Accurate rental estimates in minutes, not hours. Adjust rates, duration, add‑ons, and fees quickly here. Export results, share with teams, and rent confidently now.
Base rental cost (per unit)
Subtotal (before discount)
subtotal = base_rental + accessories + delivery + pickup + insurance + waiver + calibration + training + operator + late_fees
Discount and tax
taxable = max(0, subtotal − (subtotal × discount%))
tax = taxable × tax%
grand_total = taxable + tax
Deposit and amount due now
deposit = fixed_deposit (if > 0) else grand_total × deposit%
amount_due_now = grand_total + deposit
This tool provides an estimate; real quotes may differ by supplier policies.
Examples show how duration and add‑ons can change totals.
| Scenario | Units | Days | Rates (D/W/M) | Add‑ons | Delivery+Pickup | Discount | Tax | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Site set‑out | 1 | 5 | 120 / 650 / 2400 | Tripod, Prism, Battery | 50 | 0% | 8% | Short rental, daily often best. |
| Bridge works | 2 | 18 | 120 / 650 / 2400 | All accessories | 120 | 5% | 8% | Auto may choose weekly or mixed. |
| Road corridor | 3 | 45 | 120 / 650 / 2400 | Collector, Battery | 200 | 10% | 8% | Longer rentals favor monthly pricing. |
Many rental suppliers price total stations by day, week, and month. A common pattern is a daily rate that totals close to a weekly package after 5–6 days, while monthly packages often target 18–22 billable days. Use this calculator to compare these tiers quickly.
Weekly and monthly billing frequently uses “rounded up” periods. For example, 8 days may be billed as two weeks, and 31 days as two months. The Auto option compares daily, weekly, monthly, and a mixed breakdown to reduce rounding waste when your schedule sits between packages.
Tripods, prism kits, batteries, and data collectors are often priced as flat add‑ons per unit. While these fees look small, missing accessories can create downtime that costs far more than the add‑on. Budget at least one battery kit per unit for multi‑shift work.
Transport is typically calculated as distance × rate, with a minimum fee per trip. Short distances usually trigger the minimum fee, while long runs scale linearly. If your site is remote, confirm whether the supplier charges one‑way or round‑trip distance and enter values consistently.
Protection is commonly expressed as a percentage of the base rental. Teams sometimes carry both insurance and a damage waiver; others choose one depending on contract terms. Compare scenarios by adjusting the percentages—small changes can materially alter total cost on multi‑unit, multi‑month rentals.
Some projects require proof of recent calibration or verification. If your supplier charges calibration per unit, include it to avoid late surprises during mobilization. For regulated sites, calibration paperwork can be as important as the equipment itself when audits occur.
Operator support is best modeled as operators × days × rate. For short tasks, a one‑time training session may be enough; for complex layouts, operator time can dominate costs. Use separate entries for operator days and rental days when staffing differs from equipment duration.
Before approving a rental, confirm the billing tier, included accessories, transport assumptions, protection terms, and deposit policy. Then review discount and tax rules from your supplier quote. Export the estimate to CSV or PDF so procurement and site teams see the same numbers.
Auto compares daily, weekly, monthly, and mixed pricing for the same duration. It selects the lowest estimated base rental, then adds your selected fees and terms for the final total.
Enter the percentage your supplier applies to the taxable subtotal after discounts. If your quote shows VAT/GST or sales tax, use that value. If tax is included in the quote, set tax to 0%.
This estimate uses 30 days as a month for simplicity. If your supplier uses 28 days, adjust the monthly rate to match their policy or convert their month package into an equivalent 30‑day price.
Deposits are often refundable, but terms vary. Some suppliers deduct cleaning, damage, or missing accessory charges from the deposit. Use the deposit fields to mirror the contract and treat “amount due now” accordingly.
Use a conservative distance and confirm the minimum fee. If the site is far, test both lower and higher km values to see the cost sensitivity. Update the inputs once the route is confirmed.
Include calibration if your project requires proof of accuracy, if the supplier charges it separately, or if the instrument will be used for control points. For basic layout work, some teams rely on recent certificates already included.
Yes. Run separate calculations for each phase, especially when quantity, duration, or delivery changes. Export each result and combine them in a spreadsheet for a complete project budget view.
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.