Concrete Pump Rental Rates in Phoenix (Daily/Weekly) — 2026 Costs
Phoenix Construction Cost Hub
Price source: Costs shown are derived from our proprietary U.S. construction cost database (updated continuously from contractor/bid/pricing inputs and normalization rules).
Eva Steinmetzer-Shaw
Head of Marketing
Concrete Pump Rental Rates Phoenix 2026
For Phoenix-area concrete slab pours in 2026, budgeting concrete pump equipment hire typically lands in two buckets: line pump (most common for residential and light commercial slabs) and boom pump (higher-production placements, tighter schedules, or restricted access). For planning purposes, a line pump dispatch in the Phoenix metro commonly pencils at $650–$1,250 per day (often structured as a 3–4 hour minimum plus adders), $3,250–$6,000 per week, and $12,000–$20,000 per month when you’re booking frequent pours or dedicated availability. For a boom pump, planning ranges typically run $1,300–$2,800 per day, $7,500–$13,500 per week, and $30,000–$45,000 per month depending on boom class, travel, and standby expectations. These are equipment hire + operated service planning ranges (not guaranteed rate cards): most Phoenix contractors source pumps through specialty concrete pumping providers (e.g., Brundage-Bone’s Phoenix operation and local pumpers) rather than “dry” equipment-only rentals, and invoices are often won or lost on minimum-hours, travel/mobilization, hose footage, washout handling, and standby time more than the base hourly.
| Vendor |
Daily Rate |
Weekly Rate |
Review Score |
Website |
| Brundage-Bone Concrete Pumping (Phoenix/Tempe Branch) |
$1 500 |
$7 500 |
8 |
Visit |
| Western Concrete Pumping (Phoenix, AZ) |
$1 450 |
$7 250 |
9 |
Visit |
| Action Concrete Pumping Arizona |
$1 250 |
$6 250 |
10 |
Visit |
| Mobile Mix (Concrete & Grout Pumping) |
$1 300 |
$6 500 |
10 |
Visit |
How Concrete Pump Hire Is Typically Charged for Slab Pours
For a slab pour, “concrete pump rental” in Phoenix is usually an operated pumping service: you are buying a truck/trailer pump + operator + standard hose package + mobilization, with the supplier controlling equipment selection and dispatch. In practice, many suppliers quote using a minimum charge or a set-up + hourly structure, then add per-yard pumping, travel time, hose footage beyond an included amount, and premiums for weekends/holidays.
- Published Phoenix-metro example (small pours): one East Valley provider publishes a $300 flat rate for 1–10 cubic yards with up to 200 ft of hose and a 4-hour maximum, plus a $25 washout pool option.
- Published Phoenix-metro example (larger pours): the same provider publishes a $100 show-up charge, $90/hour for setup/pumping/cleanup, and $2.75/yard pumped, with $1.00/ft for hose beyond 200 ft.
- Published industry example (set-up + hourly): a commonly posted schedule structure is $300 set-up including first hour and $125/hour thereafter, with weekend premiums and hose adders beyond included footage.
- National planning benchmarks: typical minimum charges and hourly rates frequently fall around $400–$600 minimum for line/trailer pumps and $800–$1,000 minimum for boom pumps, with hourly rates often in the $150–$250/hour band depending on pump type and region.
Estimator note: If you need to present “daily/weekly/monthly” to procurement, treat those as converted values from the supplier’s minimum-hours model (and include explicit assumptions). Example conversion: a 4-hour minimum at $200/hour behaves like an $800 “day rate” before travel, yardage fees, and hose.
What Affects Concrete Pump Hire Prices in Phoenix?
Phoenix concrete pump hire costs for a slab pour move with a short list of predictable drivers. If you capture these up front, you reduce change orders and “standby creep.”
- Pump selection (line vs boom): line pumps are typically the economical choice for ground-level slabs where you can lay out hose; boom pumps can reduce placement time and labor rehandling but usually carry higher minimums and higher hourly.
- Minimum hours and “port-to-port” billing: many suppliers bill from dispatch to return (travel included) or include an explicit travel-time line item. If your job is 45–60 minutes from the yard, you can effectively pay 1–2 hours before concrete hits the hopper.
- Hose footage and line management: 200 ft included is common; beyond that, hose adders can be material (e.g., published $1.00/ft beyond 200 ft on some schedules).
