Boom Placer Rental Rates in Las Vegas (Daily/Weekly) — 2026 Costs

Price source: Costs shown are derived from our proprietary U.S. construction cost database (updated continuously from contractor/bid/pricing inputs and normalization rules).
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Eva Steinmetzer-Shaw
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For Las Vegas concrete pump hire using a boom placer (truck-mounted boom pump or a dedicated placing boom package), 2026 planning budgets typically land in three practical bands: (1) operated boom pump service priced primarily by the hour (plus per-cubic-yard and travel time) that, when converted to a shift-equivalent, often budgets at $1,700–$3,200 per day, $7,000–$13,500 per week, and $18,000–$32,000 per 4-week month for repeated/ongoing work; and (2) placing boom equipment hire (stationary/distribution boom) that is commonly a monthly commitment plus mobilization/crane; and (3) Telebelt/conveyor alternatives that can be cost-competitive for aggregates/backfill or limited-mix constraints. In Las Vegas, many contractors source boom pump and placing boom capacity through specialty pumping contractors (for example, Brundage-Bone’s Las Vegas branch advertises boom pumps, line pumps, placing booms, and Telebelts) rather than general rental yards, so your “rate” is usually a service ticket with jobsite rules, minimum hours, and adders that can move the invoice materially.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
Brundage-Bone Concrete Pumping (Las Vegas / JLS Concrete Pumping) $1 900 $7 600 9 Visit
MERLI Concrete Pumping (Las Vegas) $2 000 $8 000 8 Visit
Southwest Concrete Pumping & Conveying (Las Vegas) $1 800 $7 200 8 Visit
Western Mobile Concrete, Inc. (Las Vegas) $1 500 $6 000 10 Visit

Boom Placer Rental Rates Las Vegas 2026

Important scope note for estimators: In Southern Nevada, “boom placer” is often used interchangeably with a truck-mounted boom concrete pump (boom pump) on an operated basis. A placing boom can also mean a stationary distribution boom installed on a slab/structure and fed by a line pump. Your cost model should start by confirming which one procurement is actually requesting, because the commercial terms differ (hourly-minimum service ticket versus monthly equipment hire with crane and installation).

2026 Las Vegas planning ranges (USD) for operated boom pump service (most common form of concrete pump hire):

  • Daily (shift-equivalent) budget: typically $1,700–$3,200/day for an 8-hour planned window, assuming standard access, one setup, and no extreme travel. This is a budgeting conversion of hourly minimums and portal-to-portal billing practices (see “cost drivers” below).
  • Weekly budget: typically $7,000–$13,500/week for repeat pours or multi-day placements where you can keep travel/setup efficient and avoid weekend exposure.
  • Monthly (4-week) budget: typically $18,000–$32,000/4-weeks when the same project is pulling a pump frequently enough to justify negotiated terms and predictable dispatch; this is not the same as a stationary placing boom monthly hire.

Reality check using published U.S. rate sheets (used as market anchors, not Las Vegas quotes): One 2026 boom-pump rate sheet shows $225/hour plus $4.00 per cubic yard with a 4-hour minimum, plus items like $40/bag primer and defined overtime/fuel rules. Another 2025 price sheet shows boom pumps at $210/hour (32m), $235/hour (36/38/40m), and $255/hour (41m), plus $4.50/yard, a 3-hour minimum, and explicit adders for hose, washout, per diem, extra labor, and fuel surcharge. These published schedules are consistent with how Las Vegas invoices are commonly structured (hourly time + yardage + mobilization/travel + adders), even though your local quote will be job-specific.

2026 Las Vegas planning ranges (USD) for placing boom equipment hire (stationary “boom placer” distribution boom):

  • Monthly base hire (equipment only): plan $15,000–$30,000/month depending on reach class, tie-in requirements, and availability. As a hard public anchor, a public-agenda packet snippet lists a “Placing Boom Rental” line item at $15,000.00 monthly (location-specific to that contract, but useful as a floor reference for budgeting).
  • Mobilization / erection: commonly a separate line item and often the cost swing factor (crane, trucking, install crew, engineering sign-offs). For Las Vegas budgeting, carry an allowance of $6,000–$18,000 for initial install and $3,000–$10,000 for demob, then refine once you know crane access and tie-in details.

What Drives Boom Placer Concrete Pump Hire Pricing In Las Vegas?

