DIY vs. Contractor Cost Comparison Calculator
Compare the true cost of doing a project yourself versus hiring a contractor, factoring in materials, labor time, tool rentals, permits, and risk of mistakes.
Project Materials
Cost of materials if you purchase them yourself (retail price). Contractor often gets trade discounts; leave blank to use DIY materials cost.DIY Labor & Time
Total hours you expect to spend on the project. What your time is worth to you (e.g., your hourly wage or opportunity cost).Tools & Equipment
Cost of tools you need to buy (one-time). Cost of renting specialized tools for this project. Percentage of tool purchase cost you'll recover through future use or resale (0–100%).Permits & Inspections
Permit fees if you pull the permit yourself. Permit fees if the contractor handles permitting (may include markup).Contractor Quote
All-in contractor quote (labor + materials + overhead + profit).Risk & Quality Adjustments
Estimated probability-weighted cost of mistakes requiring rework (0–100%). Estimated value of the contractor's workmanship warranty (peace of mind).Formulas Used
Net Tool Cost = Tool Purchase × (1 − Reuse%) + Tool Rental
Opportunity Cost = Hours × Hourly Time Value
Mistake/Rework Cost = DIY Materials × Mistake Risk%
DIY Financial Outlay = Materials + Net Tool Cost + Permit + Mistake Cost
DIY True Total = DIY Financial Outlay + Opportunity Cost
Contractor True Total = Contractor Quote + Contractor Permit − Warranty Value
Cash Savings = Contractor Financial − DIY Financial
True Savings = Contractor True Total − DIY True Total
Effective DIY Hourly Wage = Cash Savings ÷ Hours Worked
Assumptions & References
- Contractor materials cost defaults to DIY materials cost if left blank; contractors typically receive 10–30% trade discounts (NAHB, 2023).
- Opportunity cost reflects the economic principle that time has value equal to its best alternative use (your wage or leisure value).
- Tool reuse value accounts for the fact that purchased tools retain utility for future projects or can be resold.
- Mistake/rework risk is a probability-weighted cost; industry surveys suggest DIY rework rates of 10–25% for complex projects (HomeAdvisor, 2022).
- Contractor warranty value is subjective; most licensed contractors provide 1-year workmanship warranties; some states require longer periods.
- Permit costs vary widely by municipality; always verify local requirements before starting work.
- This calculator does not account for insurance liability, code compliance risk, or financing costs.
- References: NAHB Cost of Construction Survey (2023); HomeAdvisor True Cost Guide (2022); U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics wage data.