Concrete Saw Rental Rates in Phoenix (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

For Phoenix concrete driveway cutting, 2026 concrete saw equipment hire budgets typically land in these planning ranges: $85–$140/day, $260–$420/week, and $780–$1,250/4-week for a 14 in. handheld cut-off saw; and $115–$185/day, $340–$520/week, and $900–$1,450/4-week for a 14–16 in. walk-behind concrete saw (driveway flat saw). Rates move with blade inclusion/exclusion, dust-control requirements, and whether your job needs wet cutting. In the Phoenix metro, equipment managers commonly source from national providers (e.g., United Rentals, Sunbelt, Herc) as well as Arizona-based CAT rental and local tool yards in Mesa/Surprise/West Valley; planning ranges below assume contractor-grade fleet and standard single-shift use, not 24/7 pumping-style utilization.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
United Rentals (Phoenix – Branch 905) $160 $475 9 Visit
Sunbelt Rentals (Phoenix) $165 $495 4 Visit
Herc Rentals (Phoenix) $155 $465 7 Visit
Rainbow Rentals (Phoenix) $150 $440 10 Visit
Empire Rental (Cat Rental Store – Phoenix/Mesa metro) $150 $437 9 Visit

Concrete Saw Rental Rates Phoenix 2026

Assumptions for 2026 planning ranges: (1) rates reflect Phoenix-area postings from recent Arizona rental rate guides and Phoenix-metro rental center sheets, adjusted for typical year-over-year changes; (2) “week” is commonly 5 billable days, and “4-week” is commonly 20 billable days; (3) blades may be excluded or included with wear charges depending on the yard; (4) taxes, damage waiver, and delivery are not included unless specifically stated on your quote.

  • 14 in. handheld gas cut-off saw (5 in. cut depth class): $85–$140/day; $260–$420/week; $780–$1,250/4-week.
  • 14–16 in. walk-behind concrete saw (downcut driveway saw): $115–$185/day; $340–$520/week; $900–$1,450/4-week.
  • Early-entry / green concrete saw (for same-day joints where specified): $95–$155/day; $285–$450/week; $850–$1,300/4-week.
  • Battery cut-off saws (where noise/indoor emissions matter): $95–$155/day; $285–$470/week; $850–$1,350/4-week (plus battery/charger rules).

Practical Phoenix driveway note: Most “concrete driveway” scopes end up requiring a walk-behind saw for longer straight cuts (control joints, demo paneling, or tie-in cuts) and a handheld saw for corners and tight returns. Budget both if you need clean square corners without over-cutting.

What Drives Concrete Saw Hire Pricing On Phoenix Concrete Driveway Work?

Concrete saw hire costs in Phoenix are rarely just the day rate. The all-in cost swings with (a) blade policy, (b) silica/dust compliance plan, (c) delivery logistics and jobsite access, and (d) off-rent/after-hours return rules. For driveway work specifically, the biggest cost driver is usually how the blade is billed (rental vs. included with measurable wear) and whether the spec or GC requires dust extraction or wet cutting (water supply + slurry management).

Selecting The Saw Class (And Why The Wrong Choice Costs More)

Matching the saw to the driveway scope keeps you from paying for “extra days” caused by slow cutting, blade glazing, or rework.

  • Handheld cut-off saw (14 in.): Best for short cuts, corners, and small removals. Budget for more labor time if you try to do long driveway runs handheld. If you need a wet-cut kit, allow $15–$35/day for a water feed attachment (or a vendor-supplied kit).
  • Walk-behind saw (14–16 in.): Typical for driveway panel cuts and straight, consistent depth cuts. If you need self-propelled (less common for driveway, more for street work), expect higher rates than a push saw. Some Phoenix-metro rate sheets show a blade-included walk-behind daily rate; if blade wear is measured on return, budget wear charges rather than “free blade.”
  • Early-entry saw (green concrete): Only relevant if you are cutting joints on green concrete to control cracking; it can save callbacks, but it’s a separate rental line and requires scheduling discipline.

Phoenix-specific consideration: In summer heat, crews often cut at first light to avoid heat stress and to keep engines and blades happier. That operational constraint can force earlier delivery windows and can trigger premium dispatch if your vendor needs to meet a 6:00–7:00 a.m. onsite requirement.

