Breaker Attachment Rental Rates in Omaha (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
Head of Marketing

Breaker Attachment Rental Omaha 2026

For Omaha-area excavation and demolition scopes in 2026, budget breaker attachment equipment hire (attachment-only) in three practical bands: (1) compact/mini-ex and skid-steer class breakers typically plan $250–$450/day, $750–$1,250/week, and $1,700–$3,000/4-week; (2) backhoe and 14–24 ton excavator class breakers typically plan $450–$850/day, $1,300–$2,400/week, and $3,500–$6,000/4-week; and (3) large excavator breakers often plan $1,050–$1,550/day, $3,200–$4,500/week, and $9,500–$13,000/4-week, depending on impact class, tool diameter, and whether a coupler/pin kit is included. Omaha can source these attachments through national rental houses with local branches (e.g., United Rentals and Sunbelt Rentals in the metro), as well as regional heavy equipment yards—pricing varies most by breaker size, tool wear allowances, and delivery logistics.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
United Rentals $450 $1 170 9 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals $280 $700 8 Visit
Herc Rentals $746 $1 612 8 Visit
NMC Cat Rental (The Cat Rental Store) $330 $900 9 Visit
Resource Rental Center (Omaha/Council Bluffs Metro) $125 $425 8 Visit

2026 Planning Rate Ranges By Breaker Class (Attachment-Only)

The cleanest way to estimate breaker attachment hire cost for excavator rental in Omaha is to start with the breaker’s impact/weight class (ft-lb class, breaker operating weight, and required excavator auxiliary hydraulics). Below are budget ranges for 2026 planning. These are not “guaranteed vendor prices”; they are estimating bands built from published rate examples and typical Midwest market behavior.

Compact breaker (mini excavator / skid steer “500–1,000 ft-lb” class)

  • Day: $250–$450/day (published examples include ~$300/day for a ~750 ft-lb hammer class).
  • Week: $750–$1,250/week (published examples include ~$900–$975/week for 750–1,000 ft-lb class).
  • 4-week: $1,700–$3,000/4-week (published examples include ~$2,700–$2,925/4-week for 750–1,000 ft-lb class).
  • Notes that move cost: tool bit included vs. billed as a wear item; quick-coupler compatibility; and whether the rental house treats it as “skid steer only” vs. “skid steer/mini ex” class. (g

Mid-range breaker (backhoe / 18K–35K excavator class)

  • Day: $450–$850/day (published examples include ~$288/day for a backhoe/18K excavator class hammer in one rate list; other markets will price higher for newer/high-energy hammers). (g
  • Week: $1,300–$2,400/week (published examples include ~$814/week in one rate list and ~$1,320/week for a ~1,650 ft-lb breaker on a heavy yard rate sheet). (g
  • 4-week: $3,500–$6,000/4-week (published examples include ~$1,837/4-week in one list and ~$3,300/4-week for a ~1,650 ft-lb breaker elsewhere). (g

Large breaker (6,000–12,000+ ft-lb class / 30K–100K+ lb excavators)

  • Day: $1,050–$1,550/day for common large-breaker deployment; published examples include ~$1,045/day (6,800 ft-lb) and ~$1,320/day (9,000 ft-lb) on a heavy yard schedule.
  • Week: $3,200–$4,500/week; published examples include ~$3,190/week (6,800 ft-lb) and ~$3,740/week (9,000 ft-lb).
  • 4-week: $9,500–$13,000/4-week; published examples include ~$9,570/4-week (6,800 ft-lb) and ~$11,550/4-week (9,000 ft-lb).
  • Very large breakers: if you’re budgeting 3,000–12,000 lb breaker bodies for 30K–100K lb carriers, published rate sheets in some regions show ranges like ~$900/day to ~$2,250/day and ~$5,500/month to ~$14,000/month depending on class.

How Breaker Attachment Hire Pricing Changes With Excavator Size And Hydraulics

Most cost surprises on excavator rental + breaker attachment hire happen when the breaker’s hydraulic requirements don’t match the carrier’s auxiliary plumbing (flow, pressure, case drain, return-to-tank routing, and coupler type). If your excavator rental is a “standard bucket machine,” the rental house may need to add (or swap) auxiliary lines, a dedicated return, and a mounting bracket/pin kit.

