
For Phoenix foundation repair work in 2026, concrete mixer equipment hire typically pencils out in three practical tiers: (1) a small electric drum mixer for indoor/garage or tight-access batching at roughly $75–$95/day, $260–$330/week, and $650–$850/month; (2) a towable 9 cu. ft. gas mixer for higher daily bag counts and faster cycle times at roughly $130–$165/day, $450–$580/week, and $1,200–$1,550/month; and (3) legacy/older 6–7 cu. ft. gas tow-behind units that can still show up in the $60–$95/day band depending on fleet age and counter vs. contractor programs. Recent published Phoenix-area online rates support these planning bands (for example, day/week/month pricing is commonly displayed by major local rental providers, and national houses can source similar mixer classes), but your executed cost will hinge on delivery/pick-up, damage waiver/insurance election, fuel/cleaning backcharges, and off-rent timing rules in the rental contract.
| Vendor | Daily Rate | Weekly Rate | Review Score | Website |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sunbelt Rentals | $64 | $180 | 6 | Visit |
| Herc Rentals | $103 | $363 | 8 | Visit |
| United Rentals | $136 | $344 | 6 | Visit |
Important estimating note (Phoenix, foundation repair): most “mixer-only” quotes miss the real cost drivers—especially delivery windows, return condition documentation, and whether the mix plan needs an electric unit (no exhaust) versus a towable gas unit (higher output). If you are batching non-shrink grout, micro-concrete, or flowable repair mixes, you may also need a mortar mixer or a paddle mixer; however, this guide stays focused on concrete mixer hire costs and the cost adders directly tied to putting a mixer on the job and getting it off-rent clean.
Foundation repair in Phoenix commonly involves stem-wall patching, interior slab cut-and-repair, pier/underpin cap pours, grade beam rebuilds, and crack stitching where you batch in controlled increments. The mixer category you select impacts not only the day rate, but also freight, cleaning, and downtime risk.
This is the “indoor-safe” option when you cannot run gasoline equipment in a garage, interior room, or near occupied spaces. In Phoenix-area published pricing, a 3.5 cu. ft. electric concrete mixer has been shown at $79/day, $277/week, and $720/month—useful as an anchor for your 2026 planning range above.
Cost impacts to plan for (allowances): (1) power availability and cord management, (2) GFCI requirements, (3) dust-control expectations when mixing bagged material near interior demo, and (4) slower output versus towable gas mixers—meaning you may hold labor longer, which effectively increases “mixer cost per yard placed.”
For exterior foundation repair staging (side yards, alley access, open driveways), the towable 9 cu. ft. class is a common productivity sweet spot. Phoenix-area published pricing has been shown at $138/day, $483/week, and $1,256/month for a 9 cu. ft. towable concrete mixer—again, a solid real-world reference point for 2026 planning.
Operational note: If your foundation repair scope is in a tight subdivision lot, confirm turning radius, gate widths, and whether the mixer must be hand-positioned rather than towed into place. In Phoenix summer heat, plan early starts and shaded staging; overheated engines and evaporating wash water are common “soft” cost drivers that turn into hard costs via delays.
Some Phoenix metro rental fleets still publish much lower counter rates on 7 cu. ft. gas tow-behind mixers (for example, $59/day shown on a local published rate sheet), which can be attractive for small foundation repair punch lists—provided the unit is mechanically sound and you can manage more cycles.
Phoenix foundation repair crews often want 4:00–10:00 a.m. delivery windows to beat heat and neighborhood restrictions; some local rental operations publish similar delivery expectations and early pick-up readiness requirements. If your mixer must be ready for pick-up before 7:00 a.m. on the scheduled return date, that can effectively pull your “last production shift” forward, so budget for either (a) one less day of pour capacity, or (b) a holdover day to keep the mixer through your cleanup and documentation window.
Even for a single mixer, delivery can be the swing factor versus pickup. In the Phoenix metro, it is common to see delivery structured by radius bands (for example, 0–20 miles priced at a fixed “each way” fee on some rental storefronts), with higher bands beyond that; the same concept often applies to smaller tools as well, even if the dollar amount differs by equipment class. For estimating, a realistic allowance for a mixer is $75–$125 each way within a typical metro radius, plus a mileage adder if you are outside the core delivery zone; confirm whether “miles” are measured depot-to-site or round trip.