Blade, Wear, And Consumables (Where Budgets Commonly Blow Up)

Concrete saw rentals are frequently quoted “blade not included” or “blade included, wear billed”. Either way, the blade is usually the swing item on driveway cuts because Phoenix aggregate can be abrasive, and dry cutting (when allowed) accelerates wear and dust management costs.

  • Diamond blade rental adders (if rented separately): allow $20–$60/day depending on diameter and spec (general purpose vs. premium concrete).
  • Blade wear/consumable charge (if blade is included): allow $35–$180 per blade on return depending on measured wear and whether the blade was overheated/glazed.
  • Minimum consumables charge: many yards effectively have a minimum; carry an allowance of $25–$50 even for short cuts.
  • Spare blade strategy: if downtime is costly, pre-authorize a second blade so the crew isn’t stuck mid-shift. That can be a $150–$350 purchase exposure if you choose “buy” instead of “wear.”

Estimator tip: For concrete driveway removals, specify (internally) whether cuts are “layout/control joint” (shallow) vs. “full-depth panel isolation.” The cut depth drives blade segment loss and can change wear by multiples.

Delivery, Pickup, And Phoenix Metro Logistics

Even though concrete saws are “small equipment,” delivery can still be the cheaper, lower-risk choice if you’re mobilizing multiple accessories (vacuum, slurry control, spare blades) or if the GC restricts worker pickup.

  • Local delivery/pickup (typical Phoenix metro): budget $85–$175 each way for small equipment on a standard route.
  • Out-of-area mileage: if billed per mile outside a normal radius, allow $3–$6/mile (often with a minimum trip charge).
  • Minimum delivery charge: carry $125 as a planning minimum if your vendor has a flat dispatch floor.
  • After-hours / tight window premium: if you need delivery before gate opens or you miss the cutoff, allow an extra $50–$150 for a special run or next-day remobilization.

Phoenix-specific consideration: Traffic constraints on major corridors (I-10/I-17/Loop 101) and gated communities can add dead time. If the site requires a COI upload, badging, or a call-ahead escort, put those requirements on the PO so dispatch doesn’t fail and roll a second trip.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown (Plan These Or Get Surprised)

Use this section as a checklist of common adders that show up on concrete saw equipment hire invoices for driveway work.

  • Damage waiver / rental protection: commonly 10%–15% of the rental charge (sometimes with minimums). Decide whether you’re using the vendor waiver or your own insurance per MSA.
  • Environmental / shop fees: allow $2–$8/day or a small percentage line that appears on many invoices.
  • Cleaning fees: if the saw returns caked in slurry or concrete paste, allow $45–$150 (higher if the yard has to disassemble guards).
  • Fuel policy (gas saws): return full or pay a refuel charge; budget $6–$10/gal equivalent plus a $15–$35 service fee where applied.
  • Battery tool policies: missing batteries/chargers are high exposure; carry a “loss/damage” exposure allowance of $150–$400 per battery if tools leave the site unmanaged.
  • Late return / extra day triggers: many yards have a hard cutoff (often early afternoon). Missing it can bill another day. As a planning number, carry 1 additional day risk if your return is uncertain, or a “late fee” exposure of $25–$75/hour where enforced.
  • Weekend/holiday billing: some vendors offer weekend specials; others bill calendar days. If you take delivery Friday and return Monday, plan for 2–3 billable days unless your contract states otherwise.

Dust Control, Wet Cutting, And Slurry Management Costs

Silica controls can materially change the equipment hire package for a Phoenix driveway job, especially when cutting near occupied spaces (garages, adjacent storefronts) or when a GC mandates dry cutting only with HEPA extraction.

  • Concrete dust-control vacuum (basic): allow $25–$60/day (Phoenix-area rental sheets often show low daily numbers for small vacs; confirm HEPA rating if required).
  • HEPA-rated vacuum (when specified): allow $45–$95/day depending on airflow class.
  • Pre-separator / dust deputy (recommended for heavy cutting): allow $10–$25/day.
  • Wet-cut water tank (if no hose bib onsite): allow $15–$40/day plus fill/hauling time.
  • Slurry pickup / wet vac: allow $45–$90/day for small recovery; for larger slurry control, a dedicated slurry vac can be $150–$250/day depending on class.

Phoenix-specific consideration: In very dry conditions, “dry cutting with vacuum” can still create nuisance dust at driveway edges and expansion joints. Many crews end up wet cutting for control, but that transfers the problem into slurry containment and cleanup—budget both paths and align with GC rules before you mobilize.

