Concrete Pump Rental Rates in Atlanta (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

Concrete Pump Hire

For Atlanta-area concrete pump equipment hire planning in 2026, budget on a production-service model (pump truck + operator) that is usually billed as a minimum time block plus hourly, with common adders for yardage, travel/portal-to-portal, priming, and washout. As a practical estimating range, a line (hose) pump commonly pencils at $700–$1,250/day, $3,500–$6,500/week, and $12,000–$24,000/month; a truck-mounted boom pump (roughly 32m–47m class) commonly pencils at $1,200–$2,400/day, $6,000–$12,500/week, and $22,000–$48,000/month, assuming weekday dispatches and an 8-hour on-site window with typical utilization. Large national fleets (often operating under multiple brands) and established metro Atlanta concrete pumping contractors can quote tighter numbers once you lock reach, hose package, access, and pour schedule.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
Brundage-Bone Concrete Pumping (Atlanta / Southeast HQ) $450 $2 800 6 Visit
Genesis Concrete Pumping (Atlanta Metro) $450 $2 800 8 Visit
Jensen's Concrete Line Pumping (Marietta / Atlanta & North GA) $375 $1 350 10 Visit
Omanovic Concrete Line Pumping (Metro Atlanta) $325 $1 150 10 Visit

Estimator note (assumptions behind the day/week/month ranges): many pumpers don’t rent “bare equipment” the way a skid steer is rented; the invoice typically rolls up (1) a minimum charge (often 3–4 hours), (2) pumping time beyond the minimum, (3) a per-yard charge, and (4) travel/drive time or mobilization. Published U.S. rate sheets commonly show line-pump starts around $145/hr with a 3-hour minimum plus per-yard, fuel, drive-time, and prime-out adders, and boom-pump starts around $200/hr with a 4-hour minimum plus per-yard and drive-time.

Atlanta Concrete Pump Rental Rates By Pump Type

The fastest way to build a credible 2026 budget for concrete pump equipment hire in Atlanta is to decide whether you’re buying reach (boom pump) or buying hose flexibility (line pump). Then you layer on the real invoice drivers: minimums, travel, standby, washout, and schedule premiums.

Line (Hose) Pump Dispatch (Typical Slabs, Sidewalks, Back-of-Building Access)

  • 2026 planning day rate (Atlanta): $700–$1,250/day (typically built from a 3–4 hour minimum plus 1–3 additional hours).
  • 2026 planning weekly: $3,500–$6,500/week (assume 5 weekday pours, modest hose resets, and limited standby).
  • 2026 planning monthly: $12,000–$24,000/month (assume ~20 workdays; coordinate “off-rent” rules because pumps are commonly dispatched per pour, not held continuously).

Common line items you should expect to see (and carry as allowances): hourly pumping after minimum (often the same rate as the minimum block), per-yard pumped charge, travel or drive time, a prime/primer fee, fuel surcharge/line item, and washout. One published service menu (Southeast U.S.) shows line pump rates beginning at $145/hr with a 3-hour minimum, plus $3/yd pumped, $100/hr drive time, a $25 fuel charge, and a $30 prime-out.

Atlanta-specific cost caution: line pumps are sensitive to job readiness. If your site access is constrained (tight backyards, single-gate access behind retail, or pours staged through alleys), you can burn billable time on hose placement and repositioning—especially if the concrete crew is undersized for moving line safely and quickly.

Boom Pump Truck Dispatch (Commercial Slabs, Walls, Elevated Decks, Faster Placement)

  • 2026 planning day rate (Atlanta): $1,200–$2,400/day (often a 4-hour minimum + additional hours + per-yard).
  • 2026 planning weekly: $6,000–$12,500/week (5 pours/week; higher if your sequence creates repeat standby).
  • 2026 planning monthly: $22,000–$48,000/month (20 workdays; verify whether your supplier will hold a dedicated unit or dispatch “as available”).

Published rate-sheet reality check (useful for 2026 planning): a 2026 boom-pump rate sheet shows $225/hr with a 4-hour minimum, a $4.00 per cubic yard charge, and primer priced at $40 per bag; it also notes a fuel surcharge trigger and a travel charge for longer-distance work.

Atlanta-specific cost caution: boom selection is not only “meters = cost.” In the urban core, outrigger footprint and setup time can be the real cost driver. If you need flagging, lane control, or staged setup in tight Midtown/Downtown access, you can pay for non-pumping time even when the pump is physically on site and ready.

