Cable Puller Rental Rates in Seattle (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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Cable Puller Hire Costs Seattle 2026

For Seattle electrical rough-in, 2026 planning budgets for cable puller equipment hire typically land in these ranges (excluding tax, delivery, consumables, and operator labor): $85–$200/day, $255–$600/week, and $750–$1,650 per 4-week/“monthly” rental for common 2,000–6,500 lb electric cable puller/tugger classes, with heavier 8,000–10,000 lb packages commonly planning at $125–$350/day, $375–$950/week, and $1,100–$2,100 per 4-week/28-day month depending on what is included (mounting adapter/boom, rope, force gauge, sheaves, reel stands, and feeder). Published rate sheets in the Pacific Northwest show examples such as a Greenlee tugger kit at $140/day, $420/week, $1,260/month, and 10,000 lb class pullers around $125/day, $375/week, $1,000/month in some markets—use these as anchors, then adjust for Seattle logistics and accessories. Common sourcing channels include national rental houses (for standardized “day/week/4-week” structures) and local electrical-focused rental counters for complete tugger packages.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
United Rentals $125 $375 8 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals $119 $357 8 Visit
Herc Rentals $130 $390 7 Visit
Star Rentals (WA) $110 $330 9 Visit
The Home Depot Tool Rental $89 $267 7 Visit

Rate sanity-check by puller class (planning):

  • 2,000 lb cable puller package (ex: Greenlee UT2 style): $85–$175/day; $255–$525/week; $750–$1,450/4 weeks. (Commonly 120V systems; confirm power and included mounts.)
  • 4,000 lb electric tugger: $95–$225/day; $285–$650/week; $850–$1,650/4 weeks.
  • 6,000–6,500 lb electric cable puller: $110–$275/day; $325–$725/week; $900–$1,750/4 weeks. (Some published examples show 6,000 lb class at $75/day, $225/week, $600/month; others price the motor/package weekly.)
  • 8,000–10,000 lb tugger/puller package: $125–$350/day; $375–$950/week; $1,100–$2,100/4 weeks. (Published examples show 10,000 lb class at $125/day, $375/week, $1,000/month and 8,000–10,000 lb packages around $395–$450/week and $1,100–$1,200 per 4 weeks.)

What Actually Drives Cable Puller Equipment Hire Pricing in Seattle Rough-In?

Seattle pricing on wire tugger equipment hire is less about the base tugger day-rate and more about how “complete” the package is and how quickly you can off-rent it. For rough-in, cost drivers typically cluster into (1) capacity and duty cycle (2,000 vs 10,000 lb classes), (2) mounting method (chain mount, floor mount, or mobile boom), (3) rope and rope condition (included footage and wear tolerance), and (4) jobsite access (downtown delivery windows, elevator constraints, staging rules, and where the tugger can be anchored). In Seattle, also budget for tight delivery windows around the urban core and wet-season cleanup expectations—it is common for rental yards to bill cleaning when equipment comes back with mud, concrete dust, or adhesive residue, even for electrical tools that never “touch the dirt” if they were staged in unfinished areas.

Key spec reality: many common electric cable pullers are 120V systems, and some packages call out a 20A circuit requirement. If you cannot guarantee a dedicated 20A circuit on rough-in floors, budget generator/temporary power adders instead of assuming the tugger “just plugs in.”

Seattle Rough-In: Choose The Right Puller Class Before You Lock The Rate

Over-sizing the puller can inflate rental cost, but under-sizing often costs more once you add labor inefficiency, extra setup time, and schedule creep. Published equipment catalogs show electric cable puller classes commonly marketed around 2,000 lb, 4,000 lb, and 6,500 lb pulling force ranges, with heavier puller-tensioner trailers available for utility-scale work. For interior electrical rough-in, most crews are targeting the 2,000–6,500 lb classes unless they have long, high-friction conduit runs, big copper, multiple 90s, or forced routing constraints.

Practical estimating rule: if your pull requires a mobile boom plus floor mount plus force gauge, price it as a package even if the tugger itself looks “cheap” on the day-rate. Missing accessories are where you lose budget control.