  • Pin kit / coupler adaptation allowance: $75–$150/day if billed as an accessory, or $250–$600 one-time shop charge if the branch treats it as a setup (varies by policy and whether it’s a “known fit” in their system).
  • Breaker bracket inclusion: some published guides state the hammer/breaker bracket is included with the breaker rental—confirm “included” vs. “rented separately” in the quote notes.
  • Hydraulic quick coupler add-on (if you rent the excavator and add a coupler midstream): often $75–$150/day on the excavator side plus labor if installed after delivery.
  • Metering rules: breaker packages are commonly “single shift” (hours included) and charge pro-rated overtime if you exceed included hours. One published attachment rate page explicitly references single-shift hour assumptions such as 10 hours/day, 50 hours/week, 200 hours/month as a billing basis—treat that as the baseline to negotiate against.

Estimator tip: for Omaha bidding, always request the breaker’s required GPM/PSI range and confirm your excavator rental’s aux spec in writing. The lowest day rate can become the highest total cost if the breaker is swapped, re-delivered, or downrated due to hydraulic mismatch.

What’s Typically Included (And What You’ll Pay Extra For)

Even when the rental quote reads like “breaker attachment only,” the invoice typically carries multiple equipment-hire cost adders that matter to rental coordinators:

  • Tool bit / steel: usually 1 tool included (moil or chisel). Extra tools commonly price at $25–$60/day per tool, or a weekly equivalent, especially if you want a spare on site to avoid downtime.
  • Wear limit / tool consumption: many contracts treat tools as wear items; plan a $150–$450 allowance per week for tool wear on hard aggregate or thick reinforced slabs.
  • Grease and consumables: budget $8–$15 per cartridge (or equivalent) and assume 2–6 cartridges/week depending on duty cycle and tool bushing condition.
  • Dust-control accessories (indoor demo): add $85–$150/day for a HEPA vac or $150–$300/day for a larger dust extractor package (plus filters).
  • Hose protection / whip checks / spill kits: allow $25–$75 if required by GC/site safety. (Often small dollars, but delays are expensive.)

Some of these adders are negotiable (bundled into the breaker line), but only if you ask up front for “all-in equipment hire pricing for breaker attachment + required accessories.”

Hidden-Fee Breakdown

This is where real-world breaker attachment equipment hire cost in Omaha lands. The numbers below are budgeting allowances you should carry unless your rental quote explicitly states otherwise.

  • Delivery & pickup: published municipal price sheets show examples like $120 each way + $3.25 per loaded mile for pickup/delivery charging. In practice, Omaha metro deliveries are often quoted as a flat “local” fee within a radius plus mileage beyond.
  • Heavy-yard transport (larger breakers): some rate sheets publish delivery structures such as $300 delivery (up to ~50 miles) plus $120 per additional 25 miles—useful as a planning proxy if your job is outside the Omaha core or you’re bringing in a specialty breaker.
  • Minimum rental charges: allow 1-day minimum for attachment-only; specialty breakers may be 2-day minimum during peak season.
  • Damage waiver / rental protection plan: industry and rental-company materials commonly show 10%–15% of rental charges as a damage waiver range—either optional with proof of insurance or automatically added without it. Carry 12% in budgets unless your contract says otherwise.
  • Cleaning fee: plan $150–$400 if the breaker comes back caked with slurry/concrete paste (especially if used wet indoors). Note that some published rate sheets for other equipment explicitly list cleanup charges (the concept is common even if the breaker line item doesn’t call it out).
  • Hydraulic oil top-off: allow $18–$35/gal if the carrier returns low after hose changes or coupler leaks; confirm whether your mechanics are permitted to top off on site.
  • Weekend/holiday billing: do not assume “free weekends.” If you need Friday drop and Monday pickup, get the weekend policy written on the quote notes (or you may pay 2 additional days).
  • Off-rent rules: many yards require an off-rent call and then schedule pickup; plan 1 extra day risk if your site can’t load out during the branch’s cutoff window (common with downtown delivery-hour restrictions).

Omaha-Specific Budgeting Notes For Breaker Work

Omaha estimating is less about “sticker rate” and more about the jobsite constraints that drive transport, accessories, and downtime:

  • Freeze-thaw and winter demolition: in the Omaha winter season, frozen subgrade and frost-bonded slabs can increase tool wear and time-on-hammer. Carry a higher tool-consumption allowance (e.g., add $250 per week for spare steel and bushings) and consider whether a higher-energy breaker reduces total labor hours.
  • Downtown access and delivery windows: central Omaha streets and tight sites can force smaller trucks, lift-gate requirements, or staged delivery. Add a $75–$200 allowance for “special handling” if the branch must dispatch a different truck or if the site requires appointment delivery.
  • Wet cutting/wet breaking indoors: if you’re breaking interior slabs (healthcare, food, occupied facilities), dust-control requirements can trigger add-on rentals (HEPA, negative air). Budget $600–$1,500/week for dust-control equipment hire if not included in the GC’s general conditions.

