Concrete is unforgiving. Once the truck shows up, you’re committed. Order too little and you’re paying for a short load plus a second delivery. Order too much and you’re eating the cost of returned yards. Accurate estimating isn’t just good business — it’s the difference between profit and loss on every single job.
Why concrete estimates go wrong
Material calculation errors
The math seems simple: length × width × depth = cubic yards. But contractors consistently miss:
- Subgrade irregularities: The ground is never perfectly flat. A 4” slab on uneven ground might average 5” — that’s 25% more concrete.
- Form overfill: Concrete doesn’t stop exactly at the form edge. Budget 5-10% overfill.
- Waste factor: Spillage, cleanup, and testing samples. Add 5-8%.
- Pumping loss: If you’re pumping, 2-3% stays in the line.
A 10-yard job that you quoted at 10 yards actually needs 12-13 yards. Quote at 10, and you just lost your profit.
Labor underestimation
Concrete work is labor-intensive and time-sensitive. Common underestimates:
- Prep work: Excavation, grading, compaction, and forming take longer than the pour itself
- Finishing time: Stamped concrete takes 3-4× longer to finish than broom finish
- Weather delays: You can’t pour in rain or extreme heat without adjustments
- Cleanup: Washing out the truck, cleaning tools, and stripping forms
Forgetting the extras
- Rebar or wire mesh
- Expansion joints and control joints
- Vapor barrier
- Gravel base material
- Form lumber (and the labor to build and strip forms)
- Sealer application (often a separate trip)
- Saw cutting
Building accurate estimates
Step 1: Measure twice, calculate with waste
For every job, calculate:
Base volume = L × W × D (in feet) ÷ 27 = cubic yards
+ Subgrade variance: +10%
+ Overfill/waste: +7%
= Order quantity (round up to nearest 0.25 yard)
Step 2: Template your common jobs
Build templates for your bread-and-butter work:
| Job type | Typical specs | Material | Labor hours |
|---|---|---|---|
| Driveway (2-car) | 20×20×4” | 6-7 yards | 16-24 hrs |
| Patio (basic) | 12×16×4” | 3-4 yards | 8-12 hrs |
| Sidewalk (50 LF) | 50×4×4” | 3-4 yards | 8-12 hrs |
| Foundation wall | Varies | 8-15 yards | 24-40 hrs |
| Stamped patio | 12×16×4” | 3-4 yards | 16-24 hrs |
Save these as quote templates. When a homeowner wants a patio, pull the template, adjust dimensions, and send within an hour.
Step 3: Separate material and labor on quotes
Show the customer:
- Materials: Concrete, rebar, gravel, forms, sealer — itemized
- Labor: Prep, pour, finish, cleanup — as a single line or broken out
- Extras: Stamping, coloring, exposed aggregate — clearly priced
This transparency builds trust and justifies your pricing. When a competitor quotes $3,000 less, the customer can see exactly what they’re leaving out.
Step 4: Build in your profit margin
Many concrete contractors price at cost + 10%. That’s not enough. After insurance, truck maintenance, equipment wear, and callbacks, you need 25-35% gross margin to run a sustainable business.
Track your actual costs on every job:
- Material cost (actual yards × price per yard)
- Labor cost (actual hours × loaded rate)
- Equipment and fuel
- Subcontractor costs (pumping, excavation)
Compare actual vs estimated on every completed job. This feedback loop makes your next estimate more accurate.
Quoting that closes
Homeowners getting concrete work done are spending $3,000-$15,000+. They want to feel confident in their contractor. Your quote should include:
- Detailed scope: Exactly what’s included (and what’s not)
- Material specifications: PSI rating, finish type, reinforcement
- Timeline: Start date, pour date, cure time, when they can use it
- Photos: Examples of similar completed work
- Payment terms: Deposit amount, progress payments, final payment
- Warranty: What you stand behind
Good-Better-Best options work well for concrete:
- Good: Broom finish, standard gray, wire mesh
- Better: Colored concrete, stamped border, rebar reinforcement
- Best: Full stamped pattern, integral color, sealed, rebar throughout
The “Better” option typically closes at 60%+ when presented alongside the other two.
The bottom line
Concrete contractors who track their actual costs, template their common jobs, and send professional quotes within hours — not days — close more work at better margins. The ones still estimating on napkins and calling back tomorrow are leaving money in the mixer.