Conduit Bender Rental Rates in Tucson (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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Conduit Bender Rental Rates Tucson 2026

For Tucson electrical rough-in work in 2026, conduit bender equipment hire pricing typically budgets in three tiers: (1) manual EMT hand benders for 1/2 in. and 3/4 in. runs, (2) mechanical/ratchet benders for occasional 1 in.–1-1/4 in. work, and (3) electric/hydraulic benders (Greenlee 555-class and up) for repetitive bends in 1 in.–2 in. EMT/IMC/rigid where labor time and bend quality drive the decision. As a planning range (not a quote), expect $10–$25/day for a single hand bender, $40–$110/day for a mechanical/ratchet bender package, and $160–$320/day for a powered 1/2 in.–2 in. electric conduit bender; weekly and monthly structures usually favor longer holds when inspections are predictable. Tucson-area branches of national rental houses (and electrical-supply rental counters) can usually support these tools, but total hire cost is most often determined by delivery, accessories (shoes/rollers/stands), and off-rent timing rather than the base day rate alone.

Vendor Daily Rate Weekly Rate Review Score Website
Sunbelt Rentals $240 $720 9 Visit
United Rentals $225 $675 10 Visit
Sunstate Equipment $215 $645 10 Visit
CRECO Rental $200 $600 10 Visit

Baseline rate reality check (why 2026 ranges vary): published “list” schedules show how wide pricing can be before local discounts, contract tiers, and delivery are applied. For example, a national single-shift schedule has listed a Greenlee 555 class 1/2 in.–2 in. conduit bender at $127/day, $357/week, and $924 per 4-week period (single shift defined as 0–8 hours; double shift is 1.5x and triple shift is 2x on that schedule). (g Small-tool yards also publish very low manual bender numbers (for example, $8/day and $24/week for a 1/2 in. EMT hand bender in one rate sheet). And a separate rental-rate PDF lists “Conduit Bender – 2 in.” at $119/day, $450/week, and $1,197/month (definitions and inclusions vary by supplier). Use those as anchors, then apply Tucson-specific delivery, jobsite conditions, and your company’s account tier to build a defensible 2026 hire allowance.

What Drives Conduit Bender Hire Costs on Tucson Rough-In Jobs?

In Tucson electrical rough-in, conduit bending tool hire is rarely a pure “day rate” decision. The cost drivers that actually move the needle are:

  • Conduit type and size mix: EMT 1/2 in.–3/4 in. is often handled with hand benders; recurring 1 in.–2 in. runs and rigid/IMC pushes crews toward powered bending where the labor savings justify the higher rental rate.
  • Accessory completeness: a powered bender without the right shoe set, follow bar, support stand, or bending table can burn hours (and trigger damage/return issues). Accessory adders are common and should be budgeted explicitly.
  • Time-on-rent vs. time-in-use: rough-in work can sit through inspection windows. If the tool is “on rent” while you wait for inspection sign-off, your effective cost per bend skyrockets unless you off-rent aggressively.
  • Delivery radius and access constraints: Tucson metro spreads quickly (Marana, Oro Valley, Vail, Sahuarita). Longer drive time, gated communities, and downtown access windows can add cost and/or force earlier delivery cutoffs.
  • Shift/OT use: if you plan second shift or weekend pushes, confirm whether the bender is billed as a single-shift tool or subject to shift multipliers (some published schedules define the single shift as 0–8 hours and scale up thereafter). (g

2026 Tucson Planning Ranges by Conduit Bender Type (Daily/Weekly/Monthly)

Below are practical planning ranges for conduit bender equipment hire costs in Tucson in 2026. These ranges assume a contractor account at a mainstream rental house, standard wear-and-tear, and normal weekday logistics. They also assume you are renting only the bending equipment (not the conduit, racks, or threading/cutting tools).

1) Manual EMT hand bender (single size, e.g., 1/2 in. or 3/4 in.)

  • Daily: $10–$25
  • Weekly: $30–$70
  • Monthly: $90–$180
  • Notes: published small-yard examples show day rates as low as $8 for a 1/2 in. EMT bender, but Tucson availability and minimums vary; many crews own these due to low replacement cost.

2) Hand bender set (1/2 in., 3/4 in., 1 in.)

  • Daily: $25–$55
  • Weekly: $75–$165
  • Monthly: $220–$420
  • Typical add-ons: angle setter $3–$8/day; longer handle/cheater accessories may be restricted (policy varies) and can shift liability back to you.