Example: Omaha Excavator Rental + Breaker Attachment Hire (1-Week Slab Removal)

Scenario: You’re removing a 6" reinforced interior slab (approx. 1,800 sq ft) in a constrained Omaha infill site. Work is limited to 7:00 AM–3:30 PM weekday shift, with no weekend work. You plan a 14–20 ton excavator rental with a mid-class breaker attachment, plus dust control and strict return-condition documentation.

  • Breaker attachment hire (mid-class): budget $1,500/week (planning range within $1,300–$2,400/week).
  • Excavator rental (carrier): if rented separately, published examples for ~30–34K excavators show weekly pricing around $1,596/week on some schedules; your 2026 Omaha quote may differ, but this anchors the order of magnitude.
  • Delivery & pickup: allow $120 each way + mileage. For a 20 loaded-mile run each way at $3.25/loaded mile, carry about $370 total (2 ways).
  • Damage waiver: 12% of rental charges (breaker + excavator) = about $372 on $3,096 rental.
  • Dust control package: $1,000/week allowance (HEPA + filters + hoses).
  • Tool wear allowance: $300 (spare steel / wear limit / consumables).
  • Cleaning/return condition: $250 allowance if slurry and fines are not fully cleaned before pickup.

Why this matters: the “breaker attachment rental rate” is only about one-third to one-half of the equipment hire spend once you include carrier rent, logistics, waiver, and compliance accessories. Your bid should show these as explicit allowances so the PM can manage them instead of absorbing them as variance.

Budget Worksheet

Use this bullet worksheet to build a controllable breaker attachment equipment hire budget line for Omaha scopes (no guesswork hidden in labor):

  • Breaker attachment hire (day/week/4-week per size class): $______
  • Spare tool bit (moil/chisel) rental or purchase allowance: $150–$450/week
  • Tool wear charge contingency (hard aggregate/rebar): $200–$600/week
  • Grease & consumables: $50–$150/week
  • Delivery & pickup (local): $240–$800 total project allowance depending on miles/windows
  • After-hours / appointment delivery risk allowance: $75–$200
  • Damage waiver / rental protection (if not covered by COI): 10%–15% of rental charges
  • Cleaning / slurry removal allowance: $150–$400
  • Hydraulic oil top-off contingency: $50–$175
  • Downtime contingency for swap-out (schedule impact): 0.5–1.0 day of breaker day rate

Rental Order Checklist

  • PO includes: breaker make/model class, tool diameter, carrier class, and “attachment-only” vs. “excavator rental with breaker installed.”
  • Confirm compatibility: coupler type, pin dimensions, auxiliary flow/pressure, case drain, and return-to-tank requirements.
  • Delivery instructions: site contact, crane/forklift availability if needed, delivery window, and staging area dimensions.
  • Pre-use documentation: photos of tool, bushings, hoses, couplers, and serial number; note existing play/leaks.
  • Operating rules: single-shift hour allowance, overtime/metering, and whether wet operation is required/allowed indoors.
  • Return requirements: cleaning standard, tool wear measurement method, and required paperwork/photos at pickup.
  • Off-rent procedure: who calls off-rent, required notice, and whether you’ll be billed until physically picked up.
  • Insurance/waiver: submit COI with rented equipment coverage or approve waiver percentage on PO.

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breaker and attachment in construction work

Terms That Change Total Equipment Hire Cost (Read Before You “Extend For A Day”)

Breaker attachment hire is highly sensitive to rental-term math and hour assumptions. Before you authorize an extension, confirm how the branch converts day-to-week and week-to-4-week, and how they handle partial periods. Many rental programs bill on a single-shift basis with defined included hours; one published example uses 10 hours/day, 50 hours/week, and 200 hours/month as the basis. If your slab demo runs long due to rebar congestion, you can trigger overtime charges or a rate step-up.

  • Overtime (hours beyond included): a common structure is pro-rata billing (e.g., if your breaker day rate is $550 on a 10-hour day, budget $55 per extra hour). Put an allowance of 5–15 overtime hours/week on aggressive schedules.
  • Standby time: if the excavator is waiting on sawcutting, abatement clearance, or utility marking, your breaker attachment still accrues rent unless you off-rent it.
  • Off-rent isn’t pickup: “call off rent” typically initiates pickup scheduling; ensure the contract defines when billing stops (call time vs. actual pickup).