Typical Adders That Change The Real Cable Puller Hire Cost

To make cable puller equipment hire numbers usable in a bid (or for a rental coordinator building a PO), treat the tugger as one line item and build a separate “pull package” allowance. Use adders like these (typical Seattle/Puget Sound planning ranges):

  • Mounting adapter adders: $25–$60/day or $75–$250/month depending on chain mount vs floor mount vs mobile boom class. (Some published rate sheets separate adapters.)
  • Pulling rope (if not included): $20–$45/day; $60–$135/week. If damaged or cut, plan replacement charge allowances at $2.50–$4.50 per foot for 1/2 inch rope (verify per yard policy).
  • Rope grips / basket grips: $8–$20 each/day; $25–$60 each/week. (Some package rentals include a set; others do not.)
  • Hook sheaves: $10–$20/day each; $30–$80/week each depending on size/class. Published examples show 12 inch, 18 inch, 24 inch sheaves priced weekly and 4-week.
  • Reel stand + spindle: $10–$18/day; $30–$60/week. Published examples show reel stand and spindle priced separately.
  • Fish tape / duct rodder (for pre-pull or retrieval): $8–$15/day is common for basic fish tape class rentals; budget more for rodder kits.
  • Temporary power adder (when 20A circuit is not guaranteed): $75–$150/day for a small generator class plus $25–$60/day for distribution (cords/GFCI). (Plan as an allowance if your GC cannot commit.)
  • Missing accessory charges: budget a $75–$250 “missing parts” contingency per pull package if multiple floors/crews will handle the kit (pins, clevises, mounts, force gauge leads, etc.).

Hidden-Fee Breakdown For Cable Puller Equipment Hire (Seattle)

These are the line items that typically explain why a “$140/day tugger” becomes a much larger invoice. Some are policy-driven; others are logistics-driven.

  • Delivery & pickup: $95–$175 each way inside a typical 10–15 mile radius; outside that, many yards effectively convert to a base charge plus mileage (plan $6–$9 per loaded mile beyond the radius). If you have ferry-dependent logistics (Bainbridge, Bremerton, Vashon), carry a $150–$300 ferry/time surcharge allowance.
  • Downtown Seattle access costs: for tight curb space, plan $0–$125 for jobsite receiving labor/time and $95/hour after the first 30 minutes as a “truck wait time” allowance if the rental yard charges it (common when docks are blocked).
  • Damage waiver / rental protection: budget 10%–15% of time charges if you elect the waiver (confirm whether it covers theft, water intrusion, rope wear, or only accidental damage).
  • Deposit / credit requirements: many rental programs require an account or a card/ID; for higher-value pullers, refundable deposits can be significant—published examples show a $5,000 refundable deposit for a high-performance cable puller in at least one rental listing.
  • Cleaning: $45–$125 typical “shop clean,” but if the tugger comes back with concrete slurry, spray foam, or heavy dust infiltration, carry a $150–$300 cleaning/detail allowance for occupied-building or TI work.
  • Late return / extra day risk: budget at least 1 additional day if your demob is Friday afternoon and the yard bills weekends/holidays as on-rent time, or if your off-rent call misses a cutoff (many yards require same-day off-rent notice to stop billing).
  • Repair handling: if a rope or mount is damaged mid-week, plan a $95–$175 swap trip charge (or an internal run) to avoid losing productive time waiting for replacements.

Example: Seattle TI Rough-In Pull Package With Real Constraints

Example: 9-story TI in South Lake Union. Two core risers plus floor distribution. Three scheduled pulls of larger feeders through long conduit with multiple bends; work is inside an active site with 6:30–9:00 AM loading dock windows and no staging on sidewalks. You select an 8,000–10,000 lb cable puller package for margin. Planned hire and fees:

  • Puller package: $450/week planning (1 week) based on published 8,000–10,000 lb package examples.
  • Floor mount / chain mount adapters: $75/week.
  • Two sheaves + one manhole/edge protection sheave allowance: $50/week + $80/week = $130/week planning.
  • Reel stand + spindle: $30/week + $24/week = $54/week planning.
  • Delivery + pickup (downtown): $175 + $175 = $350 allowance.
  • Wait time risk (dock conflicts): 1 hour at $95/hour after 30 minutes = $95 allowance.
  • Damage waiver: 12% of time charges (apply to the tugger-only portion and any accessory time charges per vendor policy) = carry $90–$140 as a placeholder.
  • Cleaning: $150 allowance because equipment is staged on unfinished floors with drywall dust and rain-tracked debris at entries.