Example: Phoenix Concrete Driveway Cut Package With Real Constraints

Example: You need to isolate and remove a 10 ft x 12 ft driveway panel (about 44 LF of perimeter cut) plus add two straight relief cuts totaling 30 LF. The site is a gated HOA in North Phoenix with a 7:00 a.m. delivery window, no onsite water connection available at the driveway, and the GC requires dust controls because garage doors remain in use.

  • Walk-behind saw (14–16 in.): plan 1 day at $115–$185.
  • Handheld cut-off saw (14 in.) for corners: plan 1 day at $85–$140 (or plan labor to finish corners with a demo saw you already own).
  • Diamond blades / wear: carry $75–$150 allowance (driveway mix and rebar risk can push this higher).
  • HEPA vacuum package: carry $60–$120 for the day depending on spec.
  • Water tank + fittings: $20–$55 for the day.
  • Delivery + pickup: $170–$350 (two-way), plus a possible $50–$150 premium if dispatch must hit a narrow gate window.
  • Damage waiver: add 10%–15% of rental lines (often overlooked in budgets).
  • Cleaning exposure: carry $45–$100 if slurry residue returns on the saw/vac.

Planning takeaway: even a “one-day” driveway scope can invoice like a multi-line package once you add compliance accessories and logistics. If you can consolidate everything under one delivery ticket and return before cutoff, you typically save more than negotiating $10/day off the saw.

Budget Worksheet (Concrete Saw Equipment Hire Allowances)

  • Walk-behind concrete saw (14–16 in.): ___ days @ $___/day (allow $115–$185/day)
  • Handheld cut-off saw (14 in.): ___ days @ $___/day (allow $85–$140/day)
  • Blade rental or blade wear allowance: $___ (allow $75–$250 per mobilization)
  • Wet-cut kit (hose, quick-connect, tank): $___ (allow $15–$55/day)
  • Dust control vacuum (HEPA if required): $___ (allow $45–$95/day)
  • Pre-separator / extra filters / bags: $___ (allow $10–$40/day)
  • Slurry recovery (wet vac or slurry vac): $___ (allow $45–$250/day)
  • Delivery + pickup: $___ (allow $170–$350 typical metro; add mileage if outside radius)
  • Damage waiver / rental protection: ___% of rental (allow 10%–15%)
  • Environmental/shop fees: $___ (allow $2–$8/day)
  • Cleaning fee exposure: $___ (allow $45–$150)
  • Contingency for late return / extra day: $___ (at least 1 day of the primary saw)

Rental Order Checklist (What To Put On The PO So Costs Don’t Creep)

  • Exact equipment class: handheld 14 in. vs walk-behind 14–16 in.; gas vs battery; downcut vs upcut as needed
  • Blade policy in writing: “blade included with wear billed” vs “no blade, renter provides”
  • Accessories: wet-cut kit, vacuum (HEPA?), hoses, GFCI/cord set, pre-separator, slurry recovery
  • Delivery address, gate code, contact name/phone, and required delivery window (e.g., must arrive 6:30–7:00 a.m.)
  • Off-rent process and cutoff time: who calls it, and by what time to stop billing
  • Weekend/holiday billing terms: confirm whether Saturday/Sunday count as billable days
  • Fuel/battery expectations on return (full tank, fully charged, battery count verified)
  • Return condition documentation: photos of serial numbers, blade condition, guards, and accessory counts at pickup/return
  • Billing requirements: job number, cost code, tax exemption (if applicable), and COI requirements

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How Phoenix Conditions Change Concrete Saw Hire Costs (And How To Manage Them)

Phoenix driveway work has a few operational realities that directly change equipment hire cost: (1) early-start scheduling due to heat, (2) dust sensitivity in dense neighborhoods, and (3) access constraints (gates, parked vehicles, short-staged driveways). These don’t change the published day rate, but they do change whether you pay for extra days, second deliveries, or added accessories.

  • Heat-driven scheduling: If your crew cuts from 5:30 a.m. to 11:00 a.m., the saw may be idle the rest of the day but still billed for a full day. Where possible, stack multiple driveway cuts the same day to maximize utilization.
  • Monsoon season logistics: Sudden storms can shut down cutting and create slurry/mud return conditions. Budget a $45–$150 cleaning exposure and consider covering intakes/filters on gas saws to reduce service charges.
  • Dust rules near occupied spaces: If the GC switches from “wet cut allowed” to “dry cut with HEPA only,” you may add $45–$95/day vacuum + $10–$25/day pre-separator + consumables. Lock the method before mobilization.