Attachment Wear, Tool Bit Consumption, And Return-Condition Documentation

Wear items are the most common post-return surprises on hydraulic breaker attachment rentals—especially on hard concrete with embedded aggregate or heavy rebar. Reduce back-charges by running the rental like a controlled asset:

  • Tool steel wear allowance: plan $150–$450/week as noted, but also set an internal trigger: if production drops, swap tools early rather than running a mushroomed tip (which can damage bushings).
  • Bushing/play inspection: document side-play at delivery and before pickup. Even simple phone photos and a short video of the tool-to-bushing fit can prevent “pre-existing wear” disputes.
  • Hose damage contingency: allow $45–$120 per hose plus $125–$185/hr field labor if a hose fails and the branch bills repair (varies by contract and whether waiver applies).
  • Daily maintenance expectations: many standard rental terms place routine inspection, cleaning, and maintaining fluid levels on the customer, and may require replacement of wear items like bits/teeth per manufacturer specs. Treat this as a cost driver, not boilerplate.

Bundling Strategies With Excavator Rental (Omaha Procurement Tactics)

If your work term is “excavator rental” and you know you’ll need a breaker for more than a couple of shifts, bundling can reduce total equipment hire cost:

  • Bundle breaker + excavator + coupler: ask for an “installed breaker package” so the branch owns fitment risk. Even if the nominal breaker rate is slightly higher, you often save on setup delays and return trips.
  • Multi-attachment bundle: if you need a thumb or additional bucket, some published schedules show modest daily numbers for thumbs (e.g., ~$105/day in one guide). Use that concept to negotiate a package discount rather than line-item stacking.
  • 4-week conversion planning: if your demo scope has uncertainty, it can be cheaper to book 4-week from day one and off-rent early than to stack weeks and days—ask your rep to run both options before PO release.

Insurance, Damage Waiver, And Liability (Budget It Explicitly)

For 2026 Omaha projects, treat damage waiver as a standard cost line, not a contingency. Industry commentary and rental-company guidance frequently place damage waiver charges in the 10% to 15% band of rental charges, with specific providers stating values like 10% or 15% depending on program and whether you provide proof of coverage.

Coordinator note: If you decline the waiver, ensure your COI explicitly includes “rented equipment” (installation floater) and confirm deductible handling. If you accept the waiver, read exclusions carefully (negligence, theft, underwater use, improper lubrication, wrong hydraulic settings, etc.).

Delivery Windows, Cutoffs, And Site Rules That Change Real Rental Cost

Omaha jobsite rules can quietly turn a 5-day plan into a 7-day invoice. Control these operational constraints:

  • Delivery cutoff: if your GC requires deliveries before 10:00 AM downtown and the branch can’t commit, you may pay for idle days waiting on delivery.
  • Return timing: “end of day” returns after the branch’s cutoff can bill an additional day; plan return logistics so the attachment is accessible and cleaned by midday.
  • Indoor dust suppression: if wet-breaking is required, add cleanup labor and a higher cleaning allowance (carry $250–$400) to avoid branch wash-bay charges.
  • Recharge/refuel expectations: while the breaker itself isn’t fueled, the carrier is; if you rent the excavator too, budget $150–$350 for refuel/DEF/top-off risk depending on tank size and policies.

Frequently Asked Cost Questions (Trade-Focused)

Is it cheaper to rent a breaker attachment or to rent an excavator with breaker installed?

For Omaha scopes, attachment-only is cheaper only when (a) you already have a compatible carrier on site, or (b) the rental house confirms “plug-and-play” fitment with no auxiliary modifications. If you’re also renting the excavator, an installed package often reduces transport/setup risk and can lower total cost even if the attachment line item is higher.

What’s the single biggest cost driver besides the day rate?

Logistics plus waiver: delivery/pickup and damage waiver regularly add 15%–30% to the “headline” breaker attachment hire cost, especially on short-duration rentals where transport doesn’t amortize well. Use published delivery examples like $120 each way + $3.25 per loaded mile to force realistic budgeting.

What documentation should we keep to reduce back-charges?

At minimum: (1) delivery photos of serial number, tool, hoses, and couplers; (2) daily grease log (even a simple checklist); and (3) pickup photos after cleaning. This is consistent with standard rental terms that place routine inspection/maintenance responsibilities on the renter.

Bottom line for 2026 Omaha: a professional estimate for breaker attachment equipment hire should read like a controlled rental plan—rate band by class, delivery structure, waiver %, wear allowance, and the operational rules that affect off-rent. If you build those into the bid, the PM can manage them rather than absorb them.