Result: even with a “$450/week” puller headline, the all-in hire package can plan closer to $1,300–$1,750 once accessories and Seattle logistics are applied, before tax. The control point is not negotiating $25 off the base tugger; it is ensuring the package is complete and off-rented immediately after the last pull.

Budget Worksheet (No Tables)

Use this as a copy/paste budgeting artifact for estimators and rental coordinators building a Seattle electrical rough-in equipment hire forecast.

  • Base cable puller equipment hire (select class): $85–$200/day or $255–$600/week (2,000–6,500 lb) OR $125–$350/day or $375–$950/week (8,000–10,000 lb).
  • Mounting adapters (floor/chain/mobile boom): $25–$60/day allowance; or $75–$250/month allowance.
  • Pulling rope allowance: $0 (included) OR $60–$135/week; plus $250 rope damage contingency.
  • Rope grips (set of 4): $100–$240/week allowance.
  • Sheaves (2–4 pieces): $60–$320/week allowance depending on sizes/classes.
  • Reel stand + spindle: $50–$90/week allowance.
  • Fish tape/rodder allowance: $8–$30/day (small tools) or higher for rodder kits.
  • Delivery + pickup allowance: $250–$500 for in-city; add $150–$300 if ferry/time risk exists.
  • Downtown receiving/escort/wait time: $95–$285 (1–3 hours) allowance for dock constraints.
  • Damage waiver: 10%–15% of rental time charges.
  • Cleaning allowance: $45–$300 depending on dust/mud exposure and indoor handling rules.
  • Weekend/holiday billing risk: carry 1 extra day when demob hits Friday PM and pickup cannot occur until Monday.

Rental Order Checklist (Seattle Electrical Rough-In)

  • PO scope clarity: specify puller class (2,000/4,000/6,500/8,000/10,000 lb), power requirements (120V/20A), and whether the rental is tugger-only or a complete cable pulling package.
  • Accessory lock-down: list mounts (floor/chain/mobile boom), rope length, rope diameter, force gauge (if required), quantity of sheaves, reel stand + spindle, rope grips, and any feeder requirement.
  • Delivery details: address, floor, dock instructions, contact name/phone, COI requirements, and delivery window (Seattle TI sites often enforce morning-only docks).
  • Off-rent rules: confirm how to stop billing (call/email/app), cutoff time (same-day vs next-day), and whether pickup date changes billing automatically.
  • Return condition documentation: require photos at delivery and at return (rope, mounts, serial tags) and note any existing damage immediately.
  • Consumables responsibility: confirm who supplies lube, pull line, tape, and replacement rope grips if they are lost/damaged.

Operational note: some rental policy language states day rentals may be based on an 8-hour day and that delivery/pick-up and fuel/repairs can be additional. Even when your tugger is electric, the “additional cost” categories can still hit via delivery, accessories, and repairs/cleaning.

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cable and puller in construction work

How To Keep Cable Puller Equipment Hire From Bleeding Past Budget

In Seattle rough-in, the fastest way to reduce cable puller equipment hire cost is to shorten the on-rent clock. That means coordinating conduit completion, pull schedule, and reel staging so the tugger is not sitting for days waiting on inspections, firestopping, or drywall. If you plan to pull on a Thursday/Friday, confirm whether pickup can occur Saturday (many local yards are closed weekends) and whether the yard will bill Saturday/Sunday as on-rent time—if the answer is “yes,” it can be cheaper to schedule pulls earlier in the week even if labor is slightly less convenient.

Rate Structures: Day, Week, And 4-Week “Month”

Most equipment hire programs for cable pullers use a day rate, a week rate, and a 4-week or 28-day “month.” Published examples in the region show clear 3:1 style week-to-day multiples (for example, $140/day and $420/week) and month rates roughly 3:1 over week ($1,260/month). Other published sheets show classic puller steps like $125/day, $375/week, $1,000/month for a 10,000 lb class, and $75/day, $225/week, $600/month for a 6,000 lb class. Use these as cross-checks when a quote looks “too good” or “too high,” then reconcile what is included.

