Concrete Mixer Rental Rates in Jacksonville (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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Concrete Mixer Rental Rates Jacksonville 2026

For 2026 planning in Jacksonville, concrete mixer equipment hire typically pencils out in three tiers: (1) small electric mixers (roughly 2–3 cu ft) at about $45–$80/day, $160–$260/week, and $400–$780/month; (2) mid-size gas “wheelbarrow/stand” mixers (about 4–6 cu ft) at $75–$130/day, $260–$450/week, and $780–$1,250/month; and (3) towable 6–9 cu ft jobsite mixers at $90–$160/day, $300–$525/week, and $850–$1,500/4-week, with rate sensitivity driven by drum size, towability, and account status. National rental houses and Jacksonville-area tool yards tend to land in the same band, but your final hire cost will move materially with delivery radius, off-rent rules, damage waiver selection, and clean/return condition requirements (all of which are where “cheap daily” rentals often get expensive). (g

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
Tucker Rentals (Tucker Equipment Rental & Sales Inc.) $105 $275 9 Visit
United Rentals (Jacksonville, FL) $110 $290 9 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals (Jacksonville, FL) $105 $280 9 Visit
Herc Rentals (Jacksonville, FL) $115 $300 7 Visit

What Drives the Real Concrete Mixer Equipment Hire Cost in Jacksonville?

Rental coordinators usually win (or lose) money on mixer hire by controlling the cost drivers that sit outside the published day/week/4-week rate. For concrete driveway work—especially partial replacements, aprons, and tie-ins—the mixer is often one component inside a short-duration, high-consequence pour window. Plan around the following variables before you request quotes:

  • Mixer type and batch capacity: small electrics are economical but can bottleneck production; towable 9 cu ft units are priced higher but reduce labor idle time.
  • Rental time basis: many branches treat a “day” as an 8-hour shift and apply shift multipliers if you run beyond that window on metered equipment.
  • Access and towing constraints: whether your crew can tow pickup/return (saving freight) depends on hitch class, ball size, safety chains, and site access.
  • Site conditions specific to Jacksonville: sandy subgrades, humidity/heat, and coastal exposure can push you toward faster placement and stricter cleanup discipline to avoid set-up in the drum.

Operationally, Jacksonville deliveries can also be impacted by river crossings and peak traffic around bridge approaches; that affects whether you should budget for a tight delivery appointment versus a broader “sometime today” window (which is cheaper but riskier on a pour day).

Rate Structures You’ll Actually See on Quotes (And How to Normalize Them)

Concrete mixer hire is commonly quoted as 4-hour/half-day, day, week, and 4-week (monthly) with “3-day week” conventions. Published rate cards and rental center schedules frequently show 4-hour options around the mid-$40s to $70s for small electrics and around $70+ for larger mixers, then stepping to day and week pricing.

For estimating consistency on Jacksonville driveway scopes, normalize every quote into:

  • Base rent (time charges only)
  • Freight (deliver + pick-up, or your tow/pickup cost)
  • Protection package (damage waiver or insurance adders)
  • Return condition charges (cleaning, missing pins/chutes, fuel top-off if gas)
  • Time overages (late return, weekend billing, off-rent cutoffs)

Delivery, Pick-Up, and Off-Rent Rules That Change Total Hire Cost

Even when the equipment hire day rate looks competitive, freight and off-rent policy are usually the swing factors for Jacksonville-area driveway work.

  • Typical delivery/pick-up allowance (planning): budget $95–$175 each way inside a “local” radius, then $4–$7 per loaded mile beyond that radius. (Confirm whether the quote includes bridge/toll time and whether “local” is 10, 15, 20, or 25 miles.)
  • Minimum freight / minimum invoice: many yards enforce a $75–$125 minimum total on small-equipment tickets even if you only need a 4-hour rental.
  • Delivery windows and cutoffs: if you need a 7:00–9:00 AM arrival for a driveway pour, budget an appointment / guaranteed window adder of $50–$120. If you can take “best available,” you can often avoid that cost but you carry pour-delay risk.
  • Off-rent timing: you may stop time charges when you place an off-rent call, but many branches still require the unit staged and accessible for pickup (gate code, clear path, no vehicles blocking). Treat “off-rent called at 3:30 PM” as potentially billable into the next day if pickup can’t be executed.
  • Weekend/holiday billing: some branches apply a weekend special; others bill calendar days if the unit is out. For Jacksonville work with HOA noise limits or restricted concrete truck access, ask explicitly how Saturday/Sunday count on your account.