Longer-Term Programs (Weekly/Monthly) Without Overpaying

If your project team asks for “weekly” or “monthly” concrete pump equipment hire pricing, confirm what they actually mean operationally:

  • Held equipment (dedicated unit): typically priced higher because the supplier is reserving capacity; useful for multi-day deck pours or tight sequencing.
  • Program pricing (scheduled pours): usually still billed per dispatch/pour, but may reduce travel or minimum exposure if your pour windows are consistent.

In Atlanta, consistent pour start times matter because peak traffic patterns can turn “simple travel” into billable drive time when portal-to-portal or drive-time billing applies.

What Drives Concrete Pump Equipment Hire Costs In Atlanta?

For concrete pump equipment hire costs, the pump itself is rarely the only variable. The invoice is driven by the interaction between your pour plan and the supplier’s dispatch terms.

  • Minimum charge structure: 3-hour minimums are common for line pumps; 4-hour minimums are common for booms.
  • On-site duration vs. pumping duration: standby/waiting (rebar sign-off delays, embed checks, truck gaps) can be billed at the pumping hourly rate or a reduced standby rate.
  • Yardage-based adders: many suppliers add a $/yd charge (commonly $3–$4+/yd) on top of hourly.
  • Travel, mobilization, and drive time: can be a flat mobilization, mileage, or portal-to-portal/drive-time billing (carry $100/hr drive time as a planning placeholder when you see it in terms).
  • Hose package and reach complexity: extra hose length, reducers, slick line, and specialty end hoses for interior placements can add cost and time.
  • Schedule premiums: weekend/holiday or after-hours dispatches often carry premium hourly and/or premium setup charges.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown (Where Concrete Pump Hire Budgets Blow Up)

Concrete pump equipment hire costs frequently escalate via “small” line items that are individually reasonable but collectively material. Build them into your estimate so the first invoice doesn’t surprise AP.

  • Prime / primer / slick pack: published examples include a $30 prime-out or a separate slick-prime fee (one published rate sheet shows $15 slick prime) and/or a per-bag primer fee (published at $40/bag).
  • Fuel surcharge: published rate sheets show fuel surcharges (examples include 7.5% and 8% triggers), and some ready-mix suppliers publish per-load fuel/environmental surcharge schedules that can impact your overall placed-cost environment.
  • Drive time billed as labor time: a published example shows $100/hr drive time; in Metro Atlanta, congestion risk makes this a real exposure.
  • Washout and environmental compliance: if you do not provide an acceptable washout location/containment, expect an added charge (carry $50–$200 as a planning allowance based on how strict your site is and whether offsite disposal is required).
  • Cleanup / splatter / hardened concrete removal: carry $150–$350 as a realistic allowance when placement is interior, above finished surfaces, or when red-clay mud and rain create heavy undercarriage cleanup.
  • Cancellation / short-notice reschedule: published terms commonly include a show-up/cancellation charge if you cancel inside a short window; carry $200–$600 as a planning allowance depending on pump class and crew already dispatched.
  • Late return / overtime on long pours: some published terms assess overtime based on early starts, long days, or late finishes; carry 1.5x after an 8-hour day (including travel) as a conservative allowance when your schedule is uncertain.
  • Weekend and holiday premiums: published examples show incremental hourly and setup premiums for Saturday, Sunday, and holidays (for example, +$10/hr and +$25 setup Saturday; +$20/hr and +$50 setup Sunday/holiday).

Operational Rules That Change Real Concrete Pump Hire Cost

These are the field rules your rental coordinator should confirm on every Atlanta concrete pump equipment hire PO. They are also the rules that create the most cost variance from the estimate.

  • Clock start/stop: confirm whether billable time starts at “arrive on site,” “begin pumping,” or “leave yard,” and whether it stops at “fold up,” “washout complete,” or “back at yard.”
  • Included hose and adders: confirm included hose length and the adder for additional hose (carry a placeholder like $2.50/ft beyond the included package when you see it in terms on similar service menus).
  • Standby grace period: ask if you get 30–60 minutes included for setup/inspection sequencing before standby kicks in. If not, sequence inspections so the pump is productive upon arrival.
  • Concrete supply coordination: your dispatch cost rises when trucks are late. Pump time is billable whether the hopper is full or empty.
  • Off-rent / demob notice: confirm how much notice is required to cancel the next day’s dispatch (often same-day cutoffs apply).
  • Return condition documentation: require foreman photos of setup area, washout location, and final condition so cleanup disputes don’t turn into back-charges.

