
For 2026 planning in Colorado Springs, concrete mixer equipment hire typically pencils out in three practical tiers based on capacity and mobility: (1) small 120V electric “portable” mixers (often 2–4 cu. ft.) at roughly $45–$75/day, $135–$225/week, and $300–$650/4-week; (2) mid-size 6 cu. ft. towable or heavy-duty portable mixers at about $80–$120/day, $300–$420/week, and $700–$1,200/4-week; and (3) larger gas mixers up to ~9–12 cu. ft. at roughly $95–$160/day, $336–$560/week, and $900–$1,800/4-week, depending on branch availability, condition, and whether the unit is tow-behind. Foundation repair teams usually land in tier (1) or (2) because batch sizes are small and access is constrained (side yards, basements, crawlspaces). In-market, national providers (e.g., Sunbelt, United, Sunstate) and local tool houses all compete, so your best rate is usually driven by how well you manage delivery windows, off-rent rules, and cleaning expectations (not just the posted day rate).
| Vendor | Daily Rate | Weekly Rate | Review Score | Website |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| United Rentals | $115 | $430 | 9 | Visit |
| Sunbelt Rentals | $120 | $450 | 8 | Visit |
| Herc Rentals | $110 | $410 | 9 | Visit |
Local Colorado Springs price anchors you can use to sanity-check quotes: a Colorado Springs-area provider advertises portable electric mixer day rates of $50/day (4 cu. ft.) and $60/day (6 cu. ft.), with weekly pricing at $135/week and $160/week respectively (they also advertise delivery/pickup included, which is not typical across all rental houses). Another rental catalog shows a 6 cu. ft. mixer at $100/day, $380/week, and $1,080/month, and separately prices a chute/extension accessory at $15/day, $45/week, $135/month (handy when you need to discharge into tight footing trenches without repositioning). A different online rate card for a towable 6 cu. ft. mixer lists $110/24hr and $350/7-day. For upper-bound budgeting, the U.S. GSA short-term rental ceiling rates list “concrete mixer - gas - up to 12 cu. ft.” at $95/day and $336/week (useful as a reference point when a quote seems inflated).
Capacity and discharge method drive labor cost more than the rental line item. A 2–4 cu. ft. electric mixer is cheaper to hire, but if it forces extra cycles, it can burn 2–4 labor-hours on a footing day. Conversely, a 6 cu. ft. towable mixer can reduce cycles but may require a trailer-capable pickup, a 2-inch ball, safety chains, and a driver comfortable towing on grade changes common around the Front Range. In foundation repair specifically (pier pads, stem wall patches, crack stitching grout), you’re often mixing bagged product in short bursts—so you’re buying schedule certainty and reduced rework risk more than “production.”
Colorado Springs jobsite realities that routinely change the hire price: (1) Elevation (roughly 6,000 ft.) can reduce small-engine performance; crews may need more runtime for the same mix volume, increasing exposure to late-return penalties if you planned a tight same-day off-rent. (2) Wind and low humidity increase dust-control needs around bag handling, especially when mixing indoors or near occupied facilities; extra poly, negative-air, or HEPA vacuum rentals can add $50–$250/day in ancillary equipment hire. (3) Military and critical facilities (Fort Carson / Peterson / Schriever-area work) can require tighter delivery windows, COIs, and gate access coordination—missed windows often turn into a redelivery charge or an extra day billed.
Most rental houses price mixers on a 1 day / 1 week / 4-week structure with a “rate cap” that rewards you for keeping the unit long enough to convert into the cheaper time bucket. For estimating, a common rule of thumb is:
Use these ratios to spot when a quote is “off” (for example, three separate daily charges often exceed the weekly rate). If you are doing foundation repair with uncertain excavations (unknown rebar, unexpected undermining, groundwater), it’s often cheaper to budget the weekly rate than to gamble on a single day rate and then pay late fees or extra days when conditions change.
Concrete mixer rental invoices are rarely just the base rate. Build your 2026 Colorado Springs budget with line-item allowances for the following cost drivers (these are typical planning allowances—confirm per vendor and branch policy):
For foundation repair, the mixer itself is often the smallest portion of the equipment hire cost once you include the accessories that keep production moving and prevent rework:
These add-ons are also where delivery costs balloon: a “mixer-only” delivery might be $95 each way, but a mixer + vibrator + HEPA vac often triggers a larger truck or a second drop.