Jacksonville-specific note: coastal or beach-area sites (e.g., Atlantic Blvd corridor toward the beaches) often have tighter morning access and limited staging space; if you cannot store the towable mixer securely overnight, you may need same-day pickup (higher freight) or budget for on-site security/lock-out requirements.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown

Below are the adders that most frequently turn a “$100/day mixer” into a materially higher concrete mixer equipment hire cost on the final invoice. Use these as estimating allowances unless your supplier writes them into the quote.

  • Damage waiver (DW): commonly 10%–15% of base rent (sometimes higher on towables). DW is not liability insurance; confirm what it covers (and excludes), especially drum damage, bent frames, and tires.
  • Refundable deposit / authorization hold: plan $100–$300 for small electric mixers and $250–$750 for towable mixers, depending on account terms and whether you have an established credit line.
  • Cleaning fee: budget $85–$250 if the drum returns with hardened buildup, chutes are caked, or guards are coated. “Light wash” expectations should be clarified before dispatch.
  • Concrete removal / chipping time: if set-up occurs inside the drum, the yard may bill a heavier remediation line item, often $150–$400 (labor + disposal).
  • Fuel / engine condition (gas units): allow $15–$35 for a fuel/service surcharge if returned low or with contaminated fuel; some suppliers also charge a $25–$60 “no-start/diagnostic” fee if the unit won’t run at check-in.
  • Late return: common structures include a 1/4-day penalty after a short grace period, or an hourly penalty of $25–$60/hour up to the daily cap—verify in writing.
  • Missing accessories: chute pins, safety chains, and wheel chocks can be billed at replacement pricing; as an allowance, carry $20–$75 for “small missing parts” risk unless you document outbound/inbound condition.

Choosing Mixer Size for a Concrete Driveway Scope (So You Don’t Over-Hire or Under-Hire)

The correct mixer for a concrete driveway depends on whether you are doing bagged mixes for a small repair/tie-in or trying to produce yardage at a pace that keeps finishing crews continuously productive. Published equipment guidance commonly notes that small mixers may only handle partial-bag batches, while larger towable mixers can handle roughly 1.5–2 bags per batch depending on aggregate and slump.

  • 2–3 cu ft electric mixer: lowest equipment hire cost, easiest logistics, but higher labor time; best when access is tight (gated backyards, constrained staging) and total volume is small.
  • 4–6 cu ft gas mixer: a middle ground where you can keep one finisher moving without overpaying for towable logistics; common when power is unreliable or GFCI availability is uncertain.
  • 6–9 cu ft towable mixer: higher base rent, but often cheaper per placed cubic foot once you account for crew time. Towables also reduce “trip count” around the slab, but only if your site has enough room to stage and safely maneuver.

For Jacksonville driveway work, heat and humidity increase the consequences of slow production: if your crew can’t place and finish within your planned open time, your total cost increases via overtime, rework, and extended rental duration. In other words, the “right” mixer is often the one that protects schedule certainty, not the one with the lowest day rate.

Example: Jacksonville Concrete Driveway Apron Replacement (With Real Rental Constraints)

Example scope: replace a 10 ft × 12 ft apron at 4 in thickness (about 40 cu ft ≈ 1.5 cu yd). Crew is 3-person, with a hard 8:00 AM–2:00 PM HOA work window, and no overnight equipment storage allowed in the driveway approach.

  • Planned equipment: towable 9 cu ft mixer for same-day productivity (avoid losing the pour window).
  • Base rent (planning): $110–$150/day for the towable mixer class, depending on supplier/account. (g
  • Freight strategy: schedule early delivery (7:00–8:00 AM) and same-day pickup (2:30–4:30 PM). Budget $190–$350 freight round-trip plus a $50–$120 guaranteed-window adder to protect the HOA cutoff.
  • Protection and closeout: add 10%–15% damage waiver, and carry a $150 cleaning allowance unless your field lead is responsible for washdown and photo documentation.
  • Accessories: chute extension allowance $10–$20/day if discharge height/angle requires it, plus $25–$60 for small hand tools missing/damage risk at return.

