
For Fort Worth projects planning 2026 excavator rental with a breaker attachment (hydraulic hammer), budget attachment-only hire in these working ranges: $160–$320 per day, $500–$1,050 per week, and $1,450–$2,600 per 4-week period for the most common compact/mini-excavator breaker sizes. Heavier breakers for 6–14 ton carriers typically land closer to $325–$750 per day, $1,100–$2,700 per week, and $3,300–$7,800 per 4-week period. Your exact equipment hire cost will swing on breaker energy class (ft-lb), tool steel included (moil vs chisel), coupler style, whether the excavator’s auxiliary hydraulics match the breaker’s flow/pressure, and Fort Worth delivery logistics. In DFW, most rental coordinators will cross-quote national yards (United Rentals, Sunbelt Rentals, Herc Rentals, Cat Rental Store) plus local dealer rental departments; the “best” number usually comes from matching the breaker correctly so you avoid unplanned downtime, tool-bit wear charges, and unbillable standby days.
| Vendor | Daily Rate | Weekly Rate | Review Score | Website |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Rentals (Fort Worth, TX) | $674 | $1 698 | 9 | Visit |
| Sunbelt Rentals (Fort Worth, TX) | $252 | $637 | 9 | Visit |
| Herc Rentals (Fort Worth, TX) | $490 | $1 250 | 8 | Visit |
| Texas First Rentals (Fort Worth / DFW metro) | $500 | $1 400 | 9 | Visit |
| Kirby-Smith Machinery, Inc. (Ft. Worth branch) | $450 | $1 350 | 7 | Visit |
Published Texas pricing references (useful for 2026 budgeting, not a quote): Bobcat dealer rental catalogs have listed an HB980 hydraulic breaker (loader and excavator mount) at $170/day, $510/week, $1,530/month (August 2025 catalog). A separate Texas attachment rate page lists breaker models like NB140 at $250/day, $750/week, $1,850/month and NB160 at $300/day, $900/week, $2,000/month, and notes an additional $25 fee if fitting is needed to mount to an excavator. A published rate sheet from a rental yard lists a 500-pound-class breaker for skid/CTL mount at $205/day, $825/week, $2,375/month and flags that wear charges may apply on some items. These published numbers are one reason the Fort Worth 2026 planning bands above are realistic for attachment-only breaker hire; most DFW quotes you receive will fall inside or near those bands once delivery, waiver, taxes, and shift rules are applied.
When a foreman says “breaker attachment,” estimators still need to pin down the carrier size. A breaker sized for a 1.7–2.0 ton mini-ex is a different rental than a breaker sized for an 8 ton excavator. For equipment hire cost control, set your budget band by carrier class and expected material (flatwork vs heavily reinforced grade beams vs limestone ledge).
Important: “Week” may mean a 5-day work week, a 7-day calendar week, or a 40-hour/50-hour shift week depending on the rental house. Your effective breaker attachment hire cost can move 10–25% if you assume the wrong definition.
In Fort Worth, the same breaker can price differently depending on whether you’re downtown (tight delivery windows), in industrial areas (easier access), or on a civil job where you can stage equipment and avoid repeated mobilizations. The cost drivers below are the ones that consistently show up on DFW invoices when the estimator only carried a “daily rental rate” and missed the rest.
Breaker performance is dictated by hydraulic flow/pressure and return line capacity. If the excavator’s auxiliary package is marginal, the breaker may run hot, lose impact energy, and chew tool steel—creating extra rental days. Also confirm mounting style: pin-on, quick coupler (wedge/pin-grabber), or a dedicated mounting bracket. If you’re mixing brands, budget for a $25 fit-up/adapter handling fee that some yards publish for excavator mounting, plus time to verify hose routing and coupler engagement before the delivery truck leaves.
Many rental rate sheets explicitly warn that wear charges may apply. For breakers, that usually means tool steel (chisel/moil) is considered a consumable if it’s returned below a minimum length or with mushrooming from dry firing. Even when the rental house does not publish a per-inch number, your estimator should carry a tool-bit wear allowance because it’s common for suppliers to measure before/after and back-charge if the steel is consumed faster than normal use.