Off-Rent Rules, Cutoff Times, And Weekend Billing

Many preventable overruns come from administrative timing, not field production. Put these on your internal rental coordination plan (and get them confirmed on the rental agreement).

  • Off-rent cutoff: If the yard’s off-rent cutoff is mid-afternoon and you call after it, you may be billed another day. Carry a conservative exposure of 1 extra day if you can’t guarantee same-day pickup/return.
  • Return scan time: If you drop after the rental counter closes, some systems post it next business day. If unavoidable, request written authorization or a time-stamped drop procedure.
  • Weekend structures: Weekend “specials” can be beneficial, but only if your jobsite allows access on Monday morning for returns/pickups. Otherwise, plan for 2–3 billable days across a Friday-to-Monday window.

Accessories That Commonly Get Missed On Driveway Cutting Quotes

If you need a clean, professional driveway cut (especially for patch boundaries), these are the accessory lines that often appear late and change the effective equipment hire cost:

  • Chalk line, layout, and straightedge systems: usually owned by contractors, but if rented/consumed, carry $10–$25 for layout consumables.
  • GFCI + heavy extension cord (for electric saws/vacs): allow $10–$20/day if rented as power distribution accessories.
  • Trailer (if self-hauling a walk-behind saw): allow $35–$75/day if you don’t have an approved transport option.
  • Water hose / quick-connect / backflow needs: allow $10–$25/day where required, or specify “renter provides.”
  • Spare belt/guard exposure: not typically quoted, but damage can trigger parts charges. This is one reason many coordinators accept the 10%–15% damage waiver on short-duration saw rentals.

Reducing Total Concrete Saw Equipment Hire Cost Without Sacrificing Output

  • Bundle the package: One PO for saw + vacuum + blades + water kit is easier to manage than three separate tickets. It also reduces the chance of duplicate delivery charges.
  • Control blade economics: If your yard bills wear, ask how wear is measured and what “abuse” looks like. Avoid dry cutting when not required; overheating/glazing can turn a small wear charge into a large one (budget exposure $35–$180 per blade event).
  • Plan the return: Assign one person to return equipment before cutoff. Paying for an extra day of a walk-behind saw (often $115–$185) is usually more expensive than dedicating a truck run.
  • Right-size dust control: Don’t over-rent. If you only need corner touch-ups indoors, you may not need a high-capacity vacuum all day. But if the spec says HEPA, don’t under-rent—failed compliance can cost far more than $45–$95/day.

Ownership Vs. Hire: A Cost Check For Recurring Phoenix Driveway Work

If your crews cut concrete driveway panels weekly, compare ownership to hire using your internal utilization. As a quick check, a walk-behind saw hired at $340–$520/week can exceed the annual carrying cost of ownership if you’re renting most weeks and also paying repeated blade wear, delivery, and cleaning charges. However, hire often stays the better commercial choice when you (a) need different saw classes week to week, (b) want to avoid maintenance downtime, or (c) require rapid replacement if a saw goes down mid-job.

Documentation That Prevents Back-Charges

Concrete saw rentals are easy to back-charge when accessories go missing or when the blade condition is disputed. Tight documentation is a real cost-control tool.

  • Photo the saw serial number and hour meter (if present) at pickup and return.
  • Photo blade condition on return (especially if “blade included with wear billed”).
  • Count accessories (wrenches, water kits, vacuum hoses) and note them on the return ticket.
  • Document fuel level or battery count/charge state at pickup/return to avoid refuel/recharge adders.

2026 Planning Notes For Phoenix Concrete Saw Hire Budgets

For 2026 budgeting in Phoenix, carry allowances for (1) accessory-heavy compliance packages (HEPA vacuums and slurry control), and (2) logistics volatility (delivery window misses and after-hours returns). If you need a single line “all-in” placeholder for early budgeting before firm quotes, many coordinators use: (saw day rate) + 25%–40% to cover waiver/fees/consumables, then add delivery as a separate fixed allowance of $170–$350 per mobilization. Replace that placeholder with a vendor quote as soon as you know blade policy and dust-control method.