Why this matters: on this kind of Jacksonville apron work, “saving $30 on the day rate” can be erased instantly by one late pickup that triggers an extra day, or by a drum cleanup charge when the unit sits in the sun after the last batch.

Budget Worksheet (Concrete Mixer Equipment Hire Allowances)

  • Concrete mixer base rent (select tier): $45–$80/day electric; $75–$130/day gas; $90–$160/day towable
  • Freight (deliver + pick-up): $190–$350 round trip (adjust for radius/miles)
  • Guaranteed delivery window (if pour-critical): $50–$120
  • Damage waiver: 10%–15% of base rent
  • Deposit/authorization hold (if applicable): $100–$750
  • Cleaning allowance (standard): $85–$250
  • Concrete removal/remediation contingency (worst case): $150–$400
  • Fuel/service allowance for gas units: $15–$35
  • Late return contingency: $25–$60/hour or 1/4-day penalty (per supplier terms)
  • Accessory adders (chute extension, pins, locks): $10–$20/day + $20–$75 parts risk

Rental Order Checklist (What to Put on the PO So You Don’t Eat Costs)

  • Equipment identification: mixer type (electric/gas/towable), drum size (cu ft), hitch requirements (2-inch ball vs pintle), and required accessories (chute, extension, safety chains).
  • Billing basis: confirm day = shift length, weekend policy, and any metered/shift multipliers if applicable (single vs double vs triple shift).
  • Delivery requirements: exact address, gate codes, on-site contact, staging location, ground conditions (avoid soft sand), and delivery time window/cutoff.
  • Off-rent and pickup rules: off-rent notification cutoff time; requirement to stage curbside; after-hours pickup fee if you need it ($50–$120 planning allowance).
  • Return condition documentation: outbound/inbound photos of drum, frame, tires, hitch, and guards; note any existing dents, bent guards, or hardened material.
  • Cleaning expectations: confirm whether “rinse clean” is acceptable and whether the yard prohibits washout at their location (some require you to clean on-site).
  • Risk coverage: damage waiver acceptance or COI on file; clarify tire, theft, and transit responsibility if you tow.

When Weekly or 4-Week Equipment Hire Beats the Day Rate

If your driveway scope is staged (demo day, form day, pour day, cure protection), it’s common to accidentally pay 3–5 daily rates when a weekly rate would have been cheaper. Many published schedules show a steep drop from day to week to 4-week on mixer categories, so it’s worth calculating the breakeven point before you issue the PO. (g

Jacksonville-specific scheduling reality: afternoon thunderstorms and summer heat can force you to split work across more days than planned. If you expect weather-driven delays, negotiate a week rate up front (or at least confirm conversion rules) so you don’t get trapped in daily overages.

Pricing References Used for 2026 Planning Ranges (Check Local Branch Quotes)

Planning ranges above were triangulated from published U.S. rental rate schedules and listings that show example mixer pricing across electric and towable categories, including (a) a national rate-card style schedule showing 9 cu ft tow-behind mixer day/week/4-week pricing and shift definitions, (b) independent rental center listings showing towable mixer daily/weekly/4-week pricing, and (c) rental schedules showing small electric mixer 4-hour/day/week pricing. (g

Our AI app can generate costed estimates in seconds.

concrete and mixer in construction work

How Jacksonville Conditions Affect Mixer Hire Duration and Closeout Cost

Concrete mixer equipment hire cost control in Jacksonville is often less about the nominal rate and more about preventing “extra day” events and return-condition charges. Three local conditions tend to drive those overruns:

  • Heat and humidity: faster set-up risk means you should plan a dedicated washout procedure and a hard stop time. If the mixer sits for even 30–45 minutes after the final batch on a hot day, cleanup time increases and the probability of a $150–$400 remediation line item goes up (carry it as contingency if you can’t guarantee washout discipline).
  • Sandy staging areas: towable units can sink or become difficult to move at pickup; if the driver can’t access the unit, you may incur a “dry run” charge. Budget $75–$150 for a failed pickup attempt unless you can stage on stable pavement.
  • Limited staging in subdivisions: if you cannot store the unit curbside overnight without blocking drive lanes, you may be forced into same-day pickup (more freight) or into a second day of rent because pickup can’t happen before close.