For Las Vegas boom placer concrete pump hire, most cost overruns come from a handful of operational constraints that change billable hours and adders—often more than the base hourly rate. Start your estimate by forcing clarity on the following drivers:

  • Boom size/reach class: Larger booms (e.g., 40m–47m class) typically carry higher hourly pricing than 32m–36m class units in published schedules. In Las Vegas, reach is frequently driven by setback constraints, overhead restrictions, and where you can legally stage a heavy truck with outriggers.
  • Billing clock definition (portal-to-portal / port-to-port): Many pump companies charge from yard-to-yard (or “portal-to-portal”), meaning travel time is billable at a defined rate and may be separate from the pumping minimum. This matters in Las Vegas because a “local” job can still have high time exposure due to Strip access controls, I-15 congestion, and staged entry windows.
  • Minimum hours and how they apply: Common minimums include 3-hour or 4-hour minimum charge structures depending on provider and equipment. If you only need 60–90 minutes of placement time, you are still buying the minimum plus travel and setup realities.
  • Yardage/material adders: Many schedules add a per-cubic-yard fee (examples include $4.00/CY and $4.50/CY). Yardage fees become material on high-volume mats, podium slabs, and large tilt placements.
  • Washout plan and environmental constraints: If you cannot provide a compliant washout area, some providers apply explicit fees (example: $350 “No Wash Out Area Fee” for boom pumps on one 2025 sheet). On Las Vegas sites with tight footprints (especially near active hospitality operations), washout logistics can be the deciding cost driver, not pump selection.
  • Fuel and surcharge mechanics: Surcharges are commonly tied to fuel thresholds or defined as a percentage. Examples include an 8% fuel surcharge trigger when fuel exceeds $3.00/gal on one 2026 schedule and 12% fuel surcharge on a 2025 schedule. For Las Vegas budgeting, carry fuel escalation separately on work that extends across summer peak or volatile diesel periods.
  • Overtime, weekends, and restricted-hour dispatch: Overtime after 8 hours/day and weekend premiums can add quickly (example schedule: +$40/hour after 8 hours, $40/hour Saturday OT, $80/hour Sunday OT). Another schedule shows overtime after 8 hours at $25/hour and a cancellation window. In Las Vegas, night pours around the Strip corridor or when working around guest traffic can force premium-hour exposure.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown For Boom Placer Equipment Hire

Use this checklist to pressure-test quotes and avoid scope gaps in your Las Vegas concrete pump hire package. The exact names vary by provider, but the cost categories are consistent.

  • Primer / slick pack: published examples include $40 per bag primer and $50 “slick pak” as a separate line.
  • Extra hose / pipeline: examples include $1.50/ft (over 150 ft) on one sheet and $2.50/ft for additional hose (200–400 ft) on another provider’s pricing.
  • No-washout / washout management: example fees: $350 each (boom pump) and $250 each (line pump) if there is no washout area.
  • Additional labor: example “extra man” rate: $85/hour on one price sheet; other providers list additional operator adders (e.g., $80/hour on a separate equipment list).
  • Travel charges and travel minimums: examples include travel billed at $175/hour (and jobs over 50 miles requiring a 4-hour minimum) and tiered travel charges such as $75 (50–75 miles) and $150 (75–100 miles).
  • Cancellation / standby: examples include a $200 cancellation fee inside an 8-hour window, and “show-up” charges equal to setup if not cancelled at least 2 hours prior.
  • Shop supplies / environmental: examples include a $15 environmental surcharge per show-up and a $35 fuel surcharge per show-up (separate from percentage fuel surcharges).
  • Permits (job-specific): some pumping schedules explicitly pass through permit cost when required.
  • Damage/incident exposure tied to access: published terms can place towing and damaged/unwashed/lost accessories on the contractor if the unit leaves the roadway or accessories are not returned in acceptable condition. In Las Vegas, this is especially relevant for soft shoulders, unfinished subgrades, or tight casino-service corridors where ground protection and spotters are mandatory.

Example: Las Vegas Night Pour With A 38–41m Boom Pump (Realistic Cost Build-Up)

Scenario: You have a 180 CY podium slab placement in the resort corridor, with a required 11:00 PM–7:00 AM work window, and the pump must stage in a controlled-access service lane. You select a 38–41m class boom pump and plan for 6 hours of active placement plus portal-to-portal travel.