Example: Midtown Atlanta Elevated Slab Pour With Tight Access

Scenario: 110 CY elevated slab placement with a 42m boom pump requested for reach over an active loading zone. Pour window is 7:00 AM–1:00 PM to avoid afternoon traffic impacts and keep the site clear for other trades.

  • Base minimum (planning): 4-hour minimum at $225/hr = $900 (example structure aligns with published boom rate sheets; your Atlanta quote may vary).
  • Additional pumping time: 2 extra hours at $225/hr = $450.
  • Yardage charge: 110 CY at $4.00/CY = $440.
  • Primer: 1 bag at $40.
  • Travel/longer-distance allowance: carry $175 if your jobsite is outside the supplier’s standard radius or you are being billed portal-to-portal.
  • Washout/containment allowance: $150 (higher if offsite disposal is required).
  • Fuel surcharge allowance: 8% of pump invoice line items = roughly $170 on a ~$2,100 subtotal.

Planning total for pump hire: approximately $2,300–$2,700 before any lane-control, flagging, or site-specific requirements. Operational constraint that changes cost: if your ready-mix arrives in a 20–30 minute gap and you pay 1 hour of standby at $225/hr, you effectively add $225 plus potential overtime triggers if the day runs long.

Budget Worksheet (Concrete Pump Equipment Hire Allowances)

Use this as a line-item allowance worksheet (no surprises on the invoice). Adjust to your pump class and pour size.

  • Pump dispatch minimum (line pump 3–4 hrs; boom pump 4 hrs): allowance $650–$1,600.
  • Additional pumping hours beyond minimum: allowance $145–$225/hr (use your quote once awarded).
  • Per-yard pumping charge: allowance $3.00–$4.00/CY.
  • Drive time / portal-to-portal exposure: allowance $100/hr (carry 1–3 hours depending on location/traffic risk).
  • Mobilization/travel outside standard radius: allowance $175.
  • Prime-out / slick prime: allowance $15–$60.
  • Primer/grout: allowance $40 plus 0.25–1.0 CY of sacrificial mud depending on line length and mix.
  • Fuel surcharge: allowance 7.5%–10% of invoice items (confirm trigger language).
  • Standby/waiting time: allowance $150–$225/hr after any grace period.
  • Washout/containment: allowance $50–$200.
  • Cleaning/splatter remediation: allowance $150–$350 for interior/finished-surface risk.
  • Weekend/holiday premium: allowance +$10–$20/hr and +$25–$50 setup if applicable.
  • Cancellation/show-up exposure: allowance $200–$600.
  • Contingency for access/sequence risk (Atlanta traffic + tight setups): carry 10%–15%.

Rental Order Checklist (PO, Delivery, Return, Off-Rent)

  • PO scope clarity: pump type (line vs boom), boom class/reach, included hose length, included labor (operator only vs operator + oiler), and whether yardage is billed.
  • Jobsite info: address, contact, gate codes, staging area, outrigger footprint confirmation, overhead obstructions, and designated washout location/containment plan.
  • Schedule controls: requested arrival time, first-truck time, contingency pour start, cutoff time to avoid overtime, and cancellation window.
  • Billing rules: minimum hours, standby definition, clock start/stop, drive-time billing, fuel surcharge language, and weekend/holiday premium rules.
  • Return/closeout documentation: foreman photos of washout completion, any splatter cleanup, and final site condition; keep pour logs to defend against standby disputes.
  • Safety/compliance: confirm insurance/COI requirements, site PPE, traffic control needs, and any building management restrictions (noise, hours, and washdown water handling).

Our AI app can generate costed estimates in seconds.

concrete and pump in construction work

How To Convert Hourly Concrete Pump Hire Into Bid Units

Atlanta estimators often need to push concrete pump equipment hire costs into a unit rate (per slab, per placement, or per cubic yard) to keep bids consistent across scopes. A practical method is to model three components: (1) minimum block, (2) expected productive pumping hours, and (3) expected non-productive exposure (setup + hose handling + standby).