3) Mechanical/ratchet conduit bender package (common for intermittent larger EMT)

  • Daily: $40–$110
  • Weekly: $150–$350
  • Monthly: $450–$900
  • Common job fit: TI rough-in where 1 in.–1-1/4 in. bends show up occasionally but not enough volume to justify a 555-class electric bender on rent all week.

4) Powered electric conduit bender (Greenlee 555-class, 1/2 in.–2 in.)

  • Daily: $160–$320
  • Weekly: $480–$950
  • Monthly (4-week): $1,250–$2,450
  • Anchors: a published national schedule lists a Greenlee 555 at $127/day, $357/week, $924/4-week; Tucson 2026 planning commonly comes in higher once branch-level pricing, demand, and delivery are applied. (g
  • Power requirements (cost impact): plan for a dedicated 120V / 20A circuit (or budget a small inverter generator if power is unreliable): generator allowance often $55–$95/day plus fuel.

5) Larger bending tables / 2-1/2 in.–4 in. capacity (specialty)

  • Daily: $300–$750+
  • Weekly: $900–$2,250+
  • Monthly: $2,500–$6,000+
  • Reality: often sourced via specialty channels; one example listing shows a Greenlee 884/885 class “table” bender as a distinct rental item. If your Tucson rough-in truly needs 2-1/2 in.–4 in. conduit bends, confirm lead time and transport constraints early.

Accessories and Attachments That Commonly Add Real Cost

For electrical rough-in, you should treat “conduit bender rental” as a system. The base machine is only one line item; missing accessories can either stop production or create damage claims. Typical 2026 accessory adders to budget (allowances, not quotes):

  • Shoe set (size-specific): $15–$35/day per shoe (or $45–$90/day for a multi-shoe kit), depending on size and conduit type.
  • Rigid/IMC shoe premium: +$10–$25/day vs. EMT-only shoes due to wear.
  • Follow bar / support arm replacement exposure: $90–$250 if returned bent or incomplete (document at pickup and return).
  • Tripod stand / pipe stand: $8–$18/day each; $25–$55/week.
  • Mobile bending table (if not included): $45–$120/day depending on capacity and whether it’s a dedicated 881/884 class table.
  • Extension cords (12/3, jobsite grade): $6–$15/day if rented rather than sourced internally.
  • Conduit vise / clamp: $10–$25/day when needed for consistent take-up on repeated bends.

Hidden-Fee Breakdown for Conduit Bender Equipment Hire

These are the charges that routinely explain why the invoice is higher than the quoted daily rate—especially on Tucson projects where delivery windows and dust control can complicate logistics.

  • Delivery and pickup: $85–$175 each way inside a typical “local” radius; outside that radius, budget $3.50–$6.00 per loaded mile. Tucson rough-in locations in Marana or Vail frequently land in the “mileage add” band depending on the branch.
  • Minimum rental term: common minimums are 1 day for contractor tools; some counters use a 4-hour minimum on small tools (verify before you assume a half-day savings).
  • Weekend / holiday billing: budget a 1-day minimum if the tool goes out on Friday and returns Monday unless your account terms explicitly allow “free weekend” handling for that class of tool.
  • Late return penalties: typical penalty logic is an added day (or a fraction such as 1/8-day increments on some tools) once you miss the agreed return time—confirm the branch’s cutoff (commonly 3:00–4:30 p.m.).
  • Damage waiver / rental protection: often priced as 10%–17% of the rental charge for small tools; confirm whether it applies to theft and whether shoes/accessories are included.
  • Cleaning fee: $35–$95 for light cleaning; $125–$250 if returned with concrete slurry, excessive dust intrusion, or adhesive overspray (common on TI rough-in in occupied facilities where dust control is a must).
  • Missing accessories: $25–$60 per missing pin/clip/handle item; $150–$400 for missing shoe components depending on size.
  • After-hours or scheduled-window delivery: $150–$350 if the site requires a strict 30-minute window, badge-in, or escort (downtown Tucson and secure campuses can create this cost).

Example: Tucson Electrical Rough-In Scenario With Real Numbers

Example: 18,000 sq. ft. tenant improvement rough-in near midtown Tucson. Scope includes ~240 bends total: 160 bends in 3/4 in. EMT, 60 bends in 1 in. EMT, and 20 bends in 1-1/4 in. EMT feeding panels and mech equipment. Site is occupied on lower floors, so dust-control and clean returns matter; work must be performed 6:00 a.m.–2:30 p.m. with a strict dock window.

