 2% at 2+ days, 4% at 5+ days, 6% at 10+ days, and 8% at 20+ days. Use exports to share assumptions and revise inputs as the schedule tightens.

FAQs

1) Why do hourly quotes still feel expensive?

Hourly rentals commonly include minimum billable hours, mobilization, and premium staffing. Even a short lift can trigger dispatch and setup costs that don’t scale down proportionally.

2) How do I pick the right capacity class?

Start with your load weight plus rigging, then confirm required radius and boom configuration using a load chart. Choose the smallest crane that meets the chart with a practical safety margin.

3) What is “boom length surcharge”?

If your required boom exceeds the included boom length in the selected class, suppliers often charge for added wear, setup, and configuration time. This tool models that as a per‑foot, per‑day surcharge.

4) When should I use standby hours?

Use standby when the crane and crew remain on site but cannot work due to upstream delays, inspections, or access issues. Standby is typically billed at a reduced fraction of the normal hourly rate.

5) Does overtime affect both crane and operator?

Often yes. Overtime can increase the crane’s hourly premium and the operator’s labor cost. Enter overtime hours to see the incremental premium and to compare “long day” versus “extra day” options.

6) Are fuel and insurance percentages realistic?

They’re planning placeholders. Fuel surcharges frequently range from 3–10%, and insurance or waivers vary by lift risk and contract terms. Replace them with your vendor’s published percentages for tighter estimates.

7) Is this a final quote?

It’s a structured estimate. Vendor minimums, dispatch fees, site access, ground conditions, and local regulations can change pricing. Use the CSV/PDF exports to align assumptions before requesting a formal quotation.

Example scenarios
Sample entries to demonstrate typical rental inputs.
Scenario Capacity Unit Qty Region Boom (ft) Travel (mi) Attachments Estimated total (USD)
Steel placement 70 Ton Daily 2 days Major metro 120 30 Fly jib, Rigging $6,034.75
HVAC roof lift 50 Ton Hourly 6 hours Standard 95 15 Hook block $1,972.00
Remote generator set 90 Ton Weekly 1 week Remote / rural 130 90 Mats, Spreader $17,888.38
These examples show partial totals for illustration. Your calculated quote includes surcharges, discounts, and tax based on your inputs.

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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.