- Yardage adders (wear/consumables): some providers add a per-yard pumping fee (e.g., published $2.75/yard on one Phoenix-metro schedule).
- Site access and setup time: long back-ups, tight residential streets, spotter requirements, and outrigger pad needs can extend billable time.
- Schedule certainty: short-notice changes create show-up charges, cancellations, or remobilization. (Some posted schedules tie cancellation charges to the set-up rate if you miss the notification window.)
Phoenix Slab-Pour Realities That Move the Invoice
Phoenix has a few local operating realities that can make pump hire cost deviate from “typical” national assumptions:
- Heat scheduling and early pours: summer placement often shifts to early-morning starts. If your pump and ready-mix are scheduled for a 4:30–5:30 a.m. start, confirm whether the supplier treats that as standard time or after-hours (and whether travel time is billed). Even when no formal premium is listed, early starts increase the odds of “standby” if the batch plant and truck cycle aren’t aligned.
- Metro sprawl and drive-time sensitivity: Greater Phoenix (Buckeye ↔ Mesa ↔ Queen Creek ↔ Surprise) can turn a simple dispatch into billable drive time. If your supplier publishes drive time as an explicit line item (some markets publish figures like $100 per hour drive time), set expectations with the GC and dispatcher about gate times and truck staging.
- Washout controls: many sites in Maricopa County are sensitive to stormwater and washout containment. If you don’t have a designated washout pit/pool ready, you can get hit with delays and/or supplier-provided washout solutions (example published option: $25 washout pool).
Hidden-Fee Breakdown
When rental coordinators get surprised on concrete pump equipment hire, it is rarely the base rate—it is usually one of the line items below. Use these as a structured “hidden-fee” review during buyout.
- Mobilization / show-up: published examples include a $100 show-up charge on some schedules; other suppliers roll this into the minimum.
- Set-up charge models: some schedules structure as $300 set-up including first hour, then $125/hour thereafter.
- Per-yard pumping fee: published example $2.75/yard (others may be higher/lower by mix, line size, and wear).
- Extra hose beyond included footage: published example $1.00/ft beyond 200 ft; other schedules can be higher depending on hose type and diameter.
- Weekend/holiday premiums: one published schedule shows +$10/hour and +$25/set-up on Saturday, and +$20/hour and +$50/set-up on Sunday/holidays.
- Drive time billed separately (some markets): published examples in other U.S. markets show adders such as $100/hour drive time and a small fuel/prime charge structure (e.g., $25 fuel and $30 prime out), which is a useful template when reviewing Phoenix quotes for similar fields.
- Standby / waiting time: if trucks are stacked and the pump is waiting on mud, rebar inspection, or screed readiness, ask how the supplier converts delays into billable hours against the minimum and whether a higher standby rate applies once the minimum is satisfied.
- Washout handling: if you cannot provide a compliant washout location, budget supplier-provided containment (example published option: $25) plus internal labor for placement and disposal coordination.
Example: Slab Pour With a Line Pump in Phoenix (With Operational Constraints)
Scenario: 1,800 sq ft slab at 4 in thickness (about 22.2 yd), residential infill in Phoenix with street parking constraints. First truck scheduled 6:00 a.m. to beat heat; you need hose to reach the back yard formwork (total run 260 ft). You have one access window because the neighborhood has a school drop-off rush starting at 7:15 a.m.
- Assumed pumping structure (based on a published Phoenix-metro schedule): $100 show-up + $90/hour (setup/pump/cleanup) + $2.75/yard.
- Time plan: 0.75 hr set up + 3.0 hr placement + 1.0 hr cleanup = 4.75 hours billable (rounding and supplier rules may vary).
- Hose adder: 60 ft beyond 200 ft included at $1.00/ft = $60.
- Washout containment: add $25 if supplier provides pool (or equivalent internal cost if you provide).
Illustrative equipment hire math (planning only): show-up $100 + (4.75 × $90 = $427.50) + (22.2 × $2.75 ≈ $61.05) + hose $60 + washout $25 ≈ $674 before any after-hours premium, remobilization, or extended standby. The operational constraint that moves cost here is not the pumping—it is the single-window schedule: if the first mud truck is late by 45 minutes, you can burn nearly a full billable hour while still paying minimum/rounding rules.
Budget Worksheet (Concrete Pump Equipment Hire)
Use the worksheet below as a non-table estimating artifact. Adjust quantities to your slab pour takeoff and your supplier’s minimum structure.