Foundation crack repair and slab-edge work frequently involves interior sawcutting and excavation adjacent to occupied spaces. If the mixer is staged near interior access points, add a dust-control allowance (poly, zipper doors, negative air) and plan for a stricter cleanup standard at off-rent. While dust control isn’t always billed as a mixer fee, it drives cleaning time and the risk of a rental cleaning backcharge if material hardens on the drum, frame, or discharge area.
Use these line items as estimating “guardrails” so your concrete mixer hire cost doesn’t get blown up by post-return charges:
Scenario: stem-wall stabilization with two small pier caps and a localized grade beam patch in a Central Phoenix subdivision. Bagged material is staged in the driveway; the pour must be completed before afternoon heat and HOA noise windows.
Field constraint: delivery arrives at 6:30 a.m.; pick-up must be staged before 7:00 a.m. on off-rent day. That pushes your final washout and documentation to the prior afternoon—so you either (a) finish pours by 2:00 p.m. and clean immediately, or (b) accept an extra day of rental as schedule insurance.
Use this as a no-table worksheet for internal estimating. Adjust quantities to your pour plan and access constraints.
Over-sizing a mixer often costs less than under-sizing once you factor labor idle and “one more day” risk. If you’re consistently batching more than 30–40 bags/day, a towable mixer can reduce cycle count and cleanup time compared to a small electric unit—even if the day rate is higher.
Rental houses care about hardened build-up because it damages the drum and paddles. Assign ownership: who has the hose, where wash water goes, and when the final spin-clean happens. If you return a unit dirty, published rate sheets show cleaning fees can start at $25 minimum, and the real cost is the time delay while the yard rejects the return.
For gas mixers, treat fuel as a closeout item like a small generator. If you return short, per-gallon fees can apply (published example: $4.99/gal). In Phoenix, the “last stop fuel run” during rush hour is a predictable productivity hit—so designate a driver and time it to your off-rent window.
Foundation repair scopes can slip on excavation surprises, rebar discovery, or inspection availability. When your forecast is 4–6 days of intermittent batching, request both day rates and the week rate up front (published Phoenix-area references show week rates posted alongside day rates). If a week rate is only ~3.0–3.5x the day rate, it can be cheaper than risking holdover days.

Once you have a realistic Phoenix day/week/month rate for the mixer itself, most overruns come from controllable field behaviors and procurement choices. The goal for a rental coordinator is to make the mixer a predictable, low-friction cost line—especially on foundation repair where the mixer is rarely the only constraint.
If you dispatch a crew member to pick up a towable mixer, the direct cost might look like “free,” but it usually consumes 2–4 labor hours round trip across the Valley (traffic, loading, paperwork, securing). If your internal blended labor+burden is $55–$85/hour, that’s a hidden $110–$340 that can exceed a typical round-trip delivery allowance. For electric drum mixers, pickup can still make sense if you can stage it the night before without triggering an extra day charge—confirm the rental center’s clock and cutoff.
Many rental programs apply a damage waiver / rental protection plan as a percentage of the rental subtotal unless a compliant COI is on file. Published policies commonly cite 15% charges in the absence of insurance proof, while other policies cite 10%. Treat this as a bid-day decision: either (a) push COIs early and track renewals, or (b) budget the percentage consistently so it doesn’t hit as a “surprise” in AP.
Two practical rules reduce holdover charges on mixer rentals:
If your repair staging is inside a garage (common in Phoenix for crack injection prep, partial slab replacement, or limited access), a gas mixer may be disallowed for safety/ventilation reasons. In that case, anchor your equipment hire cost around the local published electric mixer class (for example, $79/day, $277/week, $720/month has been shown for a 3.5 cu. ft. electric unit) and then add power-management cost (cords, GFCI, and placement).
For pier caps, grade beam patches, or stem-wall rebuilds where you have exterior staging, the 9 cu. ft. towable mixer commonly reduces cycle count enough to offset its higher daily hire rate (published example: $138/day, $483/week, $1,256/month).
For foundation repair, your mixer “need” is often intermittent: you batch, then wait on cure, then batch again. If the schedule uncertainty is high, weekly hire can be cheaper than stacking day rates plus holdover risk. Use a simple internal trigger:
In Phoenix, concrete mixer equipment hire costs are predictable when you anchor to real day/week/month pricing for the correct mixer class (electric vs towable), then proactively carry delivery, damage waiver, cleaning, and off-rent timing as line items—not afterthoughts. If you must pick one control lever: protect the off-rent event with a disciplined washout plan and documentation, because the fastest way to overpay on a mixer is to accidentally rent it for 1 extra day due to return rejection or missed pickup timing.