Shift Rules and Metering: Don’t Let Overtime Multiply the Rate

Some rental rate schedules define single shift as 0–8 hours, with double shift billed at 1.5× and triple shift at for applicable hour-metered machines. Even if your mixer itself is not metered, associated support equipment you add at the last minute (e.g., power buggies) can be. If your driveway pour runs long, confirm whether your branch treats the “day” as a calendar day or as a shift day on your account. (g

Estimator tip: for driveway work with a risk of finishing past normal hours, carry an overtime allowance equal to 0.25 day of base rent, plus $25–$60/hour for freight rescheduling if pickup must be moved to next day.

Accessories and “Small Adders” That Commonly Get Missed

Mixer rentals look simple, but accessory decisions can shift the total equipment hire cost enough to matter on small driveway tickets. Common adders to confirm:

  • Chute extensions: allow $10–$20/day when forms are elevated or discharge needs to clear reinforcement and edge forms.
  • Tow package requirements: if your crew is towing, confirm whether you need a specific ball size, pintle option, or light adapter; if you have to source last-minute towing accessories, carry $25–$75 in miscellaneous cost.
  • GFCI/power compliance for electric mixers: if reliable power isn’t available at the driveway, the “cheap electric mixer” can trigger a generator rental. If you do not already have power on site, plan a contingency of $65–$95/day for temporary power rather than getting stuck on pour morning.
  • Security/lockout: if the unit must remain on site overnight, budget $20–$40 for lock hardware and $50–$150 for additional security measures depending on location and theft exposure.

Reducing Cleaning and Damage Charges (Field Controls That Save Money)

Cleaning fees are predictable—and therefore preventable—when you treat the mixer like a revenue-generating asset that must be returned in documented condition. For driveway work, implement these controls:

  • Assign a washout owner: one person is responsible for keeping the drum wet between batches and executing washout immediately after final discharge.
  • Plan washout containment: if the site requires dust/slurry control, carry $25–$60 for containment materials (poly, bins) rather than risking a cleanup back-charge.
  • Photo documentation: take inbound photos at delivery and outbound photos at pickup/return—drum interior, frame, hitch, tires, and guard condition.
  • Keep chutes/pins together: bag and tag small parts; missing parts are the easiest way to turn a small hire ticket into a disputed invoice.

Negotiation and Procurement Notes for Concrete Mixer Equipment Hire

On concrete mixer categories, national house pricing and local yard pricing can converge, so the negotiation win is often in commercial terms rather than base rent:

  • Ask for rate conversion clarity: confirm whether your invoice automatically converts to the best rate (day-to-week, week-to-4-week) or whether it stays at the originally booked term.
  • Freight bundling: if you are already bringing other equipment to the same Jacksonville project, ask whether the branch can consolidate deliveries to reduce the $95–$175 per-leg freight exposure.
  • Eliminate “rush” behavior: ordering after cutoff increases appointment fees and failed-delivery risk. If you can place the order 24–48 hours ahead, you’re more likely to avoid the $50–$120 window premium.

Closeout: What to Reconcile Before the Invoice Is Approved

  • Verify on-rent/off-rent timestamps against your foreman’s pour log (avoid an accidental extra day).
  • Confirm freight legs billed match actual delivery/pickup count (watch for “attempted pickup” line items in the $75–$150 range).
  • Validate damage waiver % applied to the correct base rent line items (commonly 10%–15%).
  • Challenge cleaning/remediation charges with photos if the mixer was returned clean and wet (this is where documentation saves real dollars).

Bottom line for Jacksonville concrete driveway scopes: treat the mixer as a schedule-protection tool. You can usually save more total cost by preventing one extra billed day, one failed pickup, or one drum remediation charge than by shopping a $10/day difference in base rent.