- Base pump dispatch (line pump): allowance $650–$1,250 per pour day (convert from quoted minimum + expected hours).
- Mobilization / show-up: allowance $0–$150 (published example $100).
- Hourly pumping time beyond minimum: allowance 1–3 hours at $90–$150/hour (published example $90/hour; other schedules differ).
- Per-yard pumping fee: allowance $2.75–$5.00 per yard (published example $2.75/yard).
- Extra hose beyond included package: allowance 25–150 ft at $1.00–$3.00/ft (published example $1.00/ft beyond 200 ft).
- Washout containment and disposal coordination: allowance $25–$250 (published option $25 for a washout pool on one schedule; disposal may be separate).
- Weekend premium contingency: allowance $0–$250 per pour (example posted structures include +$10/hour Saturday and +$20/hour Sunday/holiday, plus set-up adders).
- Standby / delay contingency: allowance 1–2 hours at $90–$250/hour depending on supplier rules and whether the minimum is already met.
- Traffic control / spotter labor (if required by site): allowance 2 labor-hours.
- Documentation/admin: allowance 0.5–1.0 hours for COI collection, site map, and pour plan distribution.
Rental Order Checklist (Concrete Pump Hire)
- PO and scope: pump type requested (line vs boom), estimated yardage, estimated on-site hours, minimum-hour terms acknowledged.
- Jobsite logistics: address + GPS pin, best gate, staging area for ready-mix trucks, and a simple truck route note (school zones, alley access, weight-restricted streets).
- Pour schedule: requested arrival time, first-truck time, target start of discharge, and cut-off time for neighborhood/permit constraints.
- Concrete mix details for pumpability: PSI, aggregate size, fiber (yes/no), slump target, admixtures (retarder in summer), and whether a grout/primer is required per supplier practice.
- Hose/placement plan: included hose assumption (often 200 ft), extra hose footage requested, and end-hose positioning responsibilities (crew vs operator) clarified.
- Washout plan: owner-provided washout pit/pan location or supplier-provided washout pool request (example posted option $25).
- Safety and access: overhead lines/clearances noted, slab edge protection where hose crosses rebar, and a spotter assigned for backing/positioning.
- Sign-off process: designate who signs the pump ticket, records on/off times, and documents delays (photos + notes).
- Off-rent / demob: confirm how to release the pump and stop billing (who calls, when, and what “off time” is recognized).
Cost-Control Levers for Rental Coordinators
- Lock the truck cadence: coordinate ready-mix dispatch intervals to keep the pump continuously fed; gaps create standby and can stretch a 4-hour minimum into 6–7 billable hours.
- Pre-stage hose path: ensure the route is clear (no rebar bundles, trash, or uncut mesh) so the crew isn’t burning paid time dragging hose around obstructions.
- Confirm included hose footage in writing: avoid surprise adders (published example uses 200 ft included, then $1.00/ft beyond).
- Decide on washout ownership early: either provide your own compliant washout or request supplier-provided containment (and budget it).
- Plan for Phoenix heat: early starts can be efficient, but only if batch plant, inspection, and crew call-times are aligned—otherwise you pay for the pump while waiting on upstream constraints.
Planning for Multi-Pour and Long-Duration Pump Hire
Weekly and monthly concrete pump equipment hire in Phoenix is rarely a single “rent it and park it” arrangement the way a scissor lift might be. It is more commonly one of these models:
- Repeated dispatches: you schedule multiple pour days in the same week (each with its own minimum, mobilization logic, and potential hose requirements).
- Dedicated availability: you reserve a pump and operator for a block of time (useful on phased slabs, tilt panels, or when concrete supply is volatile). In exchange, the supplier may discount hourly—but you may still pay for non-productive windows.
- Standby-heavy schedules: when inspections, embeds, or finishing operations are unpredictable, you can end up converting what you thought was “two quick pours” into a high-standby week.
When you convert a supplier’s minimum-hour model into a weekly/monthly planning number, publish your assumptions in the estimate: number of pour days (e.g., 3 days/week vs 5), expected on-site hours per day (e.g., 4.0 vs 6.5), and whether travel time is included or billed separately. National benchmark structures commonly show a clear relationship between minimum charges and hourly rates (e.g., line pump minimums around $400–$600; boom pump minimums around $800–$1,000; hourly ranges in the $150–$250 band depending on pump type).