  • Step 1 (minimum block): carry one minimum dispatch per pour (example: 3-hour line pump minimum or 4-hour boom minimum).
  • Step 2 (production hours): convert your planned discharge rate into hours on the clock, then add fold-up/washout time (often 30–60 minutes) as real billable exposure unless explicitly included.
  • Step 3 (adders): apply per-yard charges, drive-time/mobilization, prime/primer, fuel surcharge, and washout.

Rule of thumb for bid sanity: if you are counting on a 2-hour placement, you still pay the minimum. Therefore, the cost-per-yard on small pours can look “high” unless you batch small pours together or negotiate a multi-pour program with predictable start times.

Boom Pump Versus Line Pump: Cost-Per-Yard Reality

From a pure equipment hire cost perspective, boom pumps usually carry a higher minimum and higher hourly, but they can reduce total billable hours on medium to large placements (less hose dragging, fewer resets, and faster discharge). Line pumps can be cost-effective on short reaches and back-of-building access, but can become expensive when your crew productivity is low or your hose route is long and continually changing.

Where Atlanta jobs get tripped up: urban access restrictions can force extra setup time (spotting, outrigger pads, staging ready-mix). That non-pumping time is still “pump time” on most invoices. In other words, the pump you pick should match not just reach, but the jobsite’s ability to keep the pump continuously fed and continuously placing.

Standby, Truck Gaps, And How To Stop Paying For Waiting

Standby is one of the most preventable concrete pump equipment hire costs. Build these controls into your pour plan:

  • Pre-pour readiness checklist: rebar sign-off, embeds, edge forms, and finish crew coverage complete before pump arrival.
  • Truck interval planning: don’t schedule 3-minute truck spacing if plant-to-site travel variability is 20 minutes; you’ll create hopper starvation and standby exposure.
  • Site logistics: in Metro Atlanta, plan for congestion and limited staging so the first two ready-mix trucks are on deck (without blocking fire lanes or violating site rules).
  • Hold points: if you have an inspection hold point, schedule pump arrival after the hold clears, not before.

Budget protection tactic: carry one hour of standby per pour in early budgets (example: $150–$225) and then actively drive it out during preconstruction once access and truck spacing are proven.

Insurance, Damage Waiver, And Deposit Practices (Cost Lens Only)

Concrete pumping is typically treated as a specialized service dispatch, so many suppliers will require either a COI meeting specified limits or will apply their own risk charges. For 2026 Atlanta planning, carry these allowances unless your supplier’s terms are already known:

  • Damage waiver / risk fee allowance: 8%–15% of pump charges when offered in lieu of COI compliance (varies widely by supplier and scope).
  • Deposit/credit hold allowance for new accounts: $500–$2,500 depending on dispatch size and credit terms.
  • Back-charge risk: keep a $250–$750 allowance for disputed cleanup, splatter, or hardened concrete removal when pumping over finished surfaces.

2026 Atlanta Market Notes That Affect Concrete Pump Hire Pricing

For 2026, pricing volatility in Metro Atlanta tends to come less from “headline rates” and more from availability, schedule compression, and travel-time exposure:

  • Peak demand windows: end-of-quarter pushes and weather-driven compression can tighten availability, increasing minimum exposure and reducing flexibility on cancellation windows.
  • Travel-time sensitivity: if your supplier bills drive time, Atlanta congestion can behave like an indirect rate increase on short pours.
  • Heat and weather impacts: summer heat can shorten workable time, which can force faster truck intervals; if the supply chain misses, you pay standby. Rain also increases cleanup and washout management burden.

Ownership Versus Hire (Only To Validate Your Hire Budget)

Most Atlanta contractors should treat pumps as hire/service for budgeting unless they have consistent volume and internal operator capacity. Ownership can look attractive on paper, but your equipment hire budget should reflect the “all-in” cost you are avoiding by hiring:

  • Capital cost reality check: truck-mounted boom pumps can represent a major capital outlay (often well into six figures), plus ongoing wear parts and compliance costs.
  • Operator availability: if you can’t staff a qualified operator reliably, your owned asset still behaves like a rental (idle time + overtime + schedule misses).
  • Utilization threshold: if you are not dispatching the pump multiple days per week across multiple projects, hired pumping service typically wins on risk and scheduling flexibility.

Practical takeaway for equipment managers: tighten your concrete pump equipment hire cost accuracy by controlling the controllables (schedule, readiness, access, and washout), then negotiate program pricing only after you can demonstrate predictable pour windows and truck spacing.