Scenario: You’re supporting a foundation repair subcontract that requires (12) pier pads and (1) short grade-beam patch on the west side of a Colorado Springs home. Access is through a 42-inch gate; the mixer must stay in the driveway, and material must be wheelbarrowed ~60 ft to the forms. You plan a single “batch day,” but excavation findings can extend the work.
Estimated equipment hire total (one-day plan, delivered): $105 (mixer) + $240 (delivery) + $15 (chute) + $15 (DW allowance) + $75 (cleaning allowance) = $450 before tax/fees. If excavation extends and you keep the unit two extra days, your total can jump by +$210 in base rent alone—this is why many rental coordinators pre-approve the weekly rate when the scope is uncertain.
Off-rent timing is where concrete mixer equipment hire costs get away from otherwise disciplined foundation repair budgets. Build your internal plan around these operational constraints:

When you’re comparing concrete mixer hire pricing in Colorado Springs for foundation repair, the lowest day rate is rarely the lowest total. Quote comparisons should be normalized to the same operating assumptions:
Small 120V electric concrete mixers (2–4 cu. ft.): Best for interior/basement access, tight gates, and small batch grout/concrete. Typical hire planning: $45–$75/day, $135–$225/week, $300–$650/4-week. One Colorado Springs-area provider publicly advertises $50/day (4 cu. ft.) and $60/day (6 cu. ft.), with weekly pricing at $135 and $160 respectively, which supports the lower end of these planning ranges.
Mid-size 6 cu. ft. towable mixers: Common for footing trenches, pier pads, and repeated small pours where you can stage near the driveway and wheelbarrow in. Typical hire planning: $80–$120/day, $300–$420/week, $700–$1,200/4-week. Published examples include $110/24hr and $350/7-day for a 6 cu. ft. towable.
Larger gas mixers up to ~9–12 cu. ft.: Less common on residential foundation repair but relevant for commercial underpinning or when you’re mixing higher volumes in a constrained delivery area (no ready-mix access). For budgeting, anchor to $95–$160/day and $336–$560/week, with $900–$1,800/4-week depending on availability and contract terms. The GSA ceiling rate for a gas mixer up to 12 cu. ft. lists $95/day and $336/week, which is a useful benchmark when negotiating.
Timed deliveries cost more. If your foundation repair schedule requires a hard 7:00–8:00 a.m. delivery (before occupants leave or before another trade blocks access), many rental operations treat that as a premium service. Budget +$75–$200 for time-window delivery, especially if your site is north of Colorado Springs (Monument) or east toward Falcon where route time is less predictable.
Limited access increases accessory spend. If your mixer must remain curbside and you have 50–120 ft of travel to the work area, plan for:
Cold-weather and cleanup are tied at the hip. In Colorado Springs, freeze-thaw risk makes washout discipline non-negotiable. A practical standard is “no slurry left standing longer than 20–30 minutes” at end of shift. If you can’t guarantee washout (no drain access, no designated washout bin), you should assume a higher cleaning back-charge risk (often $150–$350 for hardened material removal).
Even for smaller concrete mixer equipment hire, rental coordinators should plan for the paperwork and financial controls that can delay pickup or inflate cost:
If you run multiple foundation repair calls per week, you can save money by moving from “reactive daily rentals” to “programmatic weekly/4-week hire” during peak season (spring through fall). Indicators you should pre-book weekly/4-week:
In those cases, paying a 4-week rate (even if the mixer is idle for several days) can still reduce total costs by cutting delivery cycles and minimizing “extra-day” billing due to timing.
For foundation repair in Colorado Springs, the best budget accuracy comes from treating the concrete mixer as one component in a small “placing system” (mixer + access + containment + washout). Use 2026 planning ranges of $45–$75/day for small electric mixers and $80–$120/day for 6 cu. ft. mixers, then add explicit allowances for delivery ($150–$350 total), damage waiver (10%–15%), and cleaning/concrete-out ($75–$350). Published local and national references (including Colorado Springs-area advertised rates and government ceiling rate benchmarks) can help you validate quotes before issuing a PO.