  • Base pumping time budget: carry 6 hours × $235–$255/hour = $1,410–$1,530 using published boom pump hourly examples for that size class as an anchor range.
  • Minimum hour check: if the provider applies a 3-hour or 4-hour minimum, you are covered on pumping time—but confirm whether travel is inside or outside the minimum.
  • Yardage charge budget: 180 CY × $4.00–$4.50/CY = $720–$810 based on published per-yard examples.
  • Travel time exposure: assume 1.0–2.0 hours portal-to-portal at a billable rate; some published schedules show travel billed port-to-port and/or separate travel rates. Budget $175–$500 for this line until dispatch confirms yard location and staging delays.
  • Restricted-hours premium / overtime allowance: carry a contingency of $0–$320 for premium time depending on whether the pour runs long and crosses an overtime threshold (example published overtime mechanics include +$40/hour after 8 hours, weekend premiums, or +$25/hour after 8 hours).
  • Washout plan: if the site cannot provide a washout area, carry an allowance equal to published “no washout” examples (e.g., $350 for boom pumps).
  • Consumables: carry 1–2 primer bags × $40 = $40–$80 as a realistic allowance.

Order-of-magnitude total (before tax): for this scenario, a practical estimator’s budget is commonly $3,400–$4,900 once you combine time, yardage, travel exposure, washout risk, and a premium-time contingency. The purpose of the range is to manage approval thresholds and avoid change-order churn; your final will depend on dispatch, site readiness, and whether you keep trucks cycling without stand-by.

Budget Worksheet (Boom Placer Equipment Hire Allowances)

  • Base boom pump time (portal-to-portal): ___ hours × $___/hour (carry $210–$275/hour as a 2026 planning band depending on boom class and schedule constraints).
  • Minimum hours allowance: 3–4 hour minimum exposure if the pour is small or truck schedule is uncertain.
  • Yardage/material charge: ___ CY × $___/CY (carry $4.00–$4.50/CY planning).
  • Travel time: ___ hours (confirm whether travel time is included in minimum; if not, carry a separate travel line).
  • Washout management: $0 or “no washout” fee allowance (carry $350 risk if site is tight).
  • Extra hose/pipeline: ___ ft over included × $1.50–$2.50/ft (job-specific).
  • Consumables: primer/slick pack allowance (e.g., $40/bag or $50 per pack).
  • Premium time: overtime/weekend contingency (carry 5%–15% depending on schedule certainty and whether the pour could roll into Saturday/Sunday rules).
  • Cancellation/standby risk: allowance for last-minute reschedules (example published charges include $200 cancellation within 8 hours or show-up charges tied to setup).
  • Accessories at risk: allowance for damaged/unreturned accessories and tow exposure if site access is not stable (ground mats, spotters, and a defined route reduce this risk).

Rental Order Checklist (Concrete Pump Hire / Boom Placer)

  • PO and commercial terms: PO number, agreed rate basis (hourly + yardage), minimum hours, portal-to-portal definition, and any “off-rent” or cancellation cutoffs.
  • Site logistics: exact address, gate/entry instructions, on-site contact, staging plan, and a verified route for a heavy truck with outrigger deployment.
  • Delivery window constraints (Las Vegas-specific): confirm whether Strip-adjacent delivery requires night access, badge-in, security escort, or a hard cutoff for arrival (missed windows often convert into paid standby).
  • Washout plan: designated washout location, containment method, and who provides washout box or hauling if required (avoid “no washout” fees).
  • Concrete placement details: planned start time, mix design constraints (aggregate size, fibers), estimated cubic yards, and expected truck spacing to prevent pump idle time.
  • Accessories and adders: hose lengths, reducers, clamps/gaskets, primer/slick pack, and whether extra labor is needed to manage end hose or line moves.
  • Return condition documentation: photo-document outriggers/ground conditions, hose counts, and washout completion before the unit leaves the site (reduces disputes tied to damaged/unwashed accessories).

Las Vegas estimator’s note: The two fastest ways to reduce boom placer hire cost are (1) compressing portal-to-portal hours by removing entry/wait constraints (staging, traffic plans, badging) and (2) protecting pump utilization by coordinating ready-mix arrival spacing so the pump is not billing minimums while waiting on concrete.

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boom and placer in construction work

When You Actually Need A Placing Boom (Stationary Boom Placer) Instead Of A Truck Boom Pump

On larger Las Vegas projects—podium decks, multi-level cores, large mat pours, or constrained downtown footprints—a stationary placing boom can be the more controllable option even if the monthly hire looks high. The key is to compare total installed cost and utilization rather than comparing only “hourly pumping.”

  • Use a placing boom when: the structure geometry forces repeated long-reach setups, you need to place from a fixed point with repeatable coverage, or you need to keep the pump truck out of a restricted zone and feed a distribution boom via line pump.
  • Budget implication: even with a monthly base that can start around $15,000/month on some public documents, your total cost is typically dominated by crane and install logistics unless you run enough yardage through it to amortize mobilization.