DFW rental coordinators can often reduce cost by using a 4-hour minimum when the breaker is needed only for a small window (for example, breaking out a single pier cap or an equipment pad edge). Published breaker pricing commonly includes 4-hour, day, weekend, weekly, and monthly options—one example shows $150 (4 hours), $200 (day), $300 (weekend), $800 (weekly), and $2,190 (monthly) for the breaker attachment only. If your job will truly complete in under 4 hours of hammer time, carrying a full day rate is often unnecessary; if it won’t, make sure operations doesn’t “accidentally” turn a 4-hour plan into a full-day bill.
Fort Worth delivery cost is rarely just “a flat fee.” Many Texas rental agreements define a base delivery radius and then a mileage adder. One published Texas rental agreement example states $125 base delivery including up to 30 miles, then $3.00 per additional mile beyond that, and also warns that failed deliveries (site inaccessible or renter unavailable) may still incur full delivery charges. On smaller equipment, other Texas rate sheets show different structures such as $65 delivery within 20 miles and $2.25 per mile round-trip beyond 20 miles. For Fort Worth budgeting, a safe attachment delivery allowance is typically $150–$350 each way depending on distance, yard location, and whether you need a liftgate/boom truck.
Most breaker attachment rental rates assume a single shift. If your superintendent plans extended hours to beat a lane closure or a concrete pour schedule, confirm how overtime is billed. A simple estimator’s check is to convert the day rate into an hourly exposure: e.g., a $300/day breaker at an 8-hour day implies $37.50/hour of “rate value,” and a $900/week breaker at a 40-hour week implies $22.50/hour before fees/taxes. (Rental houses may not bill exactly this way, but this conversion helps you compare quotes and decide if a weekly or monthly term is more cost-effective.)
Below are the invoice line items that most often move Fort Worth breaker attachment equipment hire costs away from the “rack rate.” Carry them as explicit allowances so your budget survives the first vendor invoice.
Downtown and hospital/college corridors: In central Fort Worth, delivery/pickup scheduling can be the difference between a single mobilization and two. If your site has a hard delivery window (common on constrained urban sites), ask the supplier whether timed delivery is an added service and carry a dispatch premium allowance (even a $95 minimum call-out structure is published by some Texas suppliers for after-hours needs).
Material reality (DFW clay/limestone mix): If the scope includes limestone shelves or heavily reinforced pours, smaller breakers can look cheaper but cost more in total days. In equipment hire cost terms: upsizing from a $250/day class breaker to a $350/day class breaker is often justified if it saves even one extra day of rental, one extra delivery cycle, and a tool steel back-charge.
Heat and duty cycle: Fort Worth summer temperatures increase the importance of correct hydraulic flow and operator technique (no dry firing, proper greasing, and cooldown breaks). Overheating doesn’t show as a “fee,” but it creates real rental cost exposure through additional days, tool wear, and potential cleaning/service charges if the attachment is returned in poor condition.

Scenario: You are supporting an excavator rental package for a Fort Worth commercial site where operations needs a mid-size breaker for three calendar days to break a reinforced equipment pad edge and a trench crossing. The site is constrained, so you choose delivery/pickup rather than contractor hauling.
Result: The “all-in” equipment and hire budget is not 3 × $285 = $855; it is base rent plus delivery logistics, waiver, and condition/return compliance exposure. This is why Fort Worth breaker attachment rental cost control is usually won in logistics planning (one clean mobilization, clear off-rent call, documented condition at return) rather than in negotiating $10/day off the rack rate.
If your work term is explicitly excavator rental (machine + attachment), bundling can reduce cost in three ways: (1) the supplier guarantees hydraulic compatibility, (2) delivery is shared under one mobilization, and (3) you may avoid separate fit-up handling fees (published examples note a $25 fee when fitting is needed to mount to an excavator). That said, bundling can also hide costs (damage waiver applied to a bigger base, stricter return condition standards), so your PO should still break out the attachment rate, delivery, RDW, and fees as separate not-to-exceed lines.
For 2026 planning in Fort Worth, assume published 2025 rack rates escalate modestly, but do not assume “inflation only.” Breaker attachment availability swings with storm response, municipal work, and major civil schedules across DFW. The practical procurement play is to (a) reserve early, (b) specify the carrier and coupler accurately, and (c) carry explicit line-item allowances for delivery, RDW, cleaning, and late-return exposure so the project team is not forced into a last-minute extension at day rates.