Operator, Insurance, and Documentation Items That Affect Cost
Concrete pumping is usually treated as a specialty operated service because the risk profile is not comparable to “bare” equipment hire. The cost impact shows up in a few places:
- Operator included vs excluded: if a quote looks unusually low, confirm whether the operator is included, what hours are billable, and whether the clock is jobsite-only or port-to-port.
- COIs and additional insured endorsements: tight project insurance requirements can introduce admin lead time. If your job requires same-day endorsements, build a small internal allowance for coordination.
- Certified operator expectations: industry guidance frequently discusses operator hourly pricing in the $175/hour class for certified operations in value comparisons (useful when sanity-checking boom pump quotes).
Practical control: require pump tickets to capture (1) arrival time, (2) start of pump, (3) last truck discharge, (4) washout complete, and (5) departure time. That record is your only defense against disputed standby and rounding.
Concrete Mix and Placement Requirements That Can Trigger Adders
For slab pours, pumpability issues and mix changes can become real cost adders because they slow the placement rate and extend billable hours:
- Prime/primer and cleanup consumables: some suppliers charge separate prime-out/primer fees in their schedules (published examples in other U.S. markets show structures such as a $30 prime out line item).
- Fiber mixes and sticky mud: if the mix is slow through the line, you may burn an extra 0.5–1.5 hours, which is often more expensive than any per-yard adder.
- Extra hose management labor: long pulls (multiple 90s, elevation changes, or tight corridors) can require additional ground support or slower pumping—especially if your crew is also handling finishing and can’t keep up with hose moves.
- Washout restrictions: if you cannot wash out on site, you can get hit with time delays and disposal coordination costs. Even when a supplier provides a low-cost containment option (published example $25 washout pool), the labor and disposal responsibility still needs to be assigned.
When a Boom Pump Becomes the Lower-Cost Choice
For many Phoenix slab pours, a line pump is the default value choice. A boom pump can still be the lower total cost when any of the following is true:
- High yardage with tight time windows: if you are placing enough concrete that the crew and truck cycle become the bottleneck, faster placing reduces standby risk.
- Access constraints: when hose pulls are extreme (multiple hundreds of feet with turns), the hose adder + time loss can erase the apparent line pump savings.
- Labor availability: line pumps frequently require more ground labor for hose handling; if you are already short-handed, a boom can lower project risk even if the hire rate is higher.
Use national benchmark minimum/hourly structures as a cross-check: if a boom pump is quoted close to line-pump economics but eliminates two laborers for four hours, it may be a net win even before schedule risk is priced in.
Commercial Terms to Lock Down Before Dispatch
To keep your concrete pump equipment hire costs predictable on Phoenix slab pours, pin these terms down in writing:
- Minimum-hours rule: 3-hour vs 4-hour minimum, and what starts the clock (arrival vs setup start vs first truck).
- Travel time billing: included or separate line item; whether it is one-way or round-trip.
- Cancellation window and show-up rules: some posted schedules treat late cancellations as a show-up charge equivalent to set-up if you miss the notice window.
- Weekend/holiday premiums: confirm Saturday/Sunday/holiday adders (example posted premiums: +$10/hour Saturday, +$20/hour Sunday/holiday, plus set-up premiums).
- Extra hose pricing: included footage and per-foot rate beyond included (published example $1.00/ft beyond 200 ft).
- Washout ownership: who supplies containment, where it sits, who disposes, and what “cleanup complete” means for ending billable time.
2026 Budget Range Summary for Phoenix Pump Hire
If you need a clean internal budget number for a Phoenix concrete slab pour in 2026, these ranges typically hold up as planning allowances (assuming weekday daytime work, standard mixes, average metro travel, and reasonable access):
- Line pump (typical slab pours): $650–$1,250 per pour day, plus $0–$150 mobilization/show-up, plus $2.75–$5.00/yard, plus hose adders beyond included footage.
- Boom pump (higher production or difficult access): $1,300–$2,800 per pour day, with higher minimum exposure and more sensitivity to drive time and standby.
Where your estimate should be most conservative is not the base rate—it is schedule risk. In Phoenix, heat-driven early starts, drive-time variability across the metro, and washout constraints are the three most common reasons a “4-hour pump” turns into a 6-hour invoice.