How To Compare Quotes Apples-To-Apples (So Purchasing Approves The Right “Hire Cost”)

To keep boom placer equipment hire comparisons fair across Las Vegas providers, normalize every quote to the same “billable exposure” structure:

  • Normalize to portal-to-portal hours: Many providers explicitly charge port-to-port/portal-to-portal. Always request a separate line stating estimated travel hours and whether those hours are inside or outside the minimum.
  • Separate the minimum charge from expected runtime: If the minimum is 3 hours or 4 hours, treat that as a fixed cost for each mobilization day.
  • Break out yardage rates: Published examples include $4.00/CY and $4.50/CY. If one quote has a lower hourly but a higher per-yard, your total can flip on high-yardage placements.
  • Confirm washout assumptions: If your site cannot support washout, carry a discrete allowance for a washout management fee (example: $350 for boom pumps).
  • Confirm hose included vs billed: Hose included in a setup package (e.g., “included in set-up”) versus billed by the foot (e.g., $1.50/ft or $2.50/ft) changes your cost on deep setbacks.

Las Vegas Operational Constraints That Commonly Add Cost

Local conditions in Las Vegas have predictable cost impacts. Build these into your estimating notes and your subcontract/purchase terms so you do not “discover” them on the invoice:

  • Strip corridor access and hard delivery windows: Missed access windows can turn into paid standby. Even if a rate sheet doesn’t label “standby,” portal-to-portal billing effectively charges it.
  • Heat and concrete performance management: In peak summer, any slowdown (truck spacing, finishing delays, rework) increases billable pump time; carry a 10% schedule contingency on pours with thermal constraints if you can’t control dispatch and placement readiness.
  • Dust-control and indoor protection requirements: If placing inside enclosures (warehouses, retrofit shells), the “cleanup” scope and washout routing can add fees or force longer demob time. If your provider uses explicit cleanup fees (examples exist on some pumping schedules), treat that as a job-specific risk line, not overhead.

Cost-Control Moves That Rental Coordinators Can Actually Execute

  • Lock the start time to concrete dispatch reality: Avoid paying minimum hours while waiting for the first truck. Confirm batch plant release sequence, gate arrival, and slump/mix constraints in advance.
  • Pre-plan the set location and swing path: Repositioning a boom pump mid-pour is expensive, especially when move charges apply (example move charge published as $20–$50 per move on one provider).
  • Provide a compliant washout solution: Spending a few hundred dollars on a washout box or hauling plan can be cheaper than a $350 “no washout” fee plus schedule drag.
  • Control hose length requests: Every extra 100 ft can become meaningful when billed at $1.50/ft or $2.50/ft. Measure setbacks early and confirm where the truck can actually set outriggers.

Insurance, Damage Waiver, And “Who Pays If It Gets Stuck?”

Even when your boom placer is hired as a service (with operator), your contract terms can push meaningful cost back onto the contractor if the site is not prepared. Published terms can make the contractor responsible for towing if the equipment leaves the roadway, and for damaged/unwashed/lost accessories. In Las Vegas, that means your cost-control plan is not only “rate shopping”—it is also ground protection, spotters, a verified route, and documented conditions at arrival and departure.

Procurement Notes: Using A Local Specialty Provider In Las Vegas

If you need frequent concrete pump hire capacity in Las Vegas (boom pumps, placing booms, Telebelts), a specialty provider with an established Las Vegas dispatch can reduce total cost by improving show-up reliability and matching the right boom class to site constraints. Brundage-Bone specifically advertises a Las Vegas branch with a diverse fleet including concrete boom pumps, placing booms, and Telebelts—useful when your project needs multiple placement methods over time. The commercial takeaway is that availability risk (and resulting schedule premium) is often lower when the provider can swap units quickly—so the “cheapest hourly rate” is not always the lowest hire cost across the work package.

Second Example: Short Pour Where Minimums Dominate

Scenario: 28 CY equipment pad placement in North Las Vegas, estimated 75 minutes of pumping, but tight access requires a boom pump rather than a chute.

  • Minimum time cost: a 3-hour minimum at $210/hour implies a base time exposure of $630 even if actual pumping is under 2 hours. If the provider uses a 4-hour minimum at $225/hour, the minimum time exposure is $900.
  • Yardage: 28 CY × $4.00–$4.50/CY = $112–$126.
  • Consumables: allow $40 for primer if required by the provider.
  • Travel: if billed portal-to-portal, carry at least 1 hour travel exposure.

Estimator takeaway: On small-yardage pours, you are buying mobilization, minimum hours, and travel discipline—not “production.” The cost-control move is to bundle multiple small placements into one mobilization day or shift to a line pump if reach and access allow.