Shift multipliers (important for interior work): if your project runs extended hours, confirm whether the rental is priced as single shift only. Some published rental rate guidance explicitly references single shift structures and uses multipliers for longer operating hours (for hour-metered equipment in particular). Even if a tugger is not hour-metered, your vendor may still apply a multi-shift premium when the equipment is in use across multiple shifts. (g

Package vs. Piece-Part: Why Quotes Vary By Hundreds Per Week

A common Seattle coordination failure is renting a tugger “body” and assuming mounts/rope/grips are included. Published catalogs and rate sheets show that many systems are offered as packages (power unit + pipe adapter + boom/floor mount accessories), while other rate sheets price adapters separately. If you do not list the accessories on the PO, you risk (1) return trips, (2) unplanned accessory day-rates, and (3) additional delivery charges.

Seattle-Specific Cost Considerations (That Show Up On Invoices)

  • Georgetown/SODO yard proximity helps—until the job is downtown: Seattle’s central neighborhoods can be “close in miles” but expensive in time. Budget a higher probability of truck wait time and re-delivery if a dock appointment slips.
  • Wet weather and indoor dust control: if your tugger is staged across multiple floors, use totes for small parts and protect ropes and mounts from wet concrete dust. It is common for yards to charge cleaning when equipment returns with heavy dust or slurry (plan $150–$300 on larger TIs where housekeeping is imperfect).
  • Ferry and bridge choke points: if your scope crosses Puget Sound or you are delivering to constrained sites, carry a ferry/time surcharge allowance ($150–$300) and be explicit about delivery windows to avoid a missed sailing turning into an extra billed day.

Damage, Loss, And Deposits: Put Numbers In The Estimate

For cable puller equipment hire, financial exposure is often higher than for basic power tools because ropes, force gauges, and mounts are high-value and frequently handled by multiple workers. Use explicit allowances:

  • Deposit exposure: carry a $1,000–$5,000 refundable deposit placeholder for high-performance pullers (depends on credit/account setup and the exact unit). A published example shows a $5,000 deposit for a Greenlee-class puller.
  • Rope damage exposure: carry $250–$650 for rope replacement/repair contingencies (and treat cuts as chargeable).
  • Accessory loss exposure: $75–$250 per kit (pins, clevises, grips) if the kit moves across floors and is not inventoried daily.
  • Insurance/waiver: 10%–15% of time charges as a planning factor if you elect damage waiver; otherwise confirm coverage under your builder’s risk/tool floater and whether theft from jobsite is covered.

When A Smaller Tugger Is Actually More Expensive

If you rent a 2,000 lb cable puller because it is cheaper per day, but you need (a) two setup positions, (b) additional re-pulls, or (c) a second week due to slow progress, the weekly rate structure will erase any savings. Published examples show 2,000 lb packages are designed for versatility and include mounts and accessories; however, if your conduit friction is high, moving to a 4,000–6,500 lb class may reduce total rental duration by a full week.

Closeout: Off-Rent And Return Without Paying Extra Days

  • Off-rent immediately after final pull: schedule the last pull early enough to clean, inventory, and stage for pickup the same day. Missing cutoff times is a common cause of “one more day” charges.
  • Photograph return condition: take pictures of the tugger, rope, mounts, and any existing scuffs before loading out to reduce disputes.
  • Document rope length and grips count: count rope grips (and any specialty grips) back into the case. Missing grips are a frequent back-charge category.
  • Confirm power cord condition: damaged cords and missing GFCI adapters are easy back-charges on indoor projects.

2026 Planning Summary For Seattle Cable Puller Equipment Hire

Use the base tugger rate as the start, not the budget. For Seattle electrical rough-in, build your estimate around (1) the correct puller class, (2) a complete accessory package, (3) delivery/pickup logistics, and (4) a realistic off-rent plan that avoids weekend billing. Anchoring against published PNW-style rate examples (day/week/month and week/4-week price books) gives you a defendable 2026 planning range, but the invoice outcome will be determined by accessories, jobsite access, and return condition.