  • Powered bender hire (555-class): 3 days @ $240/day = $720
  • Shoe kit allowance: 3 days @ $65/day = $195
  • Tripod stand(s): 3 days @ $14/day = $42
  • Delivery + pickup (scheduled window): $165 + $165 = $330
  • Damage waiver: 14% of rental charges (equipment + accessories) = ~ $134
  • Cleaning allowance (occupied TI): $75
  • Contingency for inspection delay: 1 extra day on rent @ $240 = $240

Planning total: $1,736 for the bending package (before tax, consumables, or labor). The key control lever here is the inspection-delay day: if you off-rent immediately after the last bending run (instead of holding “just in case”), you can often save 10%–20% of the tool package cost on this type of Tucson rough-in.

Operational Constraints That Change Total Hire Cost in Tucson

  • Heat and storage: Tucson summer heat can accelerate dust intrusion and degrade lubricants on moving parts if tools are stored uncovered in open trailers. Budget either a higher cleaning allowance ($75–$150) or enforce bagged/boxed return condition with photos.
  • Monsoon conditions: sudden rain can create muddy laydown areas; returning a bender with mud-caked stands is a predictable cleaning fee trigger ($35–$95+).
  • Delivery cutoffs and off-rent rules: if you call off-rent after the branch’s dispatch cutoff, you may carry an extra day even if the tool is idle. Build internal reminders to call off-rent early (often before 2:00–3:00 p.m.).
  • Indoor dust-control requirements: many occupied facilities require protective floor coverings and containment; if you stage bending indoors, budget $25–$60/day for floor protection and an extra $50–$120 for end-of-rent cleanup to avoid backcharges (even if the rental house doesn’t charge you, the GC might).

Budget Worksheet

Use these line items to build a 2026 conduit bender equipment hire allowance for Tucson electrical rough-in. Adjust quantities to match your anticipated time-on-rent (not just time-in-use).

  • Powered conduit bender (1/2 in.–2 in.) — ___ days @ $___/day (allow $160–$320/day)
  • Shoe set / bending kit — ___ days @ $___/day (allow $45–$90/day for a kit)
  • Support stand / bending table — ___ days @ $___/day (allow $8–$120/day depending on setup)
  • Delivery — allowance $85–$175
  • Pickup — allowance $85–$175
  • Scheduled-window / after-hours logistics — allowance $150–$350 (if required)
  • Damage waiver — ___% (allow 10%–17%) applied to rental charges
  • Cleaning / dust-control return condition — allowance $35–$150
  • Missing accessories exposure — allowance $50–$250 (project-dependent)
  • Inspection-delay float day — 1 day @ $___/day (critical if rough-in signoff is uncertain)

Rental Order Checklist

  • Confirm conduit types/sizes to be bent (EMT vs IMC vs rigid) and required shoe set(s) before issuing the PO.
  • PO must specify: base bender model/class, shoe kit contents, stands/tables, and any included consumables.
  • Set delivery window and jobsite constraints (dock hours, badge-in/escort, contact name, liftgate needs).
  • Document condition at pickup/drop-off: photos of machine, shoes, pins, and any cases; note missing items immediately.
  • Confirm billing rules: single-shift vs multi-shift, weekend billing, and late-return cutoff time.
  • Confirm off-rent procedure: who can call off-rent, what time cutoff applies, and whether email/text confirmation is available.
  • Return requirements: remove tape/labels, wipe down dust, coil cords, and return shoes/pins in the labeled case to avoid missing-item charges.

Estimator’s note for Tucson: if your rough-in schedule is inspection-driven (common on TI), your best equipment-hire savings is aligning the bender delivery to the first bending day and scheduling pickup the same day as your last bend—do not let the tool sit through an inspection queue unless that float day is intentionally budgeted.

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conduit and bender in construction work

How to Tighten a 2026 Conduit Bender Hire Allowance (Without Underbuying)

When you need to tighten a Tucson conduit bender rental allowance for electrical rough-in, the goal is not to “cheapen the day rate”; it is to prevent avoidable days on rent and avoid accessory gaps that create downtime. Practical controls that estimators and rental coordinators can actually execute include:

  • Pre-stage bends: group conduit runs so the powered bender is only on rent for the bending window (often 2–4 production days), not the full rough-in duration.
  • Right-size the tool tier: if 90% of bends are 3/4 in. EMT and only a handful are 1-1/4 in., consider a hand-bender set + a 1-day powered bender “burst” rather than a full-week powered rental.
  • Lock accessory completeness: require the vendor’s counter to confirm (in writing on the contract or pick ticket) the shoe sizes and included pins/follow bars. A missing $25 pin can create an $800 lost-day labor event.

Shift, Overtime, and “Single Shift” Definitions

Conduit benders are often treated as contractor trade tools, but some published schedules still define billing by shift length, which matters if you plan overtime or second shift to meet a turnover date. One published single-shift schedule defines single shift as 0–8 hours, with double shift (9–16 hours) billed at 1.5x and triple shift (17–24 hours) billed at 2x. (g

2026 planning rule: if your Tucson project has a real chance of running extended hours for a few days (e.g., hospital TI or a data/telecom cutover), carry an overtime multiplier allowance of +50% on the base rental for those days unless your contract rate explicitly locks it as “daily calendar day” rather than “shift day.”

Common Invoice Surprises and How to Prevent Them

For conduit bender equipment hire, the most common invoice disputes are preventable with process and documentation:

  • “We returned it Friday, but got billed through Monday”: avoid this by confirming the branch’s return cutoff time (often mid-afternoon). If the branch scans returns next business day, require a return receipt timestamp. Budget a $0–$320 exposure for a “stranded weekend day” depending on tool tier.
  • Cleaning fees tied to dust: Tucson dust is fine and pervasive; if you store tools in an open-bed truck, budget a higher cleaning allowance ($75–$150) and require wipe-down and bagged accessories before return.
  • Missing shoe/pin charges: use a labeled case and an accessory count sheet. Budget $25–$60 per small missing item, and treat it as a controllable cost via check-in/check-out discipline.
  • Delivery reattempt fees: if the driver can’t access the site due to gate codes or escort requirements, a reattempt charge of $75–$150 is common. Confirm access details on the PO and day-of-delivery call ahead.

Ownership vs. Hire for Conduit Bending on Tucson Rough-In

For many contractors, the “buy vs rent” decision differs by tool tier:

  • Hand benders: ownership often wins quickly. If your company rents a $15/day bender even 20 days/year, you can spend $300 annually on rental before delivery or admin time—often more than a replacement tool cost. Still, rental can make sense for short-notice staffing increases or for uncommon sizes.
  • Powered 555-class benders: hire often wins when utilization is sporadic or when you need flexibility in shoe sets and service. If you expect 8–12 weeks/year of real use, ownership may become competitive, but only if you also budget maintenance, calibration/inspection, storage, and loss prevention.
  • Large table benders (2-1/2 in.–4 in.): most rough-in scopes do not justify ownership unless you specialize in industrial conduit packages. Rental is typical; confirm availability because this class is often “special order” and may come with higher delivery/rigging constraints.

Local Tucson Considerations That Estimators Should Call Out

  • Travel bands: Tucson projects in outlying areas (Marana, Vail, Sahuarita) can tip you from “local delivery” to mileage-based delivery. For budgeting, carry a mileage kicker of $40–$120 if you’re outside a typical 15–25 mile local zone.
  • Secure sites: if you are delivering to a controlled-access campus or facility, allow $150–$350 for scheduled delivery windows or escort time. This cost is often more significant than differences in the tool’s day rate.
  • Heat planning: if tools will be staged in direct sun, plan for covered storage. A $35 tarp and a storage tote can prevent a $125 cleaning fee or a “dust intrusion” performance issue that costs a full day.

Procurement Notes for Better Pricing (Still Focused on Hire Costs)

Even when you cannot lock exact pricing in the estimate, you can improve predictability by specifying what “conduit bender rental” means on the PO:

  • State whether you require EMT-only shoes or rigid/IMC capability.
  • State sizes required (e.g., 3/4 in., 1 in., 1-1/4 in.) and prohibit substitutions without approval.
  • Require accessory case and a contents list at delivery.
  • Require written confirmation of: delivery charge, pickup charge, damage waiver %, cleaning policy, and late-return cutoff.

Bottom line for 2026: In Tucson, conduit bender equipment hire costs are usually controlled more by rental duration discipline, delivery logistics, and complete accessories than by shopping for a slightly cheaper base day rate. Build your estimate around time-on-rent, carry realistic logistics/cleaning/waiver allowances, and treat inspection-driven float days as an explicit decision